Friday, May 31, 2013

Nick Diaz sets his sights on promoting fights

After losing his last two fights, UFC welterweight Nick Diaz is going to try a different role in MMA. Get ready for Nick Diaz, fight promoter. The man who gave fight promoters Dana White and Scott Coker many a headache as a fighter is starting War MMA. Their first event will be June 22 in -- where else? -- Stockton, Calif.

Even without Diaz in the fight, they will still have a certain Diaz-ian flair. Check out the rules:

WAR employs the Unified Rules of Mixed Martial Arts, as modified (1) to accommodate the use of a ring rather than a cage, and (2) to discourage stalling and holding ? by disallowing elbows to the head of a grounded opponent. Disallowing elbows to the head of a grounded opponent requires a fighter in top position on the ground to either seek to advance his position or to create distance to punch downwards, which is the same distance needed for the bottom position fighter to attack with submission attempts, or to attempt to get up. Permitting elbows on the ground encourages holding and stalling.

Of course. Diaz has complained about being held by fighters in the past, so he isn't going to allow any "holding or stalling" here, either.

The first card will feature UFC veterans Daniel Roberts and Antonio Banuelos. Check out the entire card here. Since Diaz has been in contact with so many fight promoters, did they offer any advice?

"Welcome to the losing money business," White said. "You wanna lose money? Come on in the business. It looks fun from the outside."

Consider that White's version of a commencement speech. Hopefully, Diaz's fighters won't do things like miss press conferences or fail drug tests. If so, they'll have just one response.

"I learned it by watching you!"

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/nick-diaz-sets-sights-promoting-fights-155759033.html

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3-D microelectrodes? Charred micro-bunny sculpture shows promise of new material for 3-D shaping

May 29, 2013 ? Though its surface has been turned to carbon, the bunny-like features can still be easily observed with a microscope. This rabbit sculpture, the size of a typical bacterium, is one of several whimsical shapes created by a team of Japanese scientists using a new material that can be molded into complex, highly conductive 3-D structures with features just a few micrometers across. Combined with state-of-the-art micro-sculpting techniques, the new resin holds promise for making customized electrodes for fuel cells or batteries, as well as biosensor interfaces for medical uses.

The research team, which includes physicists and chemists from Yokohama National University, Tokyo Institute of Technology, and the company C-MET, Inc., presents its results in a paper published today in the Optical Society's (OSA) open-access journal Optical Materials Express.

The work opens a door for researchers trying to create conductive materials in almost any complex shape at the microscopic or cellular level. "One of the most promising applications is 3-D microelectrodes that could interface with the brain," says Yuya Daicho, graduate student at Yokohama National University and lead author of the paper. These brain interfaces, rows of needle-shaped electrodes pointing in the same direction like teeth on combs, can send or receive electrical signals from neurons and can be used for deep brain stimulation and other therapeutic interventions to treat disorders such as epilepsy, depression, and Parkinson's disease. "Although current microelectrodes are simple 2-D needle arrays," Daicho says, "our method can provide complex 3-D electrode arrays" in which the needles of a single device have different lengths and tip shapes, giving researchers more flexibility in designing electrodes for specialized purposes. The authors also envision making microscopic 3-D coils for heating applications.

Currently, researchers have access to materials that can be used to make complex 3-D structures. But the commercially available resins that work best with modern 3-D shaping techniques do not respond to carbonization, a necessary part of the electrode preparation process. In this stage, a structure is baked at a temperature high enough to turn its surface to carbon. The process of "carbonizing," or charring, increases the conductivity of the resin and also increases its surface area, both of which make it a good electrode. Unfortunately, this process also destroys the resin's shape; a sphere becomes an unrecognizable charred blob. What researchers needed were new materials that could be crafted using 3-D shaping techniques but that would also survive the charring process.

The Japanese team, led by Daicho and his advisor Shoji Maruo, sought to develop materials that would fit these needs. Trained as a chemist, Daicho developed a light-sensitive resin that included a material called Resorcinol Diglycidyl Ether (RDGE), typically used to dilute other resins but never before used in 3-D sculpting. The new mixture had a unique advantage over other compounds -- it was a liquid, and therefore potentially suitable for manipulation using the preferred 3-D sculpting methods.

Daicho, Maruo, and colleagues tested three different concentrations of RDGE in their new compounds. Though there was shrinkage, the materials held their shapes during the charring process (controlled shrinkage of a microstructure can be a good thing in cases where miniaturization of a structure is desired). The resin with the lowest concentration of RDGE shrank 30 percent, while that with the highest concentration shrank 20 percent.

The researchers also tested their new resin's ability to be manipulated using techniques specifically suited for 3-D shaping. In one technique, called microtransfer molding, the light-sensitive liquid was molded into a desired shape and then hardened by exposure to ultraviolet (UV) light. The other technique, preferred because of its versatility, made use of the liquid resin's property of solidifying when exposed to a laser beam. In this process, called two-photon polymerization, researchers used the laser to "draw" a shape onto the liquid resin and build it up layer by layer. Once the objects were shaped, they were carbonized and viewed with a scanning electron microscope (SEM).

In addition to crafting pyramids and discs, the researchers reproduced the well-known "Stanford bunny," a shape commonly used in 3-D modeling and computer graphics. Maruo says that when he first saw a picture of the rabbit structure taken with the SEM, he was delighted at how well it had held up during the charring process.

"When we got the carbon bunny structure, we were very surprised," Maruo says. It was exciting, he continues, to see that "even with a very simple experimental structure, we could get this complicated 3-D carbon microstructure." The rabbit's shape would be much more difficult, expensive, and time-consuming to create using any of the existing processes compatible with carbonization, he adds.

Next steps for the team include fabricating usable carbon microstructures, as well as charring the resins at temperatures above the 800 degrees Celsius tested in this study. Moving to higher temperatures may destroy the microstructures, Maruo says, but there is a chance they will turn the surfaces into graphite, a higher-quality conductor than the carbonized surfaces they have created so far.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/P6ZPU6m0K-w/130529111341.htm

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

U.S. to loosen sanctions on Iran for mobile phones, gadgets

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States was set to relax sanctions on Iran on Thursday to allow American companies to sell mobile phones, software and other technology used for personal communications to Iranians, two U.S. officials said.

The move, expected later on Thursday, will allow Iranians to get access to the latest Apple phones and newest software that have only been available on Tehran's black market since sanctions were first imposed in 1992.

The U.S. has ramped up tough measures against Iran in recent years to slow development of the Islamic Republic's disputed nuclear program, blacklisting a wide range of Iranian companies and government officials.

The United States believes Iran is enriching uranium to levels that could be used in nuclear weapons, but Tehran says its program is for peaceful purposes.

The easing of sanctions on technology may be an attempt by the U.S. government to develop goodwill with Iranian citizens before the Iranian national elections next month.

Social media played a big role in the wake of Iran's disputed 2009 presidential elections, used by the opposition "Green Movement" to marshal global attention to their cause, and later inspiring protesters in the Arab Spring revolts of 2011.

The U.S. government first eased some technology restrictions after the election in 2010, allowing U.S. companies to export to Iran some basic software and free Internet services such as chat and email.

But the move on Thursday goes further, allowing companies to sell software and hardware to Iranian citizens, Wendy Sherman, undersecretary for political affairs at the U.S. State Department, said in an interview on the BBC Persian service late on Wednesday.

"We have no desire to cut off communications," she said in the interview, which first announced the looser rules. "We in fact want to encourage communications in every way we can."

The English transcript from Sherman's interview was provided by the National Iranian American Council, a non-profit group that has long urged the U.S. government to ease restrictions on Iran that hurt ordinary citizens but do little to hinder the government's actions.

(Reporting by Anna Yukhananov, additional reporting by Lesley Wroughton; Editing by Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-loosen-sanctions-iran-mobile-phones-gadgets-180315165.html

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Ancient streambed found on surface of Mars

May 30, 2013 ? Rounded pebbles on the surface of Mars indicate that a stream once flowed on the red planet, according to a new study by a team of scientists from NASA's Curiosity rover mission, including a University of California, Davis, geologist. The study will be published in the May 31 issue of the journal Science.

Rounded pebbles of this size are known to form only when transported through water over long distances. They were discovered between the north rim of the planet's Gale Crater and the base of Mount Sharp, a mountain inside the crater.

The finding represents the first on-site evidence of sustained water flows on the Mars landscape, and supports prospects that the planet could once have been able to host life.

As a co-investigator for NASA's Mars Science Laboratory team, UC Davis geologist and study co-author Dawn Sumner played a key role in choosing Gale Crater as the landing site for Curiosity. Finding the rounded pebbles, which were deposited more than 2 billion years ago, was a matter of landing in the right place, she said.

"The main reason we chose Gale Crater as a landing site was to look at the layered rocks at the base of Mount Sharp, about five miles away," she said. "We knew there was an alluvial fan in the landing area, a cone-shaped deposit of sediment that requires flowing water to form. These sorts of pebbles are likely because of that environment. So while we didn't choose Gale Crater for this purpose, we were hoping to find something like this."

The finding comes from Curiosity's exploration of the Mars surface during its first 100 sols (102.7 days on Earth), or Martian days. During that time, the rover traveled about a quarter mile from its landing site, examining multiple outcrops of pebble-rich slabs. Curiosity took high-resolution images of these pebbles at three locations known as Goulburn, Link and Hottah. The grain size, roundness and other characteristics of the pebbles led the researchers to conclude they had been transported by water.

Sumner said the discovery involves some of the most basic principles of geology.

"On the first day of my sedimentary class, I have the students measure grain size and the rounding," Sumner said. "It's simple, and it's important."

Sumner's work in South Africa and Australia studying signs of past microbial life in rocks and her work on living microbial communities in Antarctica helped land her the spot on the Mars Science Laboratory team. NASA recognized her skills could be critical to the mission's goal: to determine whether there ever could have been life on Mars.

As part of the MSL team, Sumner helped coordinate the first scientific interpretations of what was seen during Curiosity's first few days on Mars, helps direct the rover, via computer, to shoot photographs of the planet, and continues to work on the mission from UC Davis. She will soon go on sabbatical to work on the mission at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/space_time/astronomy/~3/dhz18ZWcCI4/130530142005.htm

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Egypt: Islamist politicians wanted for questioning

CAIRO (AP) ? Egypt's official MENA news agency says authorities have issued an arrest warrant for a key Islamist politician and requested that another's immunity be lifted, so that both can be questioned over allegations they insulted the judiciary.

The case of the two politicians is part of a long struggle between the judiciary and Islamists, who claim that Egypt's courts are filled with loyalists of ousted leader Hosni Mubarak trying to derail Egypt's shift to democratic rule.

MENA said judges on Tuesday ordered the arrest of Essam Sultan of the Islamist Wasat party for questioning over insulting the judiciary in media interviews. They also asked the Justice Minister to cancel the immunity of lawmaker Sobhi Saleh of the Muslim Brotherhood, the powerful Islamist group from which President Mohammed Morsi hails.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-islamist-politicians-wanted-questioning-171016870.html

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Samsung Desktop Dock with the Galaxy S4

Samsung Desktop Dock

 

One of our favorite features of the Samsung Galaxy S4 is that it's essentially the same size as its predecessor, and so a number of accessories released for the Galaxy S3 work with the newer version as well. 

That brings us to what you see here -- the Samsung Multimedia Desktop Dock. It's a pretty basic deal -- plop your Galaxy S4 into it and it'll automatically switch to Desktop mode. Plug in with a microUSB cable and you'll charge the phone at the same time. And use the optional 3.5mm line out to play music while the phone's docked. 

This thing's pretty portable as well, with the dock section flipping down into itself for easy travel. And perhaps most important, you can get it fairly cheap since technically it's "last year's" dock.

We've got a handful of pics after the break. Give 'em a gander.

read more

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/Oa9Hl8TzgwY/story01.htm

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OECD: Europe remains threat to world economy

PARIS (AP) ? The recession in Europe risks hurting the world's economic recovery, a leading international body warned Wednesday.

In its half-yearly update, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said that protracted economic weakness in Europe "could evolve into stagnation with negative implications for the global economy."

The OECD again slashed its forecast for the economy of the 17-country eurozone, saying it will shrink by 0.6 percent this year, after a 0.5 percent drop in 2012. The OECD had predicted a 0.1 percent decline for the eurozone in its report six months ago ? and this time last year, it forecast growth of nearly 1 percent for 2013.

The U.S. economy will continue to outpace Europe, the OECD said, with growth of 1.9 percent in 2013 and 2.8 percent in 2014. For global gross domestic product, the OECD forecasts an increase of 3.1 percent for this year and 4 percent for 2014.

Noting that eurozone policymakers have "often been behind the curve," the OECD warned that Europe was still beset by "weakly capitalized banks, public debt financing requirements and exit risks."

Meanwhile, the eurozone's 12.1 percent unemployment rate "is likely to continue to rise further ... stabilizing at a very high level only in 2014," the OECD said.

The report predicts unemployment will reach 28 percent in Spain next year and 28.4 percent in Greece.

The eurozone economy shrank 0.2 percent in the January-March period, the sixth consecutive quarterly decline, making it the eurozone's longest ever recession.

Austerity measures have inflicted severe economic pain and sparked social unrest across the continent. Europe's young people are especially suffering, with unemployment of around 50 percent in some of the hardest-hit eurozone countries such as Spain and Greece.

But OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria also noted that the tough reforms those countries made ? such as loosening their labor markets and making public administrations more efficient ? will soon bear fruit.

"In the periphery in particular, which was hardest hit by the crisis, that is where the reforms are taking place at the faster pace and where things eventually are, I believe, going to be looking better faster once we go through the acute stage of the crisis," Gurria told reporters.

With a population of more than half a billion people, the EU is the world's largest export market. If it remains stuck in reverse, companies in the U.S. and Asia will be hit.

Last month, U.S.-based Ford Motor Co. lost $462 million in Europe and called the outlook there "uncertain."

The OECD also urged the European Central Bank to take additional emergency steps to boost the economy. It said the eurozone's central bank should take the unusual step of cutting the interest rate it pays banks for depositing money with it to below zero. This would push banks to lend money rather than hoard it as super-safe central bank deposits.

The OECD also said the ECB should issue clear guidance on how long its exceptional measures, such as very low interest rates, will remain in place ? along the same lines as the U.S. Federal Reserve. The ECB was even urged to consider buying assets such bonds ? a tool that can ease borrowing costs and increase the supply of money in the economy but one that the central bank has so far been reluctant to take.

Other major economies have faltered this year but none are in recession, like Europe. The U.S. economy grew 2.2 percent last year and China, the world's No. 2 economy, is growing around 8 percent a year.

In the U.S., the organization urged politicians to soften automatic across-the-board budget spending cuts to make them less harmful to growth, and said "a credible long-term fiscal plan needs to be put in place."

___

Sarah DiLorenzo in Paris contributed to this article.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oecd-europe-remains-threat-world-economy-090045887.html

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French man dies of SARS-related respiratory virus

(AP) ? A French patient infected with a deadly new respiratory virus related to SARS died Tuesday of the disease, which has killed half the people known to be infected and alarmed global health officials.

The novel coronavirus is related to SARS, which killed some 800 people in a global epidemic in 2003. Dr. Margaret Chan, head of the World Health Organization, singled out the illness in a speech on Monday in Geneva.

"We understand too little about this virus when viewed against the magnitude of its potential threat," Chan said at the annual WHO meeting. "We do not know where the virus hides in nature. We do not know how people are getting infected. Until we answer these questions, we are empty-handed when it comes to prevention. These are alarm bells. And we must respond."

WHO said in an update earlier this month that 20 of the 40 confirmed cases of the disease have ended in death. Most of those infected since the virus was identified last year had traveled to Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan or Pakistan. There also have been cases in Britain and Germany.

The ministry said the Frenchman, whose illness was identified May 8 after he returned from a visit to the United Arab Emirates, died Tuesday. His hospital roommate also tested positive for the illness.

Meanwhile, the Saudi Health Ministry reported five new cases of the virus. All the patients were in their 70s or older.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-05-28-EU-France-Virus/id-e7ffc7dbe71b4154955e37dfb4561a81

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Home of opium, crystal meth takes off in Afghanistan

By Amie Ferris-Rotman

KABUL (Reuters) - Impoverished Afghanistan, already plagued by insurgency and struggling to contain crippling rates of opium addiction, faces another potential headache with spiraling usage of the synthetic drug crystal methamphetamine.

The growing use of the drug, known as crystal meth or ice, comes at a critical time. Some fear that, with the exit of most foreign troops by the end of next year and dwindling interest and aid from the international community, significant addiction to the relatively new drug could wreak social havoc.

The number of crystal meth samples taken from seizures tripled to 48 in 2012 compared with the year before, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

Importantly, however, there are concerns the power vacuum left by the withdrawal of foreign troops could turn Afghanistan into a new route for moving Iranian-made crystal meth to nations in the Pacific, like Thailand and Indonesia, through Pakistan.

"It's a potential threat," a Kabul-based official from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Small quantities of around half a kilogram are usually seized, said Peter Bottomley, the UNODC's consultant in Kabul, describing it as a "worrying trend".

"If this country gets addicted to meth, there will be a big problem," Bottomley said.

Afghanistan is the world's top producer of opium, from which heroin is made and which helps fund the Taliban's insurgency, and is heading for a near-record this year, the UNODC has said.

Treatment options for Afghanistan's 1 million heroin addicts, some of whom inject into their groins in broad daylight in central Kabul, are sorely limited.

In the country's sole, ultra-secretive drugs lab on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghan pharmacists analyze samples from seizures brought in on a daily basis, which are subject to three rounds of testing to identify the substance and its potency.

A sack of translucent crystals resembling large grains of sea salt sat on one of the lab's tables - one of the recent seizures of crystal meth. It stood out starkly among the brown hues of heroin, opium, morphine and hashish in tiny bags.

"If only we could get the punishment increased for selling this," said Mohammad Khalid Nabizada, the head of the lab, which operates under the Interior Ministry's Counter Narcotics Police.

Prison terms for selling crystal meth are relatively light, with dealers facing up to one year behind bars for 1 kg (2.2 lb), compared with up to three years for opium and a maximum of 10 years for the same amount of heroin.

"ABNORMAL BEHAVIOUR"

Dubbed "glass" in Afghanistan, crystal meth only appeared in recent years and is made in high-tech labs across the border in Iran. Most of it is consumed in the border provinces of Herat and Nimroz, but seizures have been scattered across the country.

Its street price is about $20, or five times that of heroin, making it relatively expensive in one of the world's poorest countries, said Ahmad Khalid Mowahid, spokesman for the Criminal Justice Task Force that convicts serious drug offenders.

But its rocketing use hints at falling exclusivity.

"If glass users are added to our opium addicts, it'll be a disaster. Meth addicts jump off roofs and punch fists in walls. Imagine such abnormal behavior here," Mowahid told Reuters.

He said Afghanistan does not have the "medicine nor the means" to try to contain a growing meth addiction.

The United States is no stranger to the epidemic of crystal meth, where home-made labs and a booming Mexican trade have consumed small towns.

"It has that same look coming out of Iran, of large-scale commercial properties ... And it can become a cancer," the DEA official said.

(Reporting by Amie Ferris-Rotman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/growing-crystal-meth-blurs-drug-hungry-afghanistans-future-085312029.html

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NY indictment filed in $6B money-laundering case

NEW YORK (AP) -- Authorities say the founder of a Latin America-based currency system and six other people have been indicted in the United States in a $6 billion money-laundering scheme.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan are expected to announce the charges on Tuesday afternoon.

Arthur Budovsky is the founder of Liberty Reserve, a currency system long favored by cybercrime scammers. He was arrested in Spain on Friday.

There also were arrests in Costa Rica and New York.

Authorities say the network processed at least 55 million illegal transactions worldwide. They call the international money-laundering case the largest ever.

___

Cordoba reported from San Jose, Costa Rica; Satter reported from London.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ny-indictment-filed-6b-money-140225894.html

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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Groups Targeted by IRS Tested Rules on Political Activity (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/308577093?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Robert Kuttner: Higher Education: The Coming Shakeout

Just as markets over-built housing, mispriced mortgages and bid up prices beyond the real financial capacity of homebuyers, America's colleges and universities have over-expanded and over-priced their product. We are getting an education bubble with dynamics similar to the late housing bubble.

As more and more students find themselves with debts that exceed the salaries offered by the current job market, colleges have expanded beyond the capacity of their markets. Some kind of shakeout is coming. The question is: what kind.

During the long boom in higher education, colleges have also dramatically increased salaries and staffing levels of administrations. Some of this reflects efforts to game the rankings, which also is another aspect of the same imbalance.

For-profit universities, with high dropout rates, heavily reliant on federal Pell grants and student loans, are only the more explicit and extreme expression of a general trend of colleges and universities becoming more marketized. Colleges are doing deals to set up satellite campuses in sheikhdoms, recruiting full-tuition state-supported foreign students and creating vanity diploma mills as profit centers. The flip side is a massive disinvestment by state legislatures in America's great public universities and an under-investment in community colleges.

Despite the broad premise that the cure for America's poor economic performance is more and better colleges, resources have been skewed in exactly the wrong direction. A report by the Century Foundation released last week reveals that per-pupil spending in community colleges, where 44 percent of post-secondary students attend, most of them children of the non-rich rich, has been flat since 1999, while spending at elite private universities is up 31 percent.

There is a huge mismatch between the greatest need -- affordable public universities and community colleges -- and where the investment has gone. Basically, it has gone to overbuilding and hyper-competition in elite universities, too much money for administration and marketing, for-profits siphoning off resources and graduates being saddled with lifelong debt (except, of course, for graduates with affluent parents, who generally pay the freight, leaving their offspring debt-free.)

So now comes the shakeout. What form will it take?

One trend is a shift to the German model of one Herr Doktor Professor and lots of adjuncts. More and more courses, even at elite universities, are being taught by graduate students or permanent part-timers who barely make a living and have little time for students.

Another trend is the shift to one form or another of computer-based distance learning, as "massive open online courses" (MOOCs) become the next new thing. Despite the adjective, open, this also being seen as a profit center or a way to cut costs. Udacity, one of the for-profit MOOC vendors, has announced a partnership with Georgia Tech and AT&T that get you an MS degree for $7,000.

There are good and bad versions of the promise of online education. It forces the question: what is the function of the university? Is a university a community? Is its purpose the broad education of young adults, or is it a glorified trade school?

You can do trade school perfectly well from a distance at a computer, but at what cost to a "liberal" education? Or has a liberal education just become a fancy term for a finishing school and connections to the right people?

If you believe that there is some value-added to spending four years on a campus in a community of scholars, getting course credit for studying online with America's superstar professors can be a terrific complement to what you do locally, but not a total substitute. On the other hand, if elite education is just a four-year vacation for the children of the elite, bring on MOOCs.

Meanwhile, the risk is that a decent higher education gets further and further out of reach of the working class kids who most need it as a ladder of mobility. These are precisely the ones who are getting destroyed by student debt. They have higher dropout rates, partly because so many have to work part-time. Jason de Parle's authoritative piece on student debt and social class in the New York Times showed just how higher education increasingly reinforces class.

Clearly, our society cannot afford the current rate of expansion of higher education costs. We've reached the limits of piling these expenses onto students. But as resources become more scarce, as the consequences of over-expansion hit, the social risk is that the shoe will pinch even more intensely in the wrong places.

Everywhere you look in our new Gilded Age, public policy reinforces the lines of social class. Even in the original Gilded Age, America was also building free public universities. The Postwar boom was built on the free higher education of the G.I. Bill.

Surely, one area were we should counteract the inherited effects of class and emphasize upward mobility is the promise of higher education. But all the signs point to a shakeout in which elite universities and elite students come out fine, and others suffer.

Robert Kuttner's new book is Debtors' Prison: The Politics of Austerity Versus Possibility. He is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior Fellow at Demos.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-kuttner/higher-education_b_3340828.html

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Monday, May 27, 2013

travel & leisure: All The Information For The Pamplona Bull

By Jordan Ebor

The festival of San Fermin in the city of Pamplona in Spain is a celebration held annually between 6 and 14 July. While its most famous event is the 'encierro', or the running of the bulls, the weeklong celebration involves many other traditional events. Although most people around the world refer to the event as the Pamplona Bull Run, or just simply Pamps, it is known by the locals as Sanfermines and is held in honour of St Fermin, one of the patron saints of the area. Over 1 million people attend each year and it has become the most internationally renowned festival in Spain. Immortalized in literature by Ernest Hemingway, San Fermin is an explosive, passionate and occasionally gory festival that is an important element of Spanish heritage.

Yes, you know the scene - you have seen it on the news every July. The Pamplona Bull Run involves hundreds of people running in front of six bulls and another six steers, down an 825-metre (0.51 mile) stretch of narrow streets of a section of the old town of Pamplona, with mad Spaniards and tourists running through the streets trying to get out of the way of these rampant bulls.

The actual running of the bulls occurs each morning at 8am between 6 and 14 July. This crazy bull run is an experience even just for spectators. It is a spectacle that is defined by the level of risk and the physical ability of the runners. However, there is much more to the festival of San Fermin in Pamplona than the encierro.

The actual festival starts at noon on 6 July with the setting off a fire cracker (chupinazo in Spanish) from a city hall balcony. There are literally tens-of-thousands of people celebrating the start of the festival around the city hall square.

Thousands of people accompany the 15th-century statue of Saint Fermin through the old part of Pamplona On 7 July.

Each morning of the festival there is the parade of giants and big heads. These giants figures are amazingly more than 150 years old.

Between 7 and 14 July there is a bullfight at 6:30pm involving the six bulls that were driven to the bullring during the morning's Bull Run. While the bullring of the city is the fourth largest in the world, it is full every evening.

Every night a firework spectacle is held at the citadel park. Thousands of people watch the fireworks each night. It is best to get to the area early to get a good seat somewhere on the grass around the citadel.



About the Author:


Pamplona Running of the Bulls is a must-do event on any travellers calendar. The events and festival travel specialists, FOMO Travel, provides an extensive array of information and advice on tour operators, travel options, travel tips, and other activities for San Fermin.

Source: http://bidding-travel.blogspot.com/2013/05/all-information-for-pamplona-bull.html

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Everyday Carry Gear ? Elizabeth Rodriguez

This entry is part 10 of 10 in the series

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/05/26/everyday-carry-gear-elizabeth-rodriguez/

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Meticulous Times: The Eon of Eras

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Hanson Brothers Beer: First Look!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/hanson-brothers-beer-first-look/

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Asparagus and caramelized onion tart

It's asparagus season, and this delightfully simple tart keeps the weekend restful so you can be ready to greet a new week.

By Christina Masters,?The Rowdy Chowgirl / May 25, 2013

Making an asparagus and caramelized onion tart is the perfect activity for a quiet Sunday afternoon.

The Rowdy Chowgirl

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There are hints of both the blessed and the accursed about some Sundays. The good parts, of course, are obvious. A day of worship for many. A day of rest. It is a day of sleeping in, and long breakfasts, and lolling and lounging and hot baths and long runs and maybe even a nap.?

Skip to next paragraph Christina Masters

The Rowdy Chowgirl

Christina Masters is a Seattle-based food blogger. As The Rowdy Chowgirl, she writes about recipes, gardening, restaurants, food ethics, feeding the hungry, and more. She believes that food is never just food ? it is always part of a larger story that includes context, community and connections. An enthusiastic home cook, she favors local, seasonal ingredients prepared in simple, flavorful ways

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All good. All very good. But there is this whiff of despair in the air some Sundays, or maybe it?s just me, looking ahead and counting the dwindling hours of freedom and ease.?

Instead of staying in the pleasant?now?of couch and cat and book I start doing mental arithmetic:?this many hours until I need to get ready for work tomorrow, and then get to bed and then get up and go to work?and oh, my week is going to be so busy, and I don?t want to go to work, not yet ? and there I am, dreading Monday morning instead of living Sunday afternoon. I?m sure I smell a whiff of brimstone in the air, possibly hear the echo of devilish laughter.

But you know what helps drive back the darkness?? A little time spent in the kitchen ? not hurrying, just flowing with the chopping and stirring. ?And then a good meal, like this summer-y tart. Yes, the leftovers will be good for lunch on Monday afternoon, too.? But don?t think about Monday while you are making it.

Asparagus and Caramelized Onion Tart

?1 shortcrust tart shell

1 large onion

1 teaspoon olive oil

15 ounces whole milk ricotta

1/4 cup cream

1 egg

1 teaspoon lemon zest

1/4 tsp salt

several grinds of pepper

1-2 tablespons/small handful of fresh parsley, minced fine

15-20 stalks of asparagus, ends trimmed

drizzle of olive oil

1. You will need a tart shell that is approximately 10 inches wide for this recipe.? Buy one, take one out of the freezer, or use your favorite shortcrust recipe to create one from scratch. Whichever way, you?ll need it rolled out and pressed into a pan. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

2. Coarsely chop onion. In a saut? pan or wok over medium heat, stir onions in 1 teaspoon of olive oil,? then cook very, very slowly until caramelized ? at least half an hour, stirring occasionally.? Add a splash of water every now and then if needed to keep onions from frying/burning/overbrowning. They are done when they are soft, golden brown, and smell sweet.

3. Meanwhile, prebake the tart shell for 10 minutes, then remove from oven.

4. Vigorously stir together ricotta, cream, egg, lemon zest, parsley, salt and pepper.? Pour into tart shell.? Top ricotta mixture with caramelized onions, distributed evenly. Arrange asparagus spears on top of onion layer. Drizzle very lightly with olive oil.

5. Place tart pan on a baking sheet and place in oven. Bake for 30 minutes, then check periodically and remove from oven when ricotta is set, asparagus looks cooked, and tart is generally golden brown on top.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/OvLqx_67wKA/Asparagus-and-caramelized-onion-tart

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T.J. Grant earns lightweight title shot with TKO of Gray Maynard at UFC 160

The next lightweight contender had a chance to make himself known at UFC 160. T.J. Grant earned the spot with dismantling of Gray Maynard on Saturday night.

Grant absorbed a few early shots from Maynard, and then landed a right hand that shook Maynard. He had no time to recover, as Grant continued to swarm with punches and knees. Maynard went down, worked his way back to his feet and then was taken back down again. Finally, the bout was stopped at 2:07 in the first round.

Both Maynard and Grant knew going into the bout that the winner was expected to get the next UFC lightweight title shot. After such an impressive performance, he should get it, but he made sure to ask for it in his post-fight interview.

"I want to fight [UFC lightweight champ] Benson Henderson for the title. I wanna be the champ. I wanna beat the champ," Grant said.

He's on a five-fight win streak. Before Maynard, he took out Matt Wiman with a first-round TKO in January.

Henderson fully expects to fight Grant. He tweeted:

With the display Grant put on at UFC 160, Henderson isn't the only one looking forward to that fight.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/t-j-grant-earns-lightweight-title-shot-tko-032254038.html

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Support for Victims of Domestic Violence - Coatesville DOES

friendsupportWhen domestic violence ends in serious injury or a death, it can rock a community.

Fingers are pointed, questions are asked: Who is to blame? Why didn?t police/family/friends DO anything? Could this have been prevented? Why does a person even stay in such a relationship?

To many of us on the outside, the warning signs seem obvious, and the response a no-brainer. But the dynamics involved in an abusive relationship are complicated, making it difficult and frustrating for those wanting to help.

Even the authorities are challenged by this. An article posted on Officer.com, entitled ?Understanding the Dynamics of Domestic Violence?, attempts to clarify some of the classic components of these relationships because, ?? understandably, police officers can become frustrated with repeat calls for service.?

According to the article, the two most prevalent major elements in an abusive relationship are power and control.

The abuser knows how to manipulate the emotions of the victim, keeping them trapped in fear and confusion about the meaning of love, and feelings of their own responsibility for the abuse. The abuser may also have control over finances, access to children and other areas of vulnerability that leaves little to no option for the victim to leave. Feelings of embarrassment or humiliation may keep the victim from reaching out for support (and it should be stated here that men can also be victims of abuse at the hands of women). We must also remember that there may still be feelings of caring for the abuser, especially if they have a family together.

Fortunately, programs like LAP (Lethality Assessment Program) are showing some success in helping police better assess the potential dangers of a relationship through asking certain questions (such as: Has the abuser ever threatened to kill the victim;? has the abuser ever used or tried to use a weapon against the victim; or has the victim recently separated from or divorced the abuser), followed by an appropriate response protocol. (For more information about LAP, click here.)

Terry Moody, of the Domestic Violence Center of Chester County, echoed these observations, and the reminder that there is so much gray area in these situations.

When asked how friends and family of a domestic violence victim can be of the most help, she gave this advice:

- To be a friend, LISTEN, and please! give information about where to get help. Support them as much as possible, let them know they are not alone and refrain from judgement. We may not understand why a person stays in that kind of relationship, but to be critical of them is to potentially threaten the friendship, and we may be their only lifeline.

Statistics show victims may leave and return an average of seven times within the course of a relationship. And again, it occurs across all walks of life and levels of income, within families ?of importance? ? even to men -? and those trapped in such a situation may feel too ashamed to let others know what is happening.

Moody says that that DVCCC has many resources to help victims of abuse, including shelter in a non-disclosed locations, two full-time attorneys, and, of course, a 24/7 phone line to call for help, or even just to talk and receive feedback on a situation, given that there are many forms of abuse beyond just the physical.

Their website is DVCCC.com and the phone number is 610-431-1430.

Another website listing shelters throughout Chester County for a variety of needs is here: http://shelter.ccil.org/

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Source: http://www.coatesvilledoes.com/support-for-victims-of-domestic-violence/

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ECB's Draghi: 'Imperative' to set up new bank body

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) ? European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said it was "imperative" that Europe's leaders create a new agency with powers to restructure busted banks in order to help the region leave its economic and financial crisis behind it once and for all.

In the text of a speech to be delivered in London Thursday, Draghi said the new agency would keep troubled banks from burdening governments through bailout costs ? thereby cutting the vicious link that has helped drive Europe's three-year crisis over too much debt.

The agency, dubbed the single resolution mechanism, would be able to force banks creditors and shareholders to take losses first when a bank goes under ? instead of getting the money from taxpayers. European leaders have made a start on strengthening their banking system by agreeing to put the ECB in charge of supervising banks. But they have not yet agreed on how to proceed with the resolution mechanism.

Together with a Europe-wide deposit guarantee scheme, these three measures would form the European Union's banking union ? a key part of the 27-country bloc's strategy to combat its financial crisis.

Putting the ECB in charge of banking supervision was a first step that "will pave the way towards severing the link between banks and their respective sovereigns," Draghi said in the text of the speech to be given at the Guildhall in the City of London.

"But to sever this link completely, it is also imperative to create a single resolution mechanism."

Fears about banks have helped drive Europe's crisis over too much debt. Spending huge amounts of money to rescue banks can pile more debt on governments, something they feel forced to do because banks are essential to keep the economy going. Banks in turn can find it hard to raise funds if markets think they will suffer losses on government bonds they hold.

Individual countries' banking regulators are considered to be too reluctant to act forcefully to halt problems with their home banks, and can face added problems when a bank's activities cross national borders. That has led to calls for a centralized EU approach that would take the financial burden and much of the regulatory responsibility, especially for big banks, away from national officials.

When it becomes Europe's banking supervisor, the ECB will have the power to yank banks' licenses. But the job of taking action over a failed bank would remain with the resolution agency. It could write off what the bank owes to its creditors, known as a bail-in, or convert those debts into shares in a restructured bank, for instance. That would find money to get the bank's lending activity going again without tapping the public treasury and making taxpayers pay.

The idea has run into resistance from Germany, the eurozone's biggest economy. Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has said such a central resolution authority would require changes in the basic treaty governing the EU in order to have a safe legal basis. That could take years.

Schaeuble has proposed having creating a network among national authorities to deal with the issue in the interim. Germany, the chief financial backer of rescue loans for indebted governments, appears reluctant to rush into setting up a resolution agency because of concern that its taxpayers or banks would have to contribute to cleaning up messes in other countries.

Still, Germany is increasingly isolated with most other EU countries pushing for more rapid implementation. Countries hardest-hit by the crisis like Greece, Portugal and Spain see the full implementation of the banking union as a way to stabilize their economies.

Draghi did not talk about a timetable, but one of his colleagues at the ECB went further in a speech earlier Thursday. Benoit Coeure, a member of the bank's six-member executive committee, said in the text of a speech in Copenhagen that a resolution agency needed to be in place when the ECB takes over banking supervision, probably next year.

Coeure said the resolution agency would need its own pot of money to finance bank restructuring, but that would be raised ahead of time by a levy on banks, not from taxpayers.

He said the recent experience in bailing out eurozone member Cyprus showed the need for clear rules and powers on winding up banks. The legislature in Cyprus had to hastily pass legislation allowing restructuring of its troubled banks. That turmoil unsettled markets and has weighed on business optimism, adding to the burdens on the eurozone economy as it struggles to leave recession return to growth.

"Any solution which does not imply an outright bailout seems to take creditors and markets by surprise. This will need to change," Coeure said. "I would say that after the events of Cyprus, markets should be convinced that Europe is serious and committed to bailing in and thus ending the bailout culture."

___

AP staff writer Juergen Baetz contributed to this report from Berlin.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ecbs-draghi-imperative-set-bank-body-213147175.html

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'Modern Family' finale react | PopWatch | EW.com

Swapping the sunshine of California for the humidity of Florida, the Dunphy-Pritchett clan gathered down South for Phil?s mother?s funeral. What ensued was a lot of exaggerated stereotypes, even more sweating, and a few tender moments.

Jay spent the episode reconnecting with the woman who swiped his V card back in the days before Vietnam (who happened to live next door to Phil?s dad), while Cam met up with the elderly ladies of book club, where he perfected his gossiping skills. Meanwhile, Phil tried to honor his mother?s last wish by setting his father (played by Fred Willard) up with a nice lady down the street before the casserole-cooking younger ladies swooped in to replace his drapes and take his money. That plot eventually led to a sweet moment for Phil, but it never fully developed into anything. Speaking of, why didn?t we get to see more Fred Willard? The guy is a comedic gem.

In my favorite storyline of the episode, Gloria was a wanted woman in the state of Florida. Wanted for what, you ask? Co-conspiring to run a prostitution ring, obviously. You see, she had moved to California before ?Quick and Easy? opened, but her name was still technically on the lease, which meant she had to brave the ultra-sweaty ? think A Time To Kill ? Southern courthouse to face her charges. Luckily, she had Mitchell, and Mitchell had his terry cloth suit. The courtroom scenes were fun, but once again, cut short. I?m thinking there were too many stories at play in this episode.

In the end, the family attended the funeral, Alex set off some fireworks, and Manny and Luke aged approximately 70 years. Welcome to Florida, boys. The home of old people, sweaty people, and not a whole lot of comedy. The cliffhanger of the season: Mitchell wants to quit his job and get back into the courtroom. However, based on the fact that we never really see him at work, does that count as a cliffhanger?

What did you all think of the finale? Was there too much going on, or did you enjoy your stay in The Sunshine State?

Samantha on Twitter: @samhighfill

Source: http://popwatch.ew.com/2013/05/22/modern-family-season-finale-react/

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Fetch, boy! Study shows homes with dogs have more types of bacteria

May 22, 2013 ? New research from North Carolina State University and the University of Colorado shows that households with dogs are home to more types of bacteria - including bacteria that are rarely found in households that do not have dogs. The finding is part of a larger study to improve our understanding of the microscopic life forms that live in our homes.

"We wanted to know what variables influence the microbial ecosystems in our homes, and the biggest difference we've found so far is whether you own a dog," says Dr. Rob Dunn, an associate professor of biology at NC State and co-author of a paper describing the work. "We can tell whether you own a dog based on the bacteria we find on your television screen or pillow case. For example, there are bacteria normally found in soil that are 700 times more common in dog-owning households than in those without dogs."

And these microbial differences may be important. For example, it's known that women who have a dog in the home when pregnant are less likely to have children with allergies. This is a correlation - there's no known causal link between the presence of a dog and the absence of allergies - but it has been hypothesized that the difference is related to the women's exposure to a wider variety of microbes. However, to this point there were few data on what the differences in microbial populations might be. While this study doesn't demonstrate a causal link, it sheds more light on the subject, showing that dogs have a major influence on which microbes are found in our homes.

Citizen scientists in 40 homes sampled nine common surfaces to help researchers determine what kinds of bacteria lived there, and in what relative numbers. The nine surfaces were wiped with sterile swabs from which researchers collected DNA to see which organisms were present. The nine surfaces were the television screen, kitchen counter, refrigerator, toilet seat, cutting board, pillow case, exterior door handle, the trim around an interior door and the trim around an exterior door.

The study found 7,726 phylotypes, or kinds, of bacteria in the homes. The study also found that each of the locations sampled harbored its own unique collection of bacteria. Researchers were able to group the sampled surfaces in the homes into one of three general habitats: places we touch, places our food touches and places that collect dust. For example, the types of bacteria found in refrigerators, on kitchen counters and on cutting boards tended to be similar - because they were primarily linked to our food. Meanwhile, the bacteria found on doorknobs, pillow cases and toilet seats were also fairly similar - and came from humans.

"We leave a microbial 'fingerprint' on everything we touch," Dunn says. "Sometimes those microbes come from our skin, sometimes they're oral bacteria and - as often as not - they're human fecal bacteria."

The research also shows that the difference between habitats is greater than the difference between homes. For example, the bacteria on my pillow case are probably more similar to the bacteria on your pillow case than they are to the bacteria on my kitchen counter.

"This makes sense," Dunn says. "Humans have been living in houses for thousands of years, which is sufficient time for organisms to adapt to living in particular parts of houses. We know, for example, that there is a species that only lives in hot-water heaters. We deposit these bacterial hitchhikers in different ways in different places, and they thrive or fail depending on their adaptations."

The researchers are currently processing samples from another 40 homes, and are preparing to process samples from a national survey of 1,300 homes across the United States. The national survey sampled four sites in each home, representing the various habitats.

"The larger sample size will help us better understand the range of variables that influence these microbial ecosystems," Dunn says. "Does it matter if you have kids or live in an apartment? We expect the microbial populations of homes in deserts to be different from the populations of homes in Manhattan, but no one knows if that's true. We want to find out."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/Ls3NMgWSPZs/130522180311.htm

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Thursday, May 23, 2013

Roofing & home improvement | No Where At ALL!

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Are you looking for a home improvement or roofing company that has high quality products, renowned customer service, and a great reputation? If so, look no farther than Ploughcroft, the leading Yorkshire roofing and home improvement company.

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They believe that looking after your roof and installing energy saving measures to your home will save you money in the long run for the finer things in life. They provide some of the world?s most innovative products while still keeping them at affordable prices. Their staff is experienced and knowledgeable; they can help advise you on all energy saving solutions from roofing and building to loft, cavity, and wall insulation. With their unique combination of credentials, they are far ahead of the competition and are the installer many people choose. The managing director focuses on customer service and ensuring each customer is looked after throughout every stage of the process.

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You?ll feel confident working with a company that has 15 years of background in high-quality roofing, as well as seven years of solar installation experience. With thousands of solar installations successfully completed, their track record speaks for itself. Ploughcroft is also a representative on the Green Construction Board and has a passion for innovation, environmental issues, and serving the interests of the community. Employees are always up to date on the latest products and technologies thanks to their ongoing training.

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If home insulation is your current interest, they offer cavity wall insulation and loft insulation. They also offer loft conversions, which can result in more living space and a warmer home with reduced energy costs. There has not been a better time than now to take action and get the loft conversion you?ve been considering. Not only could work be partially funded through the Green Deal, but also if you qualify for Energy Company Obligation funding, part of the work could be free! In most cases, planning permission is not required. Doing this can easily increase your living area without taking up more room on you outdoor property, and will increase the value of your home.

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No matter what services you?re looking for, Ploughcroft can help and provide a no obligation free quote for you to consider! Their helpful employees will be more than happy to answer any questions you might have.

This post was written by

Alyson RohrbachAlyson Rohrbach ? who has written 223 posts on No Where At ALL!.
Professional writer & Blogger at nowhereatall.com. Loves to play basketball and just about every sports, voluntarily coaches girl's basketball in LA for after school activities.

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Source: http://nowhereatall.com/roofing-home-improvement/

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Best graduation gift ever: The Debt Resistors' Operations Manual via Strike Debt...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/OccupyStudentDebt/posts/595526420471567

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