Friday, May 31, 2013

Viber : Free Messages & Calls 3.0.1 (for Android)


Smartphones can do things Alexander Bell never imagined, but the actual phone and messaging experience hasn't changed dramatically. Viber (free, Google Play) is a VoIP app that aims to improve your talk and text experience with some remarkable new tools. It might even save you a little money in the process with free voice and text messages to other Viber users.

Starting Up
Setting up Viber is a snap on Android: just enter your phone number and a user name, and Viber more or less does the rest. Oddly, the Android version defaults to American Samoa for the region code, but it's the same as the United States setting. Viber even verifies itself by sending a text message to your phone, and automatically detects the included activation code so you don't have to enter it yourself?a feature I really liked.

For better or worse your Viber account is tied to your existing phone number. As far as I can tell, this means you have to deactivate your Viber account and export your message data when you get a new device with a different number. It also means you can't set up Viber on a device without a phone number?such as a tablet. However, the big advantage is that Viber will automatically detect which of your contacts is already using the service.

?This is in stark contrast to Google Voice, which lets you create a new, independent phone number that will redirect to the devices of your choosing. Viber is focused more on communication, so look at Google Voice if you want to merge multiple phone numbers behind a single number.

Note that Viber will annoyingly create a shortcut to your device's desktop even if you've already made one.

Using Viber
Once you're up and running, Viber will automatically import all your contacts in the middle contacts section. From here you can quickly call or send messages using either Viber or your normal data plan. This is a smart option, since it encourages you to use Viber as your one-stop-shop for voice and messaging.

Adding and editing contacts, however, is a little wonky. Viber uses the default Android contact editor which is a visually jarring experience and a bit confusing. I'd like to see this process streamlined.

The leftmost section? combines your call history and your text messages. At first I thought this was odd, but I came to appreciate the simplicity. If you absolutely must find a call, the left most call section lists only calls, and includes a dial pad.

Viber also has some fairly extensive settings, perhaps the most important of which is to automatically respond with a Viber message to an incoming SMS message. This will save you the trouble of jumping between apps and help keep your texting bill under control.

When you're not in the Viber app, new messages appear as pop-up windows complete with a text field. This means you can dash off a quick reply, even when the phone is locked. Viber recently took some flak when a researcher found that these windows could be used to bypass the Android lockscreen. Thankfully, this behavior has been fixed in the current version. Annoyingly, there are separate settings for how alerts appear in both the main settings page and the messages settings. I'd like to see these consolidated in future versions.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/HJSJXkFUxsM/0,2817,2419784,00.asp

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Multi-national study identifies links between genetic variants and educational attainment

Multi-national study identifies links between genetic variants and educational attainment [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: James Devitt
james.devitt@nyu.edu
212-998-6808
New York University

A multi-national team of researchers has identified genetic markers that predict educational attainment by pooling data from more than 125,000 individuals in the United States, Australia, and 13 western European countries.

The study, which appears in the journal Science, was conducted by the Social Science Genetic Association Consortium (SSGAC), which includes researchers at NYU, Erasmus University, Cornell University, Harvard University, the University of Bristol, and the University of Queensland, among other institutions.

The SSGAC conducted what is called a genome-wide association study (GWAS) to explore the link between genetic variation and educational attainmentthe number of years of schooling completed by an individual and whether he or she graduated college. In a GWAS, researchers test hundreds of thousands of genetic markers for association with some characteristics such as a disease, trait or life outcome.

Because the sample included people from different countrieswhere markers for schooling vary significantlythe research team adopted the International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) scale, which is a commonly used method for establishing a uniform measure of educational attainment across cohorts.

Anticipating that very large samples would be required to credibly detect genetic associations, the SSGAC researchers assembled a total sample size more than 10 times larger than any previous genetic study of any social-scientific outcome. The team examined associations between educational attainment and genetic variants called single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs, which are tiny changes at a single location in a person's genetic code.

The study found that the genetic markers with the strongest effects on educational attainment could each only explain two one-hundredths of a percentage point (0.02 percent). To put that figure into perspective, it is known from earlier research that the SNP with the largest effect on human height accounts for about 0.40 percent of the variation.

Combining the two million examined SNPs, the SSGAC researchers were able to explain about 2 percent of the variation in educational attainment across individuals, and anticipate that this figure will rise as larger samples become available.

"We hope that our findings will eventually be useful for understanding biological processes underlying learning, memory, reading disabilities and cognitive decline in the elderly," said co-author Daniel Benjamin, a behavioral economist at Cornell who is a co-director of the SSGAC.

"Another contribution of our study is that it will strengthen the methodological foundations of social-science genetics," said David Cesarini, an NYU assistant professor at the Center for Experimental Social Science and the Center for Neuroeconomics, who also co-directs the SSGAC. "We used 125,000 individuals to conduct this study. Previous studies used far smaller samples, sometimes as small as 100 individuals and rarely more than 10,000. These small samples make sense under the assumption that individual genes have large effects. However, if genes have small effects, as our study shows, then sample sizes need to be very large to produce robust findings that will reliably replicate in other samples."

The researchers were careful to note that they have not discovered "the gene for education" or that these findings somehow imply that a person's educational attainment is determined at birth.

"For most outcomes that we study as social scientists, genetic influences are likely to operate through environmental channels that are modifiable," explained NYU sociologist Dalton Conley, one of the study's co-authors who also serves on the Advisory Board of the SSGAC. "We have now taken a small but important first step toward identifying the specific genetic variants that predict educational attainment. Armed with this knowledge, we can now begin to examine how other factorsincluding public policy, parental roles, and economic statusdampen or amplify genetic effects and ultimately devise better remedies to bolster educational outcomes."

###

The study was supported by a number of funding bodies, including: the National Institute on Aging, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), through grants P01-AG005842, P01-AG005842-20S2, P30-AG012810, and T32-AG000186-23; the NIH's Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research, under grant SES-1064089; the National Science Foundation; and the Sderbergh Foundation.


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?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Multi-national study identifies links between genetic variants and educational attainment [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 30-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: James Devitt
james.devitt@nyu.edu
212-998-6808
New York University

A multi-national team of researchers has identified genetic markers that predict educational attainment by pooling data from more than 125,000 individuals in the United States, Australia, and 13 western European countries.

The study, which appears in the journal Science, was conducted by the Social Science Genetic Association Consortium (SSGAC), which includes researchers at NYU, Erasmus University, Cornell University, Harvard University, the University of Bristol, and the University of Queensland, among other institutions.

The SSGAC conducted what is called a genome-wide association study (GWAS) to explore the link between genetic variation and educational attainmentthe number of years of schooling completed by an individual and whether he or she graduated college. In a GWAS, researchers test hundreds of thousands of genetic markers for association with some characteristics such as a disease, trait or life outcome.

Because the sample included people from different countrieswhere markers for schooling vary significantlythe research team adopted the International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED) scale, which is a commonly used method for establishing a uniform measure of educational attainment across cohorts.

Anticipating that very large samples would be required to credibly detect genetic associations, the SSGAC researchers assembled a total sample size more than 10 times larger than any previous genetic study of any social-scientific outcome. The team examined associations between educational attainment and genetic variants called single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs, which are tiny changes at a single location in a person's genetic code.

The study found that the genetic markers with the strongest effects on educational attainment could each only explain two one-hundredths of a percentage point (0.02 percent). To put that figure into perspective, it is known from earlier research that the SNP with the largest effect on human height accounts for about 0.40 percent of the variation.

Combining the two million examined SNPs, the SSGAC researchers were able to explain about 2 percent of the variation in educational attainment across individuals, and anticipate that this figure will rise as larger samples become available.

"We hope that our findings will eventually be useful for understanding biological processes underlying learning, memory, reading disabilities and cognitive decline in the elderly," said co-author Daniel Benjamin, a behavioral economist at Cornell who is a co-director of the SSGAC.

"Another contribution of our study is that it will strengthen the methodological foundations of social-science genetics," said David Cesarini, an NYU assistant professor at the Center for Experimental Social Science and the Center for Neuroeconomics, who also co-directs the SSGAC. "We used 125,000 individuals to conduct this study. Previous studies used far smaller samples, sometimes as small as 100 individuals and rarely more than 10,000. These small samples make sense under the assumption that individual genes have large effects. However, if genes have small effects, as our study shows, then sample sizes need to be very large to produce robust findings that will reliably replicate in other samples."

The researchers were careful to note that they have not discovered "the gene for education" or that these findings somehow imply that a person's educational attainment is determined at birth.

"For most outcomes that we study as social scientists, genetic influences are likely to operate through environmental channels that are modifiable," explained NYU sociologist Dalton Conley, one of the study's co-authors who also serves on the Advisory Board of the SSGAC. "We have now taken a small but important first step toward identifying the specific genetic variants that predict educational attainment. Armed with this knowledge, we can now begin to examine how other factorsincluding public policy, parental roles, and economic statusdampen or amplify genetic effects and ultimately devise better remedies to bolster educational outcomes."

###

The study was supported by a number of funding bodies, including: the National Institute on Aging, part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), through grants P01-AG005842, P01-AG005842-20S2, P30-AG012810, and T32-AG000186-23; the NIH's Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research, under grant SES-1064089; the National Science Foundation; and the Sderbergh Foundation.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/nyu-msi052813.php

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In Bangladesh factory aftermath, US and European firms take different paths

The wear-and-toss ?fast fashion? craze has swept Europe and the United States in equal measure, but concern about its underpinnings has not.

In the fashion world, the latest styles were once reserved for the haute couture houses of Paris and the collections introduced here or in London; Milan, Italy; and New York. This century has seen democratization in the form of big retailers selling cheap and trendy clothes that turn over at dizzying speed ? thanks to cheap labor in places like Bangladesh ? anywhere from Paris to Pittsburgh.

But when more than a thousand of these laborers sewing clothes for US and European consumers were buried alive April 24 in a Bangladesh building collapse, the transatlantic responses differed dramatically.

RECOMMENDED: Think you know Europe? Take our geography quiz.

Clothing firms quickly came under activist and union pressure to sign the Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh: a five-year, legally binding commitment from retailers, whose suppliers will be subject to independent inspections and public reports. A finance mechanism also requires each firm to contribute to safety upgrades, at a maximum of $2.5 million each over the five-year commitment.

Yet while major retailers across Europe, like Britain?s Marks & Spencer, France?s Carrefour, and the Swedish giant H&M, have signed on, US clothing labels, for the most part, have carried on with business as usual. Only two big American firms have joined the pact.

TRAGEDY AT RANA PLAZA

?I think European companies are more aware of a need to be proactive for their reputations,? says Elisabeth Laville, who founded Utopies, a Paris-based consultancy that has helped various organizations in Europe and the US on corporate responsibility strategies. ?American companies are betting on the fact that consumers will not change ... the way they buy.?

So-called fast fashion, a consumer-driven model that offers buyers the latest ?must haves? at low prices, has taken off in the past decade, with stores like H&M and Zara leading the way. This quick-response system employs thousands of workers across Asia: In Bangladesh alone, there are 4.5 million garment workers.

On April 24, like every other day, hundreds of Bangladeshis, the vast majority young rural women, filtered into work for their garment-making jobs at Rana Plaza. They shouldn?t be high-risk jobs, but in Bangladesh they are.

The day before the factory collapsed, cracks appeared on the walls of the eight-story building. But managers were focused on the bottom line, and the employees, toiling for the world?s lowest wages, couldn?t afford to stop working. So production continued until the building collapsed, killing 1,127 people inside ? the deadliest accident in the garment industry?s history. A haunting photo of two workers buried alive, in an embrace, spread across social media, leading to public pressure for the accord.

Sidebar: How Indonesia's clothing industry reforms could prove a model for Bangladesh

The accord agreed upon in the accident?s aftermath draws on an earlier agreement forged by unions and activists in the wake of other deadly, if less publicized, incidents in Bangladesh. Then, only PVH, the owner of the Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger brands, and Germany?s Tchibo, signed on.

But after Rana Plaza, Sweden?s H&M, the largest retailer operating in Bangladesh, also came on board: a key move, activists say, that paved the way for others, including Britain?s Primark and Spain?s Inditex, owner of Zara. With some 40 companies on board, the new agreement is singular in scope and covers more than 1,000 of Bangladesh?s 4,500 factories.

There are some doubts about its long-term impact, especially if consumers? penchant for bargains remains strong and corruption rampant in Bangladesh. But others have called it a game changer for the country, the world?s second largest apparel exporter after China. They say the accord will inevitably raise standards and workers? expectations ? potentially causing a ripple effect on the global industry.

WHY EUROPE AND NOT THE US?

?The fact that it?s binding, transparent, and independent, that is what is new,? says Nayla Ajaltouni, the coordinator for the Collectif Ethique sur l??tiquette, the French platform of the Clean Clothes Campaign. ?It?s a big, real step forward.?

But it is an agreement that US companies, at least for now, have apparently been hesitant to sign onto ? despite intense shaming campaigns. Some big European firms have not signed it, and many who did had to be pushed. Likewise, only two US firms have signed onto it, PVH and Abercrombie & Fitch. US retailers Cato and The Children?s Place, both of which had products made at Rana Plaza in the past year, have not signed on.

At first glance, the difference in response appears to be one of numbers. Sixty percent of the clothes sewn in Bangladesh head to Europe. The European Union is the country?s biggest market.

But there are cultural and historical reasons that Europe is forging the way, too. In general, says Ben Vanpeperstraete, a policy officer at World Solidarity in Brussels, there is a tradition of a functional working relationship between governments, unions, nongovernmental organizations, and companies. ?In Europe, people look slightly differently toward a social dialogue,? he says. ?Entering into an agreement with trade unions is more accepted, while a US brand like Wal-Mart is notorious for having a very anti-trade union stance both in rhetoric and actions.?

Allyson Stewart-Allen, director of International Marketing Partners in London and co- author of ?Working with Americans,? says she also finds a healthy skepticism in European consumers, which could stem from a history dating back to the exploitative feudal systems of five centuries ago. ?The Europeans are much more scrutinizing. They are more circumspect,? she says. ?There is a suspicion in Europe, which [has] much older economies, over what big corporations get up to.?

PRICE VERSUS RESPONSIBILITY

And that might influence how retailers act. US firms, which have cited legal liabilities, have embraced a lawyer-driven dialogue that favors a corporate instead of consumer response, Ms. Stewart-Allen says. North American re-tailers say they are drawing up their own safety plan.

Liz Leffman, a codirector at Clothesource, a sourcing agency for the apparel industry in Oxfordshire, England, says that Americans appear to be more concerned with the bottom line.

?Price is more important in the US. For companies like Wal-Mart, it?s key, whereas in Europe corporate responsibility is a bigger issue. There is more of an ethical thread,? she says.

The European activist network was particularly successful in connecting the dots between the disaster and stores in Europe, says Dara O?Rourke, who focuses on environmental and social impacts of global production systems at the University of California at Berkeley. ?I think the European activists have been very effective at targeting European brands in public conversation and putting pressure on them,? he says.

Ms. Ajaltouni, the activist in France, says that she does not see a major split between continents ? rather she sees differences between individual companies. But she does say that the organizing power of activists with the Clean Clothes Campaign multiplies pressure on European retailers.

If activists in Spain protest against Mango, for example, that retailer will know that the activist network across Europe will also be protesting in Germany, France, and everywhere they have outlets. ?European countries will feel pressure in every country that they have re- tailers,? she says. Their challenge today, she says, is having that awareness trickle down to the buyer of clothes, and having consumers stop to reflect (?There must be a reason that these clothes are so cheap?).

?YOU DON?T KNOW, DO YOU??

But while data show that US and European consumers say they care about ethical practices, it?s hard for them to know what exactly is ethical. And as opposed to consumer choices on fair-trade eggs, for example, when it comes to clothes, size, fit, color, and personal style are equally considered, says Jeffery Bray, a lecturer in marketing and consumer behavior at Bournemouth University in England.

In the midst of the economic crisis in Europe, so, too, is price.

Walking through Kingston upon Thames shopping center in south London is like visiting any major town center across Britain. Familiar names dot the high street and indoor Bentall Centre, tempting passersby to part with their money in what have been tough retail times.

In Kingston, that means endless sales and bargain hunters like Michelle Jenkins, who was accompanied by her three children on a recent day as she walked out of a Marks & Spencer store. ?I do think about ... what happened in Bangladesh, but to be honest I have to think about house finances first. With three children to buy school uniforms for, I have to buy on cost, and if that means it?s come from Bangladesh or another developing country, then so be it,? she says. ?I can?t afford to be choosy.?

Dodging the afternoon shoppers was student Daniel Jones, who said he wished there was more information for consumers to make ethical choices.

?I try and avoid some stores which sell cheap clothes because you don?t know, do you? I prefer designer labels, and I just assume [that] because they?re a bit more expensive, they?ve been sourced ethically,? he says.

A TEST FOR THE INDUSTRY

It often takes tragedy to drive real reform. The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911 in New York City, which killed 146 workers who could not escape through locked stairwell and exit doors, led to an overhaul of US labor laws and workers? rights.

In Bangladesh, Rana Plaza was only the latest in a string of accidents due to poor infrastructure and shoddy construction. In the past five months alone, 1,254 people have been killed in collapses, fires, and stampedes, says Charles Kernaghan, director at the Pittsburgh-based Institute for Global Labour and Human Rights.

He sees the accord as crucial to improving standards, but the deeper problem ? government corruption that has led to lax regulations and negligence ? is still there. ?The major problem with Bangladesh is it?s hollowed out. There?s nothing you can?t just buy out,? he says.

He and many others say that even though the accord does have a clause that increases the role of unions, if that part fails, the impact of the accord will be limited. Unions already exist on paper in Bangladesh, but in reality they are stifled. ?If they had a voice, if they could negotiate with management, you wouldn?t have these fires or these collapses,? Mr. Kernaghan says.

?It?s very good that companies signed the agreement,? says Ms. Laville in France. But the social and environmental consequences will remain as long as fast fashion remains the rule, she says, ?as long as people want the cheapest possible clothes changing every month, with people buying more clothes than they can wear.?

RECOMMENDED: Think you know Europe? Take our geography quiz.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bangladesh-factory-aftermath-us-european-firms-different-paths-162806011.html

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Solar Energy's Sunny Future

Over the past several years, the solar industry has been trying to recover from a crash in the price of silicon?a key component in the construction of solar panels.

For most of us, the effects of the price drop were masked by the tinge of scandal: Among the victims of the crash was the infamous Solyndra, which went bankrupt at the cost to the country of hundreds of millions of dollars. Conservatives seized on the company's collapse as a reason for the government to divest itself from renewable-energy projects. Campaigning outside Solyndra's shuttered headquarters in Fremont, Calif., last year, Mitt Romney argued?that the company was a symbol of "the president's failure to understand the basic nature of free enterprise in America."

But amid the right-wing outrage over President Obama's investment choices, we lost sight of what Solyndra's collapse really meant: A boon for solar energy in general.

The story begins and ends with China. Sensing vast opportunities in green technology, China began mass-producing solar panels in the last decade in ever greater quantities, flooding the international market. The United States joined Europe in pledging stiff tariffs against Chinese dumping, but not before dozens of Western solar-panel manufacturers went bankrupt. Beijing, because it can do this sort of thing, responded by buying up some of the excess and built lots of solar farms. The country plans to install 10,000 megawatts of solar capacity this year, three times as much as last year.

The intervention seems to be working; prices of solar panels appear to be recovering. And even better, the glut that closed Solyndra has helped drive the overall price of solar energy down to what economists regard as a magic number?about $1 per watt.

In the United States, politicians held up Solyndra as an example of why solar isn't a viable energy solution. But in fact, it may have been just the opposite. What caused the company to go belly-up has also made the solar industry more competitive relative to other forms of energy.

Still, solar panels aren't going to start cropping up on everyone's homes, said Danish statistician and climate skeptic-of-sorts Bjorn Lomborg.*

"The reality is, solar panel costs are only a tiny part of it. You also need installation in individual homes," Lomborg told me. "And the other part of it is, you need to have some sort of backup."

Learning to store solar energy for when it's cloudy has been one of the technology's biggest challenges. Still, the crash of silicon has some analysts predicting that solar energy will actually become a good investment?not just an ambitious one?by as early as 2020, if not sooner in some other countries. Here's a chart of what that might look like (click for an interactive version via Bloomberg).


Energy analysts predict that as the price of solar energy continues to fall, it'll start becoming an attractive investment. (Bloomberg New Energy Finance)

*In his defense, Lomborg isn't a climate-change denier; he simply believes the world would be better off addressing other problems first.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/solar-energys-sunny-future-131051948.html

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

Lebanese TV: Syria has received Russian missiles

FILE - This Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2009 file photo shows Syrian President Bashar Assad, seen, during a meeting with his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, unseen, at the presidency in Tehran, Iran. Syrian President Bashar Assad says he won't step down before elections are held in his war-ravaged country. The Syrian leader's comments, published Saturday in the Argentine newspaper Clarin, highlight the difficulties the U.S. and Russia face in getting the Assad regime and Syria's political opposition to the table at an international conference envisioned for next month. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, File)

FILE - This Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2009 file photo shows Syrian President Bashar Assad, seen, during a meeting with his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, unseen, at the presidency in Tehran, Iran. Syrian President Bashar Assad says he won't step down before elections are held in his war-ravaged country. The Syrian leader's comments, published Saturday in the Argentine newspaper Clarin, highlight the difficulties the U.S. and Russia face in getting the Assad regime and Syria's political opposition to the table at an international conference envisioned for next month. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, File)

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows Syrian forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad at the Dabaa military air base, in Homs province, Syria, Thursday, May 30, 2013. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported ongoing clashes in the town on Thursday. The Observatory called for urgent aid to the injured inside the town, most of which is now controlled by Assad?s troops, including the Dabaa military air base just outside Qusair. (AP Photo/SANA)

This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows Syrian forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad at the Dabaa military air base, in Homs province, Syria, Thursday, May 30, 2013. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported ongoing clashes in the town on Thursday. The Observatory called for urgent aid to the injured inside the town, most of which is now controlled by Assad?s troops, including the Dabaa military air base just outside Qusair. (AP Photo/SANA)

BEIRUT (AP) ? The Syrian president has told Lebanon's Hezbollah-owned TV station that Damascus received the first shipment of Russian air defense missiles, according to remarks released Thursday.

Bashar Assad's comment on the arrival of the long-range S-300 air defense missiles in Syria will further ratchet up tensions in the region and undermine efforts to hold U.N.-sponsored talks with Syria's warring sides.

Israel's defense chief, Moshe Yaalon, said earlier this week that Russia's plan to supply Syria with the weapons is a threat and that Israel was prepared to use force to stop the delivery.

The Al-Manar TV, owned by the Lebanese militant Hezbollah group, released Assad's comment on the Russian missiles through its breaking news service to clients on Thursday morning. An official at the station confirmed to The Associated Press that the remark was from the interview. The TV is to air the exclusive interview later Thursday.

On Monday, the European Union lifted an arms embargo on Syria, paving way for individual countries of the 27-member bloc to send weapons to rebels fighting to topple Assad's regime. The move raised fears of an arms race in the Middle East.

Israel has carried out several airstrikes in Syria in recent months that are believed to have destroyed weapons shipments bound for Hezbollah. It is not clear whether Israeli warplanes entered Syrian airspace in these attacks.

But with the Russian missiles in Syria's possession, the Israeli air force's ability to act could be limited.

Israel has lobbied Moscow over the planned sale of S-300 air-defense missiles to Syria but on Tuesday, Russia's deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, said his government remained committed to the deal.

The S-300s have a range of up to 200 kilometers (125 miles) and the capability to track and strike multiple targets simultaneously. Syria already possesses Russian-made air defenses, and Israel is believed to have used long-distance bombs fired from Israeli or Lebanese airspace. The S-300s would expand Syria's capabilities, allowing it to counter airstrikes launched from foreign airspace as well.

Monday's decision by the EU paved the way for individual countries to send weapons to Assad's outgunned opponents. The EU's move may have little impact on the conflict since no single European country is expected to send lethal weapons to the rebels anytime soon.

Britain and France, the main military powers in the EU, had pushed for lifting the embargo. They have argued that Europe's threat of arming the rebels in the future would force Assad to negotiate in good faith.

Russia, an Assad ally, harshly criticized Europe's decision to allow the arming of Syrian rebels, saying it undercuts international efforts to bring the opposing sides in Syrian conflict together for a peace conference.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-05-30-Syria/id-7010da22f0544a5fa37c27717fb2f6e4

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How Obama should work with business to combat China cyberspying

If the US wishes to stop Chinese economic cyber-espionage, it will need to increase the costs and reduce the benefits to China of such activities. US government actions are important, but the key players in this game sit in the private sector. A true public-private partnership is needed.

By Irving Lachow,?Op-ed contributor / May 29, 2013

US Ambassador to China Gary Locke speaks at the 6th US-China Internet Industry Forum in Beijing April 9. Op-ed contributor Irving Lachow writes: 'All nations spy on each other, but right now, the United States and China are playing the spy-vs.-spy game using different sets of rules. If the US wants China to change its behavior, it will need to change the payoff that China gets from playing the game its way.'

Jason Lee/Reuters

Enlarge

The United States has made it clear to China that its cyber-espionage activities are a serious concern.

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The Washington Post reported this week that several US military weapons systems and technologies have been compromised by Chinese hackers, according to the Defense Science Board. As alarming as that news is, China?s cyber-spying attacks are also bombarding US businesses.

If the US wishes to stop this Chinese economic cyber-espionage, it will need to increase the costs and reduce the benefits of such activities. That will cause China and other competitors to rethink whether such activities are worth it. Government actions are important, but the key players in this game sit in the private sector. A true public-private partnership is needed.

The threat of Chinese cyberspying to US businesses is clear. A report released last week by the Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property states that: ?China is two-thirds of the intellectual property theft problem, and we are at a point where it is robbing us of innovation to bolster their own industry, at a cost of millions of jobs.?

What makes the US-China dispute unique is that the two countries are playing a game ? spy vs. spy ? that is accepted in international relations, but they are playing it by different rules.

The US government views espionage as a national security activity, not as a tool for furthering the economic well-being of US companies. In contrast, China views the well-being of its companies as being directly tied to the security interests of the nation. In their minds, drawing a line between espionage focused on stealing state secrets and espionage focused on stealing corporate secrets is arbitrary.

China is not the only country that has such views. However, the scale and scope of Chinese activity is unparalleled, and the potential threat it poses to US competitiveness is certainly raising the eyebrows, if the not hackles, of the nation?s highest leaders.

Because of this fundamental difference in the acceptability of state-sponsored cyber-economic espionage, the United States will be hard pressed to stop such activities with words alone. The US will need to raise the costs and lower the benefits of such activities. There are several policy levers that the US government can use to achieve those goals, though changing China?s fundamental views through government actions alone will be difficult.

For example, the US government can threaten retaliatory actions, be they economic, diplomatic, legal, or technical in nature. For example, the US could impose economic sanctions or deny visas to suspected cyberspies and/or their enablers.

There are certainly benefits to pursuing these ideas, but US options will be limited because of the trade-offs involved in increasing tensions with its largest trading partner. If China truly views economic espionage as a national security matter, if will strongly resist efforts to curtail such activity, especially if it views the US position as being hypocritical. The US may thus risk retaliatory actions on American companies or citizens if it pushes too hard on this issue.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/B1RBsmdpiuU/How-Obama-should-work-with-business-to-combat-China-cyberspying

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

SKorea idles 2 nuke plants after cable tests faked

(AP) ? South Korea has idled two nuclear power plants after finding test results for crucial control cables were falsified.

South Korea's trade and energy ministry said Tuesday a private company fabricated the results after the cables failed international tests of their ability to withstand changes in voltage and pressure.

The cables are responsible for shutting off radioactive materials or cooling nuclear fuel during an emergency.

Another four nuclear reactors that were either shut down for scheduled maintenance or under construction were also using cables that had failed the tests.

The revelations add to worries about nuclear safety and power shortages during the summer. They are a new blow to South Korea's ambitions to export nuclear technology.

South Korea has 23 nuclear power plants which supply about 30 percent of its energy.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-05-28-SKorea-Nuclear/id-252b6133fad84e3cb90cfb8e3bd993f6

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Examiner.com Publishes Then Deletes an Unbelievably Deranged Wingnut Conspiracy Fantasy (Little green footballs)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/308955469?client_source=feed&format=rss

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AstraZeneca to pay about $260M for Omthera Pharma

British drugmaker AstraZeneca PLC plans to spend about $260 million on Omthera Pharmaceuticals Inc., a specialty drug developer with a potential treatment for patients who have high levels of fats called triglycerides in their blood.

AstraZeneca said Tuesday it will pay $12.70 for each share of Omthera, which priced an initial public offering last month at $8 per share. AstraZeneca's price represents an 87 percent premium compared to the stock's closing price Friday of $6.77.

The price of Omthera shares nearly doubled, climbing $6.73 to $13.50, before markets opened Tuesday.

AstraZeneca said the deal totals about $323 million when counting Omthera's cash balances.

Omthera shareholders also could receive additional payments totaling about $120 million if the potential treatment called Epanova reaches development milestones. Those contingent value rights add up to about $4.70 per share

Omthera, based in Princeton, N.J., has completed late-stage testing on Epanova, a fish oil-based treatment. It plans to submit the drug, which is a coated, soft gelatin capsule, to U.S. regulators for approval by the middle of this year.

Omthera has only 14 employees and focuses on developing new treatments for abnormal lipid levels in the blood. The company's shares closed at $7.43 on April 11, the stock's first day of trading, and had remained below the IPO price until Tuesday morning.

AstraZeneca said last month that its first-quarter profit fell 31 percent as generic competition for bipolar medication Seroquel IR, high blood pressure drug Atacand and cholesterol drug Crestor drove revenue down.

U.S.-traded shares of AstraZeneca rose 2.4 percent, or $1.25, to $53.42 in premarket trading Tuesday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-05-28-US-AstraZeneca-Acquisition/id-3d33b941b4c2428eb40ba8bffd3d4780

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Are Healthy Family Relationships Essential to Finding Love? | Evan ...

Hi Evan,
I am a 34-year-old German girl living in Munich. I?ve read two of your books and I?ve been following your blog. Yes, you could call me a fan. Your advice has helped me a lot and I feel lucky that a friend has send me a link to one of your articles about one year ago.

I?d love to hear your opinion on the following: You often mention that you consider it important that a guy is on good terms with his family and has a good relationship with his parents. I personally don?t have a good relationship with my parents and I am very sad about this. But during my childhood and early adult life I suffered a lot from my depressive mother and my (verbally) abusive father until I decided a couple of years ago to limit our contact to a minimum since there was too much damage done already. I understand that my family history is far from ideal, but this doesn?t mean that I am not a family person or that I am a bad partner. Of course I am in no position to turn down a man for this reason, and I also hope that I am not judged by a man who thinks that a healthy family background is vital for a good relationship. Although I normally find the fact that a man is close with his family very attractive I often connect better with men who can relate to what it?s been like for me.

So here?s the question: ?How important is a healthy family background for a healthy relationship?? Am I doomed because I come from a broken family?
?Jenny

Your history does cause complications. You are undoubtedly aware of some of them; you are undoubtedly oblivious to others. This is why therapists have jobs.

No, Jenny, you?re not ?doomed? because you come from a broken family.

That would doom far too many people and I?m kind of an optimist about love.

But your history does cause complications. You are undoubtedly aware of some of them; you are undoubtedly oblivious to others.

This is why therapists have jobs.

Source: http://www.evanmarckatz.com/blog/are-healthy-family-relationships-essential-to-finding-love/

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Randomness: Microbes at home in your gut may also be influencing your brain

By Tom Siegfried

Web edition: May 28, 2013

When your gut grumbles or growls, it?s speaking to your brain. And it?s a perfectly reasonable thing to do. Evolution favors guts that can tell a brain what they want.

So it?s not surprising that the brain and the gut should have a reliable communications connection. But suppose the gut?s messaging system was hacked by foreign invaders sending a different sort of message, messing with your mind. Guess what? It is. Unless you?re a special sort of experimental mouse, your gut already hosts something close to 100 trillion invaders. They?re members of perhaps a thousand different species from half a dozen or more phyla of microbes.

Actually, it would be more proper to call most of those invaders colonists. In the first few days after birth, a baby?s gut becomes home to diverse families of microbes that normally hang around for a lifetime. These colonist microbes outnumber your own cells. But they pose no threat of declaring themselves a ruling majority and taking over your body. They are allies, helping you digest your food and assisting in protecting you from disease. And they send important signals to your brain.

The precise mix of these colonist microbes is not the same in all individuals. It depends on your age, your genes, what you eat and where you live, among other things. And any one person?s mix can change over time.

?We are only beginning to understand how the diversity and distribution of these prominent phyla contribute to health and disease,? write Jane Foster and Karen-Anne McVey Neufeld in the May Trends in Neurosciences.

Your gut?s colonial microbes aid in the development of the immune system, which battles malicious bugs that aren?t normally part of your gut?s microbiota ? its microbial repertoire. ?Germ-free? mice raised without colonist microbes have a weaker immune system and show exaggerated responses to stress. Studies have also shown that gut microbes influence signaling in the HPA axis (for hypothalamus, pituitary gland and adrenal glands, the key players in the body?s response to stress).

Early in development, gut microbes affect the wiring of nerves in the stress system, influencing how the body reacts to stress for the rest of its life. That suggests that the microbiota?s impact extends to some aspects of mental health, a function only recently appreciated.

?We suggest that gut microbiota are an important player in how the body influences the brain ? and influence risk of disease, including anxiety and mood disorders,? write Foster and Neufeld, of McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada.

Depression, for instance, might be related to snafus in stress-axis signaling that microbes can influence. But the bugs may also affect the brain more directly, adjusting the sensitivity of nerve cells in the gut that send signals to the brain to influence behavior. Gut bacteria also appear to alter the chemical activity of nervous system messenger molecules such as serotonin, an important player in mood disorders including depression.

Almost all the evidence establishing this new understanding of the gut?s germs comes from mouse studies. So the lessons for using this knowledge to help out humans are limited. Nevertheless, the mouse research suggests some possibly promising avenues to explore.

For one thing, treatment with ?probiotics? ? friendly microbes consumed not as medicine but as a nutritional supplement ? may prove helpful in fighting anxiety and depression. Probiotics reduce anxiety and depressive behavior in mice, and similar effects have been seen in a few human studies. Those studies, though, merely showed lower scores on stress and anxiety questionnaires in healthy people after they took probiotics. It will take tests in actual psychiatric patients to see whether probiotics will really be useful treatments for people with serious mood disorders.

In any event, it?s not very likely that manipulating the mix of microbes in the gut will become a cure-all for mental illness. But it?s also not a good strategy to treat depression and other mood disorders by focusing only on the brain while neglecting the gut microbiota. That would be like blaming global warming on power plants while ignoring cars and cattle (not to mention the cattle?s own microbiota). Complex systems pose problems that can?t be solved by pretending that the issue is simpler than it is.

And the gut microbiota?s impact on the body and brain may be even more complex than research to date has shown. Gut microbiota may affect learning and memory. Studies of gut microbiota might even offer new insights into such baffling medical problems as autism, obesity and, perhaps, personality disorders.

So far, the evidence is not conclusive on those points. But some scientists have a gut feeling about it.??

Follow Tom Siegfried on Twitter at @tom_siegfried.

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/350674/title/Microbes_at_home_in_your_gut_may_also_be_influencing_your_brain

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

What's an American lawyer doing in Afghanistan?

As Western troops plan for the drawdown in Afghanistan, one American lawyer has set up her own private practice in the Afghan capital and doesn?t have plans to leave any time soon. She?s too focused on helping make sure the laws are enforced.

The lawyer, Kimberley Motley, is best known for defending a girl imprisoned for ?adultery? after being raped and impregnated by her attacker in 2010. The victim had received a 12-year sentence in appellate court with the alternative of marrying her rapist, and was serving the sentence when her case came to Ms. Motley?s attention.

She lodged a request for a presidential pardon citing Sharia law, Afghan law, and international conventions, while at the same time launching an online petition that garnered 6,000 Afghan signatures in three days. The girl was granted the pardon in December 2011 by President Karzai and released to a shelter.

RECOMMENDED: How well do you know Afghanistan? Take our quiz.

Motley is trying to lead by example. She says it is important to draw attention to human rights abuses through specific cases ? if the victims are willing to go public ? in order, she says, ?to create test cases of how things can be done.?

She made her first trip to Afghanistan in 2008 as part of the US government?s rule-of-law support program after five years working for the Wisconsin Public Defenders? Office.

The aim of the program was to address a lack of general legal knowledge. Motley and the others on the program helped train local defense lawyers and assisted them in writing legal briefs. Motley personally helped write the brief for the landmark 2009 appeal by an Afghan student who had been sentenced to death after downloading an article on women?s rights.

As she looked around at all the nongovernmental organizations and researchers in Kabul trying to help, though, she realized tangible results were relatively few and far between.

So, ?sick of all the report writing on capacity building,? she determined the best way she could achieve results was to act directly within the system. She started her own private legal services and consultancy firm, initially taking only foreign clients. She then spent two and a half years gaining familiarity with the complications and intricacies of Afghan law and courts before she decided it was time to accept her first Afghan client.

A SERIES OF FIRSTS

Motley?s first case for an Afghan client didn?t draw much attention, but some of her subsequent ones have made international headlines and brought her death threats and an arrest warrant, which she shrugs off. ?It?s sort of standard operating procedure,? she says.

In December Motley filed the first civil suit against government officials for refusing to act: A young law student reported spousal abuse to police who did nothing, and the student was later killed. The case is currently pending. Many local colleagues in the area have expressed appreciation for Motley?s work but also concern over potential backlash from conservatives.

"Sometimes international attention is needed," says Mary Akrami, who opened Kabul?s first women?s shelter and who represented Afghan civil society at the 2001 Bonn Conference. "But sometimes it is also very risky, given the reactions we?ve seen from conservatives.??

Ms. Akrami has reason for concern. The few shelters in the country are in danger of shutting down due both to a sharp reduction in funding from the international community and an immediate threat to the Elimination of Violence Against Women law from traditionalist members of Parliament.

HURDLES

Motley is determined to make an impact on the system, but faces a number of hurdles, including corruption, lack of understanding of law ? among both the population and many of those working within the system itself ? and widespread distrust of the formal justice system. Many of the traditionalists have no formal training in Afghan constitutional law.

There are a lot of people currently working in the justice system who have been there for years, prior to any reform, says Heather Barr a researcher from Human Rights Watch. She points out that there are judges and lawyers who never went to university and who ?cannot read and write well, let alone understand? Afghan law.

"You see this in the poor quality of judicial decisions, in the fact that there really isn?t any tradition of case law, of precedent. So it?s a very, very weak system, and it?s a system where rule of law is really compromised. And this is one of the threats to stability here,'' says Ms. Barr.

''There?s this feeling that if somebody violates your rights, if somebody comes to your house and steals from you or kills you, the government isn?t necessarily able or ready to protect you."

Another major problem, Barr notes, is that ?the formal justice system is absent in many parts of the country,? leaving many with little choice but to make recourse to jirgas and shuras to solve disputes: traditional systems in which neither women nor the young have any voice.

In an attempt to address the inconsistency of decisions handed down and thus the population?s faith in the system, Motley recently launched a set of sentencing guidelines drawn up on the basis of Afghan law and in collaboration with the Italian Cooperation.

She noted that the Supreme Court had already ?gotten on board? with the project. The idea is to apply the guidelines initially to juvenile cases, training judges and assessing them, and then eventually incorporate them into the entire justice system. She hopes that the guidelines will play a major role in increasing accountability. ?I feel very strongly about this,? she says. ?I think this is a very good way of building foundations, and I think I have enough institutional knowledge to create something like this.?

Overall, though, she says that "whether or not it?s sustainable is really up to the Afghan people ? it?s always been up to whether or not they really want it."

RECOMMENDED: How well do you know Afghanistan? Take our quiz.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/whats-american-lawyer-doing-afghanistan-130014150.html

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Monday, May 27, 2013

Freeze Your Target In Its Tracks With a Liquid Nitrogen Gun

Wired had a chance to play with what looks like one of the most entertaining but dangerous-looking contraptions you can easily get your hands on. Designed for use by responsible professionals like doctors, researchers, and even avant-garde chefs, the Brymill Cry-Ac 3 is capable of firing a blast of liquid nitrogen that instantly freezes its target to 320 degrees below zero. Cue a mad scientist-esque laugh.

It's the perfect way to guarantee an ice cream cone doesn't drip or a laptop doesn't overheat. But let's be honest here, anyone outside of the above mentioned professions will only be using the blaster to freeze and shatter whatever they can get their hands on. And as long as they put the results on YouTube, that's ok.

The Cry-Ac the folks at Wired got to play with was particularly neat since it included an accessory called the TrackerCam which provides real time feedback on the surface temperature of what's being chilled with liquid nitrogen. It's kind of like a built-in GoPro, but designed with safety in mind, not for capturing your ridiculous pranks. [Brymill Cryogenic Systems via Wired]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/freeze-your-target-in-its-tracks-with-a-liquid-nitrogen-509990789

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Obama calls Oklahoma tornado's toll 'hard to comprehend' (reuters)

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Hipstamatic's photo filter app Oggl now open for everyone

Hipstamatic's photo filter app Oggl now open for everyone

Hipstamatic's subscription-based photo filter app is now publicly available on iTunes, a few weeks after its invite-only launch. Oggl is a free download, and you get five of its parent app's virtual lenses and films that you can mix and match to concoct your own filters from the get-go -- it also lets you edit a photo's effects after you've taken it. But if you find its small selection of lenses and films limiting and you'd prefer to have the whole enchilada (read: all Hipstamatic filters), you've got to part with $2.99 per quarter or $9.99 per year. No word yet on whether an Android version is in the works, but a preview of the app shown at the Nokia Lumia 925 launch event indicates that it's on its way to Windows Phone 8.

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Source: iTunes

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/25/hipstamatic-oggl-public-itunes/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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A controversial victory lap for Lewis at Cannes

CANNES, France (AP) ? Jerry Lewis, so beloved in France, isn't quite overcome with emotion now that he's back at the Cannes Film Festival.

The festival, he says, is "for snobs," and when he meets a reporter from his native land, he exhales, "It's so nice to hear an American." To him, Cannes isn't an epicenter of rabid Lewis fandom, it's simply "business," he says, chomping on gum.

And at 87, Lewis is back in business. Nearly two decades since his last film, he's at Cannes with "Max Rose," a modest independent film in which he stars as an elderly man reconciling himself to life without his late wife.

"I'm very happy to relax and stay home with my family, and if something comes up, I'll consider it," Lewis, in an interview, said of his return to movies. "That's the nice part about 87. You just tell people: Oh, you're very tired."

At Cannes, Lewis has been anything but tired, both burnishing and tarnishing his legacy as a brilliant comedic performer. His Cannes tribute ? the festival paid "homage" to him in an out-of-competition screening of "Max Rose," as well as with a screening of his 1961 classic "The Ladies Man" ? has been overshadowed by his views about female comedians.

In a press conference, Lewis told reporters that his earlier-stated feelings haven't changed in recent years: Comedy isn't for women, he claims. A day after his comments roiled women across the Internet, Lewis wasn't apologetic, saying he sees females as mothers, not stand-ups.

"It's the truth. I can't help it," Lewis says, shrugging. "Women, it's just wrong. I don't care that the audience laughs at it and likes it. I don't happen to like it. I have too much respect for the gender. And I think that they are wrong in doing it. I can't expect them to stop working, but just don't work anywhere where I have to look at it."

It's a clearly out-of-date attitude that has turned many away from Lewis. In Cannes, "Max Rose" didn't help his reputation. The film, by first-time filmmaker Daniel Noah, drew terrible reviews at the festival. Variety said only "the most irrationally charitable of Lewis' fans" will appreciate it.

But such opinions mean little to Lewis. He made the film with Noah purely because he liked the script ? the best he's ever read, he says. It's the rare film to tell a story about the struggles of growing older, featuring a downbeat performance from Lewis far from the elastic farce his fans are accustomed to seeing.

Asked why he hadn't made a film since 1995's "Funny Bones," Lewis responds: "You see the movies they're putting out? What am I going to do, discuss that?"

Noah, who wrote the script based on his grandfather, sought out Lewis with little expectation of landing him. Months after sending the screenplay, Lewis called him and committed over the phone. Lewis told him he hadn't planned to make another film, but decided, "I gotta give them one more Jerry picture."

"I was braced for a difficult experience," says Noah. "I saw nothing but horror stories about how he was controlling and irascible and unpredictable and moody. . But I cannot explain to you the chasm between the man that othjcoers seem to know and the man that I know. I have not had a single moment of tension with him, of difficulty. He has been like a grandfather to me."

Noah says Lewis ? who helmed more than a dozen films in his career, including 1963's "The Nutty Professor" ? left the directing completely to him. He gave his famous star little direction, save for the occasional reminder to be more minimal, more "sad clown," says Noah.

"He's a wonderful kid," says Lewis. "When you're 87, almost everybody's a kid."

Lewis has continued to perform concerts ? "a wonderful way to make a fortune," he says. Retirement is not on the table. "I'm happiest when I'm on the stage," says Lewis, who was honored with the Academy Awards' humanitarian award in 2009 after years of telethon hosting for the Muscular Dystrophy Association.

"Wherever the audience is is where you want to go," he says. "And if you're a ham, like me, you go wherever the action is. You see a lens and a crew and say, 'Yeah!'"

At the press conference in Cannes, Lewis proved that he still has his pugnacious wit and eagerness for laughs.

Asked about Dean Martin, Lewis' famed comedy partner in the '50s, he responded: "He died, you know. When I arrived here and he wasn't here I knew something was wrong." (Martin, with whom Lewis parted acrimoniously, died in 1995.)

"I've worked hard to sustain a reputation of: If you buy a ticket, you know you're going to get entertained," says Lewis. "That's what I was taught."

Lewis may be many things ? talented, funny, honest, out-of-touch, sexist ? but perhaps above all else, he's an entertainer. "Max Rose" marks his 82nd year performing.

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/controversial-victory-lap-lewis-cannes-174528118.html

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French soldier stabbed in throat outside Paris

Police officers stand near the cordoned off spot where a French soldier was stabbed in the throat in the busy commercial district of La Defense, outside Paris, Saturday May 25, 2013, and France's president said authorities are investigating any possible links with the recent slaying of a British soldier.(AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

Police officers stand near the cordoned off spot where a French soldier was stabbed in the throat in the busy commercial district of La Defense, outside Paris, Saturday May 25, 2013, and France's president said authorities are investigating any possible links with the recent slaying of a British soldier.(AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

Police officers stand near the cordoned off spot where a French soldier was stabbed in the throat in the busy commercial district of La Defense, outside Paris, Saturday May 25, 2013, and France's president said authorities are investigating any possible links with the recent slaying of a British soldier.(AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

Police officers stand near the cordoned off spot where a French soldier was stabbed in the throat in the busy commercial district of La Defense, outside Paris, Saturday May 25, 2013, and France's president said authorities are investigating any possible links with the recent slaying of a British soldier.(AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

PARIS (AP) ? A French soldier was stabbed in the throat in a busy commercial district outside Paris on Saturday, and the government said it was trying to determine if there were any links with the bloody killing of a British soldier by suspected Islamic extremists.

French President Francois Hollande said the identity of the attacker, who escaped, was unknown and cautioned against jumping to conclusions about the assault on the uniformed soldier in the La Defense shopping area. The life of the 23-year-old soldier was not in danger, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

On Wednesday, British soldier Lee Rigby, 25, was brutally stabbed on a London street in broad daylight in a suspected terrorist attack that has raised fears of potential copycat strikes.

The French soldier was on a group patrol as part of a national protection program when he was attacked from behind, prosecutor Robert Gelli told BFM-TV. The assailant did not say a word, Gelli told Europe 1.

"There are elements ? the sudden violence of the attack ? that could lead one to believe there might be a comparison with what happened in London," Interior Minister Manuel Valls told France 2 television. "But at this point, honestly, let us be prudent."

Rigby was attacked while walking outside the Royal Artillery Barracks in the Woolwich area of south London.

The gruesome scene was recorded on witnesses' cellphones, and a video emerged in which one of the two suspects ? his hands bloodied ? boasted of their exploits and warned of more violence as the soldier lay on the ground. Holding bloody knives and a meat cleaver, the suspects waited for police, who shot them in the legs, witnesses said.

In the video, one of the suspects declared, "We swear by almighty Allah we will never stop fighting you ... We must fight them as they fight us."

Two Muslim hard-liners have identified that suspect as Michael Adebolajo, a Christian who converted to Islam and attended several London demonstrations organized by banned British radical group al-Muhajiroun.

French security forces have been on heightened alert since their country launched a military intervention in the African nation of Mali in January to regain territory seized by Islamic radicals. British Prime Minister David Cameron was himself in Paris meeting with Hollande when he first received word of the London attack.

Last year, three French paratroopers were killed by a man police describe as a French-born Islamic extremist who then went on to strike a Jewish school in the south of France, killing four more people.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-25-EU-France-Soldier-Stabbed/id-ee762cf826084b0dab2a97d010add47f

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