Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Search for tornado survivors nearly complete

MOORE, Okla. (AP) ? Helmeted rescue workers raced Tuesday to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children.

Scientists concluded the storm was a rare and extraordinarily powerful type of twister known as an EF5, ranking it at the top of the scale used to measure tornado strength. Those twisters are capable of lifting reinforced buildings off the ground, hurling cars like missiles and stripping trees completely free of bark.

Residents of Moore began returning to their homes a day after the tornado smashed some neighborhoods into jagged wood scraps and gnarled pieces of metal. In place of their houses, many families found only empty lots.

After nearly 24 hours of searching, the fire chief said he was confident there were no more bodies or survivors in the rubble.

"I'm 98 percent sure we're good," Gary Bird said at a news conference with the governor, who had just completed an aerial tour of the disaster zone.

Authorities were so focused on the search effort that they had yet to establish the full scope of damage along the storm's long, ruinous path.

They did not know how many homes were gone or how many families had been displaced. Emergency crews had trouble navigating devastated neighborhoods because there were no street signs left. Some rescuers used smartphones or GPS devices to guide them through areas with no recognizable landmarks.

The death toll was revised downward from 51 after the state medical examiner said some victims may have been counted twice in the confusion.

By Tuesday afternoon, every damaged home had been searched at least once, Bird said. His goal was to conduct three searches of each building just to be certain there were no more bodies or survivors.

The fire chief was hopeful that could be completed before nightfall, but the work was being hampered by heavy rain. Crews also continued a brick-by-brick search of the rubble of a school that was blown apart with many children inside.

No additional survivors or bodies have been found since Monday night, Bird said.

Survivors emerged with harrowing accounts of the storm's wrath, which many endured as they shielded loved ones.

Chelsie McCumber grabbed her 2-year-old son, Ethan, wrapped him in jackets and covered him with a mattress before they squeezed into a coat closet of their house. McCumber sang to her child when he complained it was getting hot inside the small space.

"I told him we're going to play tent in the closet," she said, beginning to cry.

"I just felt air so I knew the roof was gone," she said Tuesday, standing under the sky where her roof should have been. The home was littered with wet gray insulation and all of their belongings.

"Time just kind of stood still" in the closet, she recalled. "I was kind of holding my breath thinking this isn't the worst of it. I didn't think that was it. I kept waiting for it to get worse."

"When I got out, it was worse than I thought," she said.

Gov. Mary Fallin lamented the loss of life, especially the children who were killed, but she celebrated the town's resilience.

"We will rebuild, and we will regain our strength," Fallin said.

In describing the bird's-eye view of the damage, the governor said many houses were "taken away," leaving "just sticks and bricks, basically. It's hard to tell if there was a structure there or not."

From the air, large stretches of town could be seen where every home had been cut to pieces. Some homes were sucked off their concrete slabs. A pond was filled with piles of wood and an overturned trailer.

Also visible were large patches of red earth where the tornado scoured the land down to the soil. Some tree trunks were still standing, but the winds ripped away their leaves, limbs and bark.

In revising its estimate of the storm's power, the National Weather Service said the tornado had winds of at least 200 mph and was on the ground for 40 minutes.

The agency upgraded the tornado from an EF4 on the enhanced Fujita scale based on reports from a damage-assessment team, said spokeswoman Keli Pirtle. Monday's twister was at least a half-mile wide. It was the nation's first EF5 tornado of 2013.

Other search-and-rescue teams concentrated on Plaza Towers Elementary, where the storm ripped off the roof, knocked down walls and destroyed the playground as students and teachers huddled in hallways and bathrooms.

Seven of the nine dead children were killed at the school, but several students were pulled alive from under a collapsed wall and other heaps of mangled debris. Rescue workers passed the survivors down a human chain of parents and neighborhood volunteers. Parents carried children in their arms to a triage center in the parking lot. Some students looked dazed, others terrified.

Neither Plaza Towers nor another school in Oklahoma City that was not as severely damaged had reinforced storm shelters, or safe rooms, said Albert Ashwood is director of the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management.

More than 100 schools across the state do have safe rooms, he said, explaining that it's up to each jurisdiction to set spending priorities.

Ashwood said a shelter would not necessarily have saved more lives at Plaza Towers.

"When you talk about any kind of safety measures ... it's a mitigating measure, it's not an absolute," he told reporters. "There's not a guarantee that everyone will be totally safe."

Officials were still trying to account for a handful of children not found at the school who may have gone home early with their parents, Bird said.

On the streets of Moore, evidence of the storm's fury stretched in every direction: Roofs were torn off houses, exposing metal rods left twisted like pretzels. Cars sat in heaps, crumpled and sprayed with caked-on mud. Insulation and siding was piled up against any walls still standing. Yards were littered with pieces of wood, nails and pieces of electric poles.

President Barack Obama pledged to provide federal help and mourned the death of young children who were killed while "trying to take shelter in the safest place they knew ? their school."

The town of Moore "needs to get everything it needs right away," he said Tuesday.

Moore has been one of the fastest-growing suburbs of Oklahoma City, attracting middle-income families and young couples looking for stable schools and affordable housing. The town's population has grown over the last decade as developers built subdivisions for people who wanted to avoid the urban problems and schools of Oklahoma City but couldn't afford pricier Norman, the college town next door.

Many residents commute to jobs in Oklahoma City or to Tinker Air Force Base, about 20 minutes away.

___

Associated Press writers Tim Talley, Ramit Plushnick-Masti and Nomaan Merchant, and Associated Press photographer Sue Ogrocki contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/search-tornado-survivors-nearly-complete-234241535.html

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Marc Faber Wont Keep Gold In America - Business Insider

Gold prices continue to take a beating with futures at $1,354 an ounce.

Marc Faber, publisher of The Gloom, Boom and Doom report, told Talking Numbers that he is buying physical gold and will buy more if it hits the $1,300 mark.

But, he said that he isn't keeping it in the U.S. "I bought gold at $1,400, I buy every month some gold, and I have an order to buy more at $1,300 because I want to keep an allocation towards gold ? physical gold ? and not stored in the United States at all times."

Here he explains why he isn't keeping it in the U.S. via CNBC and Yahoo Finance:

Now you're emphasizing stored outside the U.S.. We're a pretty safe country Marc, why do you have to keep the gold out of here?
Well, safe country? I?m not so sure about that under the present government. But in 1933, gold was taken away from Americans. The government paid them $25 and after, they revalued the gold to $35. So, basically what the government can do once again, and that is a possibility. They could artificially depress, manipulate the price down and then say ?Gold is illegal to be held. We have to collect all the gold from the citizens.? Say if they manipulated the price down to $1,000. They could collect it at $1,000 and then revalue to $10,000.

That's possible but do you believe it is probable Marc? That would be a Black Swan kind of event or a cold swan type of an event for you. That's not your base case.
It?s not probable?? Correct. I?m not a believer in the manipulation theory. I?m not a believer in all the conspiracy theories. I?m a believer that the market went down because there was a technical break and also because stocks are so strong. So, when people look at their gold and they look at the stock market that goes up every day, they then decide ?Gold is dead. Let?s buy stocks? because, at heart nowadays, everybody is a momentum player. The fund managers who must outperform the index, the hedge fund guys, the high-velocity trading people, the algorithmic people ? they?re all momentum players. What moves up, they chase. What moves down, they sell.

Watch the entire interview at CNBC and Yahoo Finance:

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/marc-faber-wont-keep-gold-in-america-2013-5

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'Star Trek Into Darkness' Spoiler Special: Burning Questions Answered

Co-writer Damon Lindelof exclusively addresses the mysteries surrounding the blockbuster.
By Josh Horowitz

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1707650/star-trek-into-darkness-spoiler-special-burning-questions-answered.jhtml

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Jake Brought Delmon To the Wall ? CESPEDES FAMILY BARBECUE

This is a picture of myself, at the Western Wall.

I am holding a card in the picture. It is hard to see from this distance, but if you enhance it a bit?

Its a Delmon Young rookie card. Jordan gave me this card three months ago when I left for my three months in the holy land. I brought it around with me in my backpack all across this country. Delmon saw everything Israel had to offer whether he wanted to or not: The Galilee, the Negev Desert, Tel Aviv, and of course the Western Wall. Bringing baseball strongest anti-semite with me throughout the trip might be insensitive, but so what.

I go back home tonight to America. I?ll miss some stuff about Israel, but staying up until 2 in the morning to watch games back at home won?t be one of them. I shall flee the land of milk and honey for the land of hot dogs and baseball and I could not be more excited. Delmon on the other hand, has plans to make aliyah and serve the Jewish people by joining the Israeli Army.

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This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged America, delmon young, Israel, Judaism, Religion, Western Wall.

Source: http://cespedesfamilybarbecue.com/2013/05/20/jake-brought-delmon-to-the-wall/

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Monday, May 20, 2013

Palestinians hold off on UN agency membership

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? A top official says Palestinians have done all the legal work necessary to join 63 U.N. agencies, conventions and treaties, but haven't applied yet mainly to give the U.S. peace effort a chance to succeed.

Chief Palestinian peace negotiator Saeb Erekat said Monday that Palestinians have done "everything" to enable President Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry to succeed, and "there is a good opportunity now."

Kerry is heading to the Mideast this week to advance his two-month effort to restart Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

The U.N. General Assembly voted overwhelmingly in November to upgrade the Palestinians from U.N. observer to non-voting member state, but have not begun seeking membership for Palestine in U.N. agencies ? a move opposed by both Israel and the United States.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/palestinians-hold-off-un-agency-membership-193427422.html

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Stephen King's decision to skip the e-book format gets renewed attention

Stephen King said his new novel, 'Joyland,' will be released in paper format only. 'Let people ... go to an actual bookstore,' said King.

By Molly Driscoll,?Staff Writer / May 20, 2013

Stephen King's new novel 'Joyland' centers on a teenage carnival worker who learns about a never-solved murder case.

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Legendary author Stephen King?s decision not to released his new novel ?Joyland? in e-book format is getting renewed attention as the book's June 4 publication date draws near.

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?I have no plans for a digital version," King told the Wall Street Journal about his "Joyland." "Maybe at some point, but in the meantime, let people stir their sticks and go to an actual bookstore rather than a digital one.?

King has already made a name for himself as a maverick where e-books are concerned. In 2000 he made headlines when he released a shorter work titled ?Riding the Bullet? in e-book format only, making "Riding the Bullet" the world's first mass-market electronic book.

?Joyland? follows a 1970s college student who is employed at a carnival in North Carolina one summer and finds out about a murder that occurred several years ago and was never solved.

The book?s tagline on the front cover, ?Who dares enter the funhouse of fear?,? is reminiscent of some of King?s early horror works.

?Joyland? is being published by Titan Books imprint Hard Case Crime.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/pQNESZGRV-s/Stephen-King-s-decision-to-skip-the-e-book-format-gets-renewed-attention

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Yahoo Board Has Approved A $1.1 Billion Cash Deal For Tumblr, WSJ Reports

QcccaNdThe Wall Street Journal is now reporting via Twitter that the rumored $1.1 billion cash acquisition deal for social blogging site Tumblr has been approved by Yahoo's board of directors. The Tumblr acquisition was rumored last week, with a price tag reportedly north of $1 billion, which appears to be accurate if the WSJ's sources are correct.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Yg0khab4X6Y/

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This Table Designs Itself With a Corrosive Chemical Dance Party

There are all kinds of ways to design a table, but most of them don't include resonant frequencies or specially-designed abrasive enzymes, much less both. Bonus Table 571 isn't most tables though, and that's exactly how it gets its very specific pattern.

Engineered by Colleen & Eric and shown off at NYC Design Week 2013, Bonus Table 571 is all about the process. In order to get a gemoetrically etching on the table's surface that's specific to the very peice of wood its made out of, you've got to use the wood's resonant frequency. Then, when the board starts vibrating, you can suss out its hidden patterns, and coat them with an enzyme concoction engineered from forest floor microbes that will gnaw away at the surface. Why? Because it's awesome.

Bonus Table 571 isn't so much a table as it is a recipe. Any slab of wood can get the same treatment once you tease out its resonant frequency. And the kind of wood you're working with will determine how deep down the enzymes can burrow.

It's certainly not the most straight-forward way to design the surface of a table, but it seems like one of the only ways you could ever actually let the table have a say in what it looks like. It gets no say in the corrosive enzymes, though. [Core77]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-table-designs-itself-with-a-corrosive-chemical-dan-508483076

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Hofstra graduates honor student killed by police

MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) ? Students at Hofstra University wore white ribbons at their graduation ceremony to honor a fellow student who was accidentally killed by a police officer confronting an armed intruder.

Sunday's ceremony came two days after Andrea Rebello died when the masked man entered her off-campus home on Long Island.

A police officer aiming at the would-be robber opened fire, hitting the 21-year-old college junior as well as the ex-convict who had entered the house.

On Saturday evening, flags on campus were at half-staff and students held a silent outdoor in front of a photo of the young woman. Surrounded by candles and flowers, they sang "Ave Maria."

Rebello's funeral is scheduled for Wednesday in Sleepy Hollow, which is in Westchester County.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hofstra-graduates-honor-student-killed-police-161643997.html

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Inspect your boat! It's National Safe Boating Week - miNBCnews.com

The Great Lakes Coast Guard is urging boaters to inspect their boats before heading out on the water.

Officials say they have performed two water rescues recently.

In both cases, the boats were not "water-ready."

The Coast Guard is using "National Safe Boating Week" as a time to encourage people to be safe on the water.

They caution against drinking and driving and encourage recreational boaters to wear safety vests at all times.

In 2012, 651 boaters died on U.S. waterways. 70% of those deaths were the result of drowning.

National Safe Boating Week runs from May 18-24.

Source: http://www.minbcnews.com/news/story.aspx?id=899357

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Netanyahu takes aim at weapons 'leakage' in Syria

By Jeffrey Heller

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held out the prospect on Sunday of further Israeli strikes inside Syria, pledging to act to prevent advanced weapons from reaching Hezbollah and other militant groups.

Although Israel has not publicly taken sides in the civil war between Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and rebels trying to topple him, Western and Israeli sources say it has launched air strikes in Syria to destroy weapons it believed were destined for Lebanon's Hezbollah.

In public remarks at the weekly meeting of his cabinet, Netanyahu made no direct mention of those attacks, but made clear Israel was prepared to take action in the future and said it was "preparing for every scenario" in the Syrian conflict.

Israel had set a policy "to prevent, as much as possible, the leakage of advanced weapons to Hezbollah and terror elements", he said.

"We will act to ensure the security interest of Israel's citizens in the future as well," Netanyahu added, describing his government's actions as "responsible, determined and level-headed".

Israel has neither confirmed nor denied reports it attacked Iranian-supplied missiles stored near Damascus this month that it believed were awaiting delivery to Hezbollah, which fought a war with Israel in 2006 and is allied with Assad.

SUPERSONIC MISSILE

A Russian shipment of Yakhont anti-ship missiles to Syria was condemned by the United States on Friday, and Israel is also alarmed by the prospect of Moscow supplying S-300 advanced air defense missile systems to Damascus.

Netanyahu held talks in Russia on Tuesday with President Vladimir Putin on the Syrian crisis but gave no public indication whether Israel's concerns over the Russian weaponry had been eased.

Amos Gilad, a senior Israeli Defence Ministry official, said on Saturday the S-300 and the Yakhont, weapons that could complicate any plans for foreign military intervention in Syria, would likely end up with Hezbollah and threaten both Israel and U.S. forces in the Gulf.

"Yakhont is a cruise missile that can hit targets at sea and strategic targets. (It is) a supersonic missile, (with) a range of 300 km, very sophisticated," Gilad said on Israel's Channel Two television on Saturday.

"The Russians sent it to Syria, beside the strategic defense system called the S-300. There are a number of versions, and they are sending them one of the good versions," he said.

General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on Friday Russia's delivery of anti-ship missiles to Assad was "ill-timed and very unfortunate" and risked prolonging a war that has already killed more than 80,000 Syrians.

A spokesman for Putin, while not responding directly to assertions Russia had sent the anti-ship missiles, said Moscow would honor contracts to supply Syria, a long-time weapons customer.

(Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/netanyahu-takes-aim-weapons-leakage-syria-094955582.html

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There Was No Surge in IRS Tax-Exempt Applications in 2010 (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/306521697?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Obama takes Cabinet secretaries out to play golf

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama has taken two Cabinet secretaries out for a round of golf ? in the rain.

The White House said Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius (seh-BEEL'-yuhs) and outgoing Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood joined the president Saturday at Andrews Air Force Base. LaHood is running the Transportation Department until the Senate confirms Obama's choice of Charlotte, N.C., Mayor Anthony Foxx as successor.

Reporters saw Sebelius climb into the president's SUV before the motorcade left the White House. She's overseeing the president's health care law.

Before he got into the vehicle, Obama looked up at the grey sky with an outstretched hand. A steady rain was falling by the time he arrived about a half hour later.

White House assistant chef Sam Kass completes the foursome.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-takes-cabinet-secretaries-play-golf-165709657.html

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Agriculture in China predates domesticated rice: Discovery of ancient diet shatters conventional ideas of how agriculture emerged

May 17, 2013 ? Archaeologists have made a discovery in southern subtropical China which could revolutionise thinking about how ancient humans lived in the region. They have uncovered evidence for the first time that people living in Xincun 5,000 years ago may have practised agriculture -- before the arrival of domesticated rice in the region.

Current archaeological thinking is that it was the advent of rice cultivation along the Lower Yangtze River that marked the beginning of agriculture in southern China. Poor organic preservation in the study region, as in many others, means that traditional archaeobotany techniques are not possible.

Now, thanks to a new method of analysis on ancient grinding stones, the archaeologists have uncovered evidence that agriculture could predate the advent of rice in the region.

The research was the result of a two-year collaboration between Dr Huw Barton, from the School of Archaeology and Ancient History at the University of Leicester, and Dr Xiaoyan Yang, Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, in Beijing.

Funded by a Royal Society UK-China NSFC International Joint Project, and other grants held by Yang in China, the research is published in PLOS ONE.

Dr Barton, Senior Lecturer in Bioarchaeology at the University of Leicester, described the find as 'hitting the jackpot': "Our discovery is totally unexpected and very exciting.

"We have used a relatively new method known as ancient starch analysis to analyse ancient human diet. This technique can tell us things about human diet in the past that no other method can.

"From a sample of grinding stones we extracted very small quantities of adhering sediment trapped in pits and cracks on the tool surface. From this material, preserved starch granules were extracted with our Chinese colleagues in the starch laboratory in Beijing. These samples were analysed in China and also here at Leicester in the Starch and Residue Laboratory, School of Archaeology and Ancient History.

"Our research shows us that there was something much more interesting going on in the subtropical south of China 5,000 years ago than we had first thought. The survival of organic material is really dependent on the particular chemical properties of the soil, so you never know what you will get until you sample. At Xincun we really hit the jackpot. Starch was well-preserved and there was plenty of it. While some of the starch granules we found were species we might expect to find on grinding and pounding stones, ie. some seeds and tuberous plants such as freshwater chestnuts, lotus root and the fern root, the addition of starch from palms was totally unexpected and very exciting."

Several types of tropical palms store prodigious quantities of starch. This starch can be literally bashed and washed out of the trunk pith, dried as flour, and of course eaten. It is non-toxic, not particularly tasty, but it is reliable and can be processed all year round. Many communities in the tropics today, particularly in Borneo and Indonesia, but also in eastern India, still rely on flour derived from palms.

Dr Barton said: "The presence of at least two, possibly three species of starch producing palms, bananas, and various roots, raises the intriguing possibility that these plants may have been planted nearby the settlement.

"Today groups that rely on palms growing in the wild are highly mobile, moving from one palm stand to another as they exhaust the clump. Sedentary groups that utilise palms for their starch today, plant suckers nearby the village, thus maintaining continuous supply. If they were planted at Xincun, this implies that 'agriculture' did not arrive here with the arrival of domesticated rice, as archaeologists currently think, but that an indigenous system of plant cultivation may have been in place by the mid Holocene.

"The adoption of domesticated rice was slow and gradual in this region; it was not a rapid transformation as in other places. Our findings may indicate why this was the case. People may have been busy with other types of cultivation, ignoring rice, which may have been in the landscape, but as a minor plant for a long time before it too became a food staple.

"Future work will focus on grinding stones from nearby sites to see if this pattern is repeated along the coast."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ehlHNvNJaR8/130517085734.htm

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Ferguson heads into retirement seeking 1 more win

Manchester United's manager Sir Alex Ferguson, center, lifts the premier league trophy after his last home game in charge of the club, their English Premier League soccer match against Swansea City, at Old Trafford Stadium, Manchester, England, Sunday May 12, 2013. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Manchester United's manager Sir Alex Ferguson, center, lifts the premier league trophy after his last home game in charge of the club, their English Premier League soccer match against Swansea City, at Old Trafford Stadium, Manchester, England, Sunday May 12, 2013. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Manchester United's manager Sir Alex Ferguson speaks to the crowd after his last home game in charge of the club, their English Premier League soccer match against Swansea City, at Old Trafford Stadium, Manchester, England, Sunday May 12, 2013. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

Manchester United's manager Alex Ferguson arrives for the team's Player of the Year Awards dinner at Old Trafford Stadium, Manchester, England, Wednesday May 15, 2013. (AP Photo/Jon Super)

(AP) ? Alex Ferguson is looking forward to a retired life of luxury vacations, watching thoroughbreds, enjoying good wines and perhaps studying languages.

Before that, though, there's one final challenge to overcome ? beating West Bromwich Albion on Sunday in his 1,500th and last game as Manchester United manager.

"One thousand five hundred matches ? it's quite incredible," Ferguson said Friday, shaking his head at his own longevity.

The end of the road in Ferguson's 39-year coaching career comes at The Hawthorns, an unassuming stadium in central England.

He has already had one emotional farewell ? at Old Trafford on Sunday after a 2-1 win over Swansea that marked his final home match as United manager. On that occasion, there was a guard of honor, a five-minute speech to fans and relentless waving of red flags by United supporters who can't quite believe their manager of nearly 27 years is stepping aside. There's also been United's trophy parade through the streets of Manchester on Monday, when tens of thousands of people came out in force for one more glimpse of the legendary man and his Premier League title-winners.

This weekend's match promises to be another tear-jerker, although all Ferguson wants is a win. It's typical of him.

"Every team wants to win their last home game ? that's a fact of life," said Ferguson, who was named the Premier League's manager of the year on Friday. "And also I want to win this one more than last week's even."

His coaching life began in 1974, with unheralded East Stirlingshire in the Scottish lower leagues. Ferguson remembers having "eight players and no goalkeeper." Now he has six goalkeepers and around 100 players to oversee.

"It's a different life," Ferguson acknowledged. "Change is inevitable ? you have to manage that.

"There have been big changes in this club in terms of number of staff, sports science, modern technology has come into it. When I started as a manager there were no agents, media was different then, too. ... The changes are all there, integrated over a long period. But I don't think I've changed much."

Things are set to change in Ferguson's life, however. No more getting up in the early hours and being the first person into Carrington, United's vast and impressive training complex in west Manchester. No more picking teams, coaching world-class players, doing draining media duties.

But that doesn't mean he'll be enjoying regular 10-hour sleep-ins, as he did after the parade on Monday.

"It's the first time in my life that I've had 10 hours' sleep ? (wife) Cathy kept making sounds round about me," Ferguson said. "I think she was just checking to see if I was alive."

Ferguson's new life will likely see him having a closer involvement in his second passion of horse racing and spending more time with his family and on holiday, particularly to his favorite destinations of New York and the south of France. He's then scheduled to have hip surgery in July.

"I'm driven to take on some challenges and some other things right away," he said. "I've got a league managers meeting on Monday, I'm going to Newmarket (for horse racing) on Tuesday and Wednesday ... I'm going on holiday on June 4, it's the (English) Derby on June 1, I'm going on holiday for a month.

"Then I'm having the operation, then I've got the recuperation, then the season starts. So we're all right."

Ferguson, who will become a director at United once he steps aside for new manager David Moyes, made his decision to quit coaching last Christmas, after the death of his wife's sister. He said Friday he has no regrets, not even when he felt dejected following United's exit at the hands of Real Madrid in the Champions League in March, when winger Nani was controversially sent off with United ahead on aggregate in the two-legged match.

That denied Ferguson the chance of a third title in the Champions League, a competition in which he has always acknowledged United has underperformed for a club of its stature.

"I made my mind up long ago and that was it ... you can't be successful without disappointments, I think disappointments are good for you," Ferguson said. "It's a challenge to you and for your players' character to recover and I think we've been doing that over the years."

Ferguson was given a standing ovation at his final news conference Friday. He received a cake with a hairdryer made of icing on top, in reference to the so-called "hairdryer treatment" he dished out to players at halftime of matches.

That's just one of the many things Ferguson will be remembered for.

"The memories are all there, 26 years at Manchester United is fantastic," Ferguson said. "The day I came here was a privilege and the day I've left will be an honor. I'm lucky to have been here that long."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-17-SOC-Man-United-Ferguson's-Farewell/id-2f2ca08cd00944ca9c69364ec05c4b2f

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Saturday, May 18, 2013

OAS calls for softer approach toward illegal drug users

By Eduardo Garcia

BOGOTA (Reuters) - The Organization of American States on Friday published a report calling for decriminalization of drug use and for greater coordination between nations in tackling the scourge.

"The report presented by the OAS today is a vital piece in the construction of a common way to fight this problem," Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos said during the presentation of the 200-page report in Bogota.

Almost all the cocaine consumed in Western countries is produced in Latin America, while violence linked to the drug trade kills thousands every year as smugglers fight for control of trafficking routes in Central America, Colombia and Mexico.

Drug consumption is ticking up in nations such as Argentina and Brazil. According to the OAS, about 45 percent of cocaine consumers, 50 percent of heroin users and 25 percent of marijuana smokers live in North and South America.

The report for the OAS, which includes all 35 North and South American nations, aims to start a debate among American nations regarding anti-drug policies. It also advocates for softer policies toward drug users.

"The decriminalization of drug consumption must be considered the base of any public health strategies," the report says. "An addict is not a person with a chronic disease that should be punished for his addiction."

The report echoes comments by Helen Clark, the head of the U.N. Development Program, who in March said she favored Latin American governments treating drugs as a public health problem.

It also calls for "a substantial reduction in penalties" to drug addicts and urges countries in the region to opt for rehabilitation programs instead. It suggests that countries in the region should consider the option of legalizing or decriminalizing marijuana consumption.

"Our report, however, did not find any significant support, in any of the countries, toward the decriminalization or legalization of any other illegal drug," the OAS said.

The United States has sent billions of dollars to Colombia to combat the cocaine trade but still there is limited coordinated effort between countries in fighting drug trafficking and usage. That prompted several member presidents to ask the OAS to analyze the region's anti-drug policies in order to make them more effective.

The Open Society Foundations, a human-rights and pro-democracy group, celebrated the report as a "game changing" document that likely will broaden the debate on drug policy reform.

"This is the beginning of an international conversation on a new approach to drugs," said David Holiday, the group's senior regional advocacy officer. "We can hope this will move policies from those currently based in repression to strategies rooted in public health and human rights."

Many in Latin America feel a new approach is needed to the drug war - and a shift away from hard-line policies - after decades of violence in producer and trafficking nations such as Colombia, Peru and Mexico.

Some regional leaders are pressuring the United States for an overhaul of anti-drug policies. Presidents including Santos have suggested they might be open to legalization of some narcotics if that helped reduce violence.

(Reporting by Eduardo Garcia; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/oas-calls-softer-approach-toward-illegal-drug-users-215200385.html

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World's melting glaciers making large contribution to sea rise

May 16, 2013 ? While 99 percent of Earth's land ice is locked up in the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, the remaining ice in the world's glaciers contributed just as much to sea rise as the two ice sheets combined from 2003 to 2009, says a new study led by Clark University and involving the University Colorado Boulder.

The new research found that all glacial regions lost mass from 2003 to 2009, with the biggest ice losses occurring in Arctic Canada, Alaska, coastal Greenland, the southern Andes and the Himalayas. The glaciers outside of the Greenland and Antarctic sheets lost an average of roughly 260 billion metric tons of ice annually during the study period, causing the oceans to rise 0.03 inches, or about 0.7 millimeters per year.

The study compared traditional ground measurements to satellite data from NASA's Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite, or ICESat, and the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment, or GRACE, missions to estimate ice loss for glaciers in all regions of the planet.

"For the first time, we've been able to very precisely constrain how much these glaciers as a whole are contributing to sea rise," said geography Assistant Professor Alex Gardner of Clark University in Worcester, Mass., lead study author. "These smaller ice bodies are currently losing about as much mass as the ice sheets."

A paper on the subject is being published in the May 17 issue of the journal Science.

"Because the global glacier ice mass is relatively small in comparison with the huge ice sheets covering Greenland and Antarctica, people tend to not worry about it," said CU-Boulder Professor Tad Pfeffer, a study co-author. "But it's like a little bucket with a huge hole in the bottom: it may not last for very long, just a century or two, but while there's ice in those glaciers, it's a major contributor to sea level rise," said Pfeffer, a glaciologist at CU-Boulder's Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research

ICESat, which ceased operations in 2009, measured glacier changes using laser altimetry, which bounces laser pulses off the ice surface to determine changes in the height of ice cover. The GRACE satellite system, still operational, detects variations in Earth's gravity field resulting from changes in the planet's mass distribution, including ice displacements.

GRACE does not have a fine enough resolution and ICESat does not have sufficient sampling density to study small glaciers, but mass change estimates by the two satellite systems for large glaciated regions agree well, the scientists concluded.

"Because the two satellite techniques, ICESat and GRACE, are subject to completely different types of errors, the fact that their results are in such good agreement gives us increased confidence in those results," said CU-Boulder physics Professor John Wahr, a study co-author and fellow at the university's Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences.

Ground-based estimates of glacier mass changes include measurements along a line from a glacier's summit to its edge, which are extrapolated over a glacier's entire area. Such measurements, while fairly accurate for individual glaciers, tend to cause scientists to overestimate ice loss when extrapolated over larger regions, including individual mountain ranges, according to the team.

Current estimates predict if all the glaciers in the world were to melt, they would raise sea level by about two feet. In contrast, an entire Greenland ice sheet melt would raise sea levels by about 20 feet, while if Antarctica lost its ice cover, sea levels would rise nearly 200 feet.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/woYZQYlNnL0/130516142547.htm

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Google Glass 'prescription edition' makes a cameo at Google I/O

Google Glass 'prescription edition' makes a cameo at Google IO

Google I/O is always full of surprises, and we came across yet another elusive bit of hardware on the show floor today: Google Glass "prescription edition". No, it's not actually called that (we made up the name), but what you're looking at is definitely Glass that's been neatly integrated with a pair of prescription glasses -- in fact, it looks a lot like the version of Glass that Google recently mentioned on its blog. We don't really know anything else about this device, but we've reached out to Google for comment. Is this a custom design built by combining Google Glass Explorer Edition with off-the shelf eyewear? Is this a Glass prototype that's designed specifically for people who wear prescription spectacles? Share your thoughts in the comments and don't forget to check out the gallery below.

Update: Google's confirmed it's a prototype the company's experimented with.

Brad Molen contributed to this report.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/17/google-glass-prescription-edition-makes-a-cameo-at-google-i-o/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Wall Street opens up in rebound from recent drop

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks opened higher on Friday and were on track for their fourth straight week of gains as equities rebounded off their worst daily decline in nearly three weeks.

The Dow Jones industrial average <.dji> was up 40.51 points, or 0.27 percent, at 15,273.73. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.spx> was up 5.70 points, or 0.35 percent, at 1,656.17. The Nasdaq Composite Index <.ixic> was up 19.00 points, or 0.55 percent, at 3,484.24.

(Reporting by Ryan Vlastelica; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stock-futures-rise-ahead-umich-leading-indicators-data-120747073.html

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Boston Symphony names Latvian conductor to succeed James Levine

BOSTON (Reuters) - The Boston Symphony Orchestra has hired Latvian conductor Andris Nelsons to succeed James Levine, an iconic American conductor known for his wild hair and dramatic manner, who left in 2011 due to health problems, it said on Thursday.

Nelsons will be the leading U.S. symphony's youngest conductor in more than a century when he begins the 2013-14 season as "music director designate." He will assume the full title of music director for the 2014-15 season.

"Sought after by the top orchestras and opera houses of the world, Maestro Nelsons, at age 34, is already considered one of the most brilliant conductors of our time," said Chairman of the BSO Board of Trustees Ted Kelly in a press release.

Nelsons, who is currently conducting the Birmingham Symphony Orchestra in the United Kingdom, said in the release that his appointment to the BSO marked "one of the highest achievements a conductor could hope for in his lifetime."

The Boston Symphony has been without a permanent music director since 2011, when Levine - one of the leading forces in U.S. classical music for the last four decades - left after seven seasons because of back problems and other health issues.

Levine, who also serves as music director of the Metropolitan Opera in New York, is due to return Sunday to the podium in New York, where he will conduct excerpts from Wagner's Lohengrin and Schubert's "Great" Symphony.

Nelsons is scheduled to make his first official appearance at the head of the orchestra in Boston in October, leading Wagner's Siegfried Idyll, Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 25 in C, and Brahms's Symphony No. 3.

(Writing by Richard Valdmanis; Editing by Scott Malone and Gunna Dickson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boston-symphony-names-latvian-conductor-succeed-james-levine-195752787.html

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Friday, May 17, 2013

online business development | eCommerce Investments Europe

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We are?Online Business Experts , providing experience , knowledge and?all eCommerce Skills necessary ?for?online business development?

Our work philosophy?are based on the Business Generation on Internet, and although it may seem obvious, really is important to emphasize this point ??Internet Business Generation? ?because there are big differences between a website creation to show the Online Image from a company and manage the?activation of internet sales from a Internet project or Internet Idea

As experienced professionals in eCommerce we launched this company?to bring the skills necessary to develop online businesses?of entrepreneurs?with the maximum effectiveness.

Our goal from the beginning has been to help entrepreneurs to create their business on Internet, fast and error-free ,?making us the partner on the internet,?and collaborating from the start in a very clear way

As eCommerce Consultants and eCommerce Investors,?We have created two programs in?order to adapt to the maximum amount of possible?projects.

1-eCommerce Consulting Program,

With our eCommerce Consulting Program, We fully developed and drive Internet Projects?to get the full potential of the online business, and we do this?covering all development costs and managing all processes on the Internet, and when the project start to?generate business?we will receive a percentage of sales?during the agreed time to recover our investment?and of course also to earn money

To seal each alliance?we need a initial security payment?and also a minimum period of collaboration, thats all!

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Internet Investors over small and medium eCommerce projects with solid business and growth process,

We provide our expertise , small business finance?and we involve ourselves in the online business development, becoming in your technology partner in your eCommerce companies, to?take over the development cost, and technical management of online businesses, in exchange for a share of the company and online sales percentage

Developing an online business requires many skill-sets, not just technical, also marketing, graphics, positioning, social media, Internet marketing service.. and all the skills combined and contributed by the right people to mold the successful online venture

A eCommerce Project should be handle only for one eCommerce agency which handles all processes for the Internet Business Creation, this is crucial?to go the way of success, because on this way will take advantage of all the synergies,?avoiding double spending on items to be overlapped in the Internet business creation process

Each of us in eCommerce Investments have had our share of success and failure, and our experiences on both sides is what makes us online business experts.?we have created our own business,?and participated in many others during the last years.?so we know what to do?and when to do it,?to set up an internet business .

We exist to facilitate the online business development knowledge that most small or medium sized eCommerce projects becoming in the Internet Partner to the Companies and entreperneurs who want to?create your online business?in a solid, sustainable and long-term way

Now if you fit with our work philosophy and want to Create, expand or boost your internet business in partnership with us, let us know you want to collaborate.

Source: http://ecommerce-investments.com/online-business-development/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=online-business-development

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Obama travels to Baltimore as part of his 'middle class jobs and opportunity tour' (Washington Bureau)

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Nasa buys into 'quantum' computer

A $15m computer that uses "quantum physics" effects to boost its speed is to be installed at a Nasa facility.

It will be shared by Google, Nasa, and other scientists, providing access to a machine said to be up to 3,600 times faster than conventional computers.

Unlike standard machines, the D-Wave Two processor appears to make use of an effect called quantum tunnelling.

This allows it to reach solutions to certain types of mathematical problems in fractions of a second.

Effectively, it can try all possible solutions at the same time and then select the best.

Google wants to use the facility at Nasa's Ames Research Center in California to find out how quantum computing might advance techniques of machine learning and artificial intelligence, including voice recognition.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

The gate model... is the single worst thing that ever happened to quantum computing?

End Quote Geordie Rose Chief technology officer, D-wave

University researchers will also get 20% of the time on the machine via the Universities Space Research Agency (USRA).

Nasa will likely use the commercially available machine for scheduling problems and planning.

Canadian company D-Wave Systems, which makes the machine, has drawn scepticism over the years from quantum computing experts around the world.

Until research outlined earlier this year, some even suggested its machines showed no evidence of using specifically quantum effects.

Quantum computing is based around exploiting the strange behaviour of matter at quantum scales.

Most work on this type of computing has focused on building quantum logic gates similar to the gate devices at the basis of conventional computing.

But physicists have repeatedly found that the problem with a gate-based approach is keeping the quantum bits, or qubits (the basic units of quantum information), in their quantum state.

"You get drop out? decoherence, where the qubits lapse into being simple 1s and 0s instead of the entangled quantum states you need. Errors creep in," says Prof Alan Woodward of Surrey University.

One gate opens...

Instead, D-Wave Systems has been focused on building machines that exploit a technique called quantum annealing - a way of distilling the optimal mathematical solutions from all the possibilities.

Annealing is made possible by physics effect known as quantum tunnelling, which can endow each qubit with an awareness of every other one.

"The gate model... is the single worst thing that ever happened to quantum computing", Geordie Rose, chief technology officer for D-Wave, told BBC Radio 4's Material World programme.

"And when we look back 20 years from now, at the history of this field, we'll wonder why anyone ever thought that was a good idea."

Dr Rose's approach entails a completely different way of posing your question, and it only works for certain questions.

But according to a paper presented this week (the result of benchmarking tests required by Nasa and Google), it is very fast indeed at finding the optimal solution to a problem that potentially has many different combinations of answers.

In one case it took less than half a second to do something that took conventional software 30 minutes.

A classic example of one of these "combinatorial optimisation" problems is that of the travelling sales rep, who needs to visit several cities in one day, and wants to know the shortest path that connects them all together in order to minimise their mileage.

The D-Wave Two chip can compare all the possible itineraries at once, rather than having to work through each in turn.

Reportedly costing up to $15m, housed in a garden shed-sized box that cools the chip to near absolute zero, it should be installed at Nasa and available for research by autumn 2013.

US giant Lockheed Martin earlier this year upgraded its own D-Wave machine to the 512 qubit D-Wave Two.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22554494#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Android reaches 900 million activations

900 million

At the Google I/O keynote in San Francisco, Android and Chrome head Sundar Pichai has just revealed that Android has passed the milestone of 900 million activations, up from 400 million in 2012 and 100 million in 2011.

Pichai called the milestone "an extraordinary ecosystem achievement," but joked "there are 7 billion people in the world, so we have a long way to go, and we think we're just getting started." 

Follow our live coverage of the Google I/O keynote for the rest of the day's news!

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/ig97_lJTH-U/story01.htm

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Angelina&#39;s Cancer Gene Is Actually Patented by a Company - Jezebel

On Tuesday, Angelina Jolie wrote an emotional op-ed for The New York Times about her decision to have a preventive double mastectomy. Jolie?s decision came after she underwent genetic testing that indicated she was a carrier of certain genes that put her at a greater risk for developing aggressive breast cancer. Detecting these genes?known as BRCA1 and BRCA2?can be a crucial first step in preventing breast and ovarian cancers for women who have a family history of those diseases. But you?re gonna need some serious Jolie-bucks to find out if you?ve got the faulty genes.

Things that exist inside of your body are usually, you know, yours. But the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes actually ?belong? to a company called Myriad Genetics, which patented the genes in the late 1990s?truly the salad days of creepy science. Myriad didn?t patent the testing procedure or the method of extraction, but the genes themselves. These patents allow the company to control research on BRCA1 and BRCA2, set the price of the testing, and locations of their labs. Jolie herself points out that steps must be taken to ensure that all women have access to genetic testing, since at the moment it?s totally cost-prohibitive for those women who are not Angelina Jolie. Because that gilded billiards room in the party yacht isn?t going to pay for itself, Myriad charges anywhere from $3,000 to $4,000 for the test.

Last fiscal quarter, Myriad raked in $126 million dollars from genetic testing for breast cancer (85% of their total revenue!). Jolie?s piece on her genetic testing and subsequent surgery was a windfall for the company?Myriad can finally swap out the 4-ply for one hundred dollar bills in the executive bathrooms. (And it?s not just Myriad. About 20% of our genes have already been patented, potentially creating financial impediments for those whose diseases might be prevented through genetic testing.) It?s just like your conservative Uncle Larry always says, ?Let private enterprise provide life-saving medical services, because I fucking hate poor people and women!? CAPITALISM GUITAR RIFF!

But those rabble-rousers over at the ACLU think this whole gene patent thing is messed up, and have filed suit against Myriad. The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case this past April. The ACLU argued that Myriad?s patents are unconstitutional, because generally speaking, you can?t patent something that is a ?product of nature.? For something to be patentable, it needs to involve ?human ingenuity.? Here?s an example: let?s say you?re an old-timey prospector hopping around in the river in your long johns (with a back hatch, doy) and overalls. You love panning for gold but hate when your beard hairs get yanked out after getting stuck in the pan. You create a special pan that helps you find all the gold while still maintaining the integrity of your chin curtain. You can patent your special pan, but you can?t patent the gold that you find, because gold is a nature thing, not an invention thing. The same idea applies to genes?because BRCA1 and BRCA2 are made by nature, and were not created by Myriad, the ACLU doesn?t think the genes are patentable.

Myriad, of course, disagrees. It argued that its patents are legit because it isolated the genes outside of the human body, which the company thinks is enough to meet the ?ingenuity? threshold. Plus, they totally want to keep drinking champagne out of diamond-encrusted woolly mammoth tusks, so please don?t harsh their mellow, SCOTUS! For their part, the Supreme Court justices were mostly all, ?Duhhhh, science?? because lawyers are useless dummies who know nothing, Jon Snow.

Ultimately, Myriad?s approach makes life more difficult not just for women hoping to prevent cancer, but groups of geneticists, pathologists, and other scientific researchers who are eager to study BRCA1 and BRCA2 for a cure or for alternative testing methods. The whole point of patenting is to encourage discovery and invention by allowing those who hold patents to retain exclusive rights over their invention. Instead, Myriad has blocked these pursuits by refusing access to BRCA1 and BRCA2?including researchers who could determine whether certain gene mutations are more common in minority groups. As a result, Myriad?s monopoly on genetic testing for breast and ovarian cancer has only made it more difficult for women to make choices about their own health. Even women of means like Jolie can?t always get a second opinion after receiving the results of their genetic testing, because Myriad often prevents labs from running more tests. I mean, I don?t know, a second opinion might be useful when it comes to deciding whether or not to have parts of your body removed.

Although President Obama?s Affordable Care Act has expanded the number of preventive services that women can receive at no-cost (I just made a birth control milkshake, y?all), many women will still have to pay at least some of the cost for genetic testing, even with insurance. This disproportionately affects African-American, Latina, and poor women (women who are already at an increased risk of developing aggressive cancers) who are more likely to delay treatment because of the cost and are less likely to survive a cancer diagnosis.

Angelina Jolie made a courageous decision and absolutely deserves a standing ovation for her honesty and her inspiration. But every woman should have the chance to make that same choice without cost as a barrier. As long as Myriad Genetics holds patents for BRCA1 and BRCA2, it may be financially impossible for all women to get the testing that they need.


Meagan Hatcher-Mays is an unemployed graduate of Washington University Law School in Saint Louis. She does a significant amount of yelling on Twitter.

Image via Mopic/Shutterstock.

Source: http://jezebel.com/angelinas-cancer-gene-is-actually-patented-by-a-compan-506820204

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Newtonian Lawlessness (Unqualified Offerings)

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