Thursday, October 10, 2013

Container Home Plans | Home Accent Ideas | Bedroom Designs ...

Container Home Plans:- Container home plans are the new concept which has suitably gained much popularity and public interest in many countries. Building a Container Home Plan is very easy and with the obvious economic benefits, the green eco-friendly practices of recycling and sustainability quality which can create a lot of opportunity for modern architects and builders who want to develop and improve the concept of container home plans. Container housing plan is very beneficial than our conventional housing because after two or three years it can be bought at an economical price. Now because of its affordable and strong feature to become the framework for a house, steel container home and shipping container home are the most wanted for the home builders.


Great-Design-for-Container-House-Plans

Great-Design-for-Container-House-Plans


Steel container house:


It is a form of functional steel container home which is consists with steel intermodal container architecture.


Shipping container house:


Shipping containers were invented in 1950 and today it helps to transport various goods to any part of this world. Shipping container houses are able to create a very much affordable place to live and provide an economic, sociological climate to those people who are looking for much simple, less expensive place to live. An important advantage is that, rather than trashing them it can be used to build a strong and recycled structure. This shipping container homes made with steel helps to create a flexible and strong structure which is able to protect from hurricanes, earthquakes and tornadoes. There are scientific proofs that these houses remain stable in winds as strong as 100+ miles per hour, especially when anchored to the ground with supportive devices. But this structure is basically designed to be shipped anywhere in the country. This structure is used in various ways by different people:


Some people use it and transforming them into permanent residences. Others are turning them into temporary living quarters or guest house. Designers help in building it as more as attractive someone wishes for and liveable place with bathrooms, kitchens and living spaces.


Important benefits of having a shipping container house are:


  1. Able to resist fire, withstand rain and protects from insect etc.

  2. Able to protect form any storms and wind forces.

  3. Less expensive than the same structured traditional wood houses.

  4. Easily expendable in size and height.

  5. Can be shipped in any place by ships, trucks or rail, because they are shaped in a slandered shipping size.

  6. Environment friendly and made with the material which can be recycled.

A home made with shipping containers is a great solution for homes in rural areas. Its extendable feature and customization quality is highly beneficial which will help to produce its final look with an appropriate artistic texture. Generally these houses made with corrugated steel with tubular steel frames and welds are water-proof.


There are some disadvantages of it:


  1. Steel is good conductor of heat, so if temperature is hot enough then problems can occur.

  2. Size and weight of the container.

  3. Container can be damaged by friction, collisions and other forces of heavy loads during transit.

In spite of these few disadvantages container home plans is always considered a good idea these days and trusted by many.


Amazing Container Homes

Amazing Container Homes


 


Container House-Image

Container House-Image


 


Good LookingContainer Home

Good LookingContainer Home


 


Shipping Container Home

Shipping Container
Home



Steel Containers Home

Steel Containers Home



Source: http://www.homeaccentideas.com/container-home-plans/
Category: Alice Munro   Cleveland Indians   james spader   Nick Jonas   National Tequila Day  

Container Home Plans | Home Accent Ideas | Bedroom Designs ...

Container Home Plans:- Container home plans are the new concept which has suitably gained much popularity and public interest in many countries. Building a Container Home Plan is very easy and with the obvious economic benefits, the green eco-friendly practices of recycling and sustainability quality which can create a lot of opportunity for modern architects and builders who want to develop and improve the concept of container home plans. Container housing plan is very beneficial than our conventional housing because after two or three years it can be bought at an economical price. Now because of its affordable and strong feature to become the framework for a house, steel container home and shipping container home are the most wanted for the home builders.


Great-Design-for-Container-House-Plans

Great-Design-for-Container-House-Plans


Steel container house:


It is a form of functional steel container home which is consists with steel intermodal container architecture.


Shipping container house:


Shipping containers were invented in 1950 and today it helps to transport various goods to any part of this world. Shipping container houses are able to create a very much affordable place to live and provide an economic, sociological climate to those people who are looking for much simple, less expensive place to live. An important advantage is that, rather than trashing them it can be used to build a strong and recycled structure. This shipping container homes made with steel helps to create a flexible and strong structure which is able to protect from hurricanes, earthquakes and tornadoes. There are scientific proofs that these houses remain stable in winds as strong as 100+ miles per hour, especially when anchored to the ground with supportive devices. But this structure is basically designed to be shipped anywhere in the country. This structure is used in various ways by different people:


Some people use it and transforming them into permanent residences. Others are turning them into temporary living quarters or guest house. Designers help in building it as more as attractive someone wishes for and liveable place with bathrooms, kitchens and living spaces.


Important benefits of having a shipping container house are:


  1. Able to resist fire, withstand rain and protects from insect etc.

  2. Able to protect form any storms and wind forces.

  3. Less expensive than the same structured traditional wood houses.

  4. Easily expendable in size and height.

  5. Can be shipped in any place by ships, trucks or rail, because they are shaped in a slandered shipping size.

  6. Environment friendly and made with the material which can be recycled.

A home made with shipping containers is a great solution for homes in rural areas. Its extendable feature and customization quality is highly beneficial which will help to produce its final look with an appropriate artistic texture. Generally these houses made with corrugated steel with tubular steel frames and welds are water-proof.


There are some disadvantages of it:


  1. Steel is good conductor of heat, so if temperature is hot enough then problems can occur.

  2. Size and weight of the container.

  3. Container can be damaged by friction, collisions and other forces of heavy loads during transit.

In spite of these few disadvantages container home plans is always considered a good idea these days and trusted by many.


Amazing Container Homes

Amazing Container Homes


 


Container House-Image

Container House-Image


 


Good LookingContainer Home

Good LookingContainer Home


 


Shipping Container Home

Shipping Container
Home



Steel Containers Home

Steel Containers Home



Source: http://www.homeaccentideas.com/container-home-plans/
Category: Alice Munro   Cleveland Indians   james spader   Nick Jonas   National Tequila Day  

Friday, July 26, 2013

New research suggests human papilloma virus increases risk of oesophageal cancer

Updated July 25, 2013 10:25:18

New research suggests the human papilloma virus (HPV) could significantly increase the risk of oesophageal cancer.

Scientists at the University of New South Wales have published research showing people with the virus are three times more likely to develop oesophageal cancer.

Professor Ian Frazer, whose research linked HPV with cervical cancer, says his vaccine - known as Gardisil - could help in the treatment of other cancers caused by HPV.

"We're gradually realising that papilloma virus is a lot more than just a virus that causes cervical cancer," he said.

"Members of the papilloma virus family contribute to a number of cancers, including cancer of mouth and throat and cancer in some parts of the skin.

"I am surprised that we keep finding new ones, but the nature of the virus is such that it's likely to promote cancer anywhere it affects."

HPV does not cause cancer for everyone. Some people will only get symptoms like genital warts.

Others with the infection will notice no symptoms.

Professor Raina McIntyre, who led the University of NSW's research into HPV and oesophageal cancer, says HPV may be passed on by oral sex.

"That is one of the theories," she said.

"Certainly it has been found in the oral cavity ... and there's been a recent study that's come out by another group overseas which shows that the vaccine prevents virus acquisition in the mouth.

"That's the obvious theory of how it gets in there."

Professor McIntyre says oesophageal cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death around the world.

"It's the most common type of cancer worldwide and in some countries like China, South Africa and Iran, it's actually one of the leading causes of cancer deaths," she said.

"In other countries like Australia it's a fairly rare cancer but it's a cancer that has a very high fatality rate."

Professor Frazer says he will investigate a link between the papilloma virus and skin cancer.

"We're very interested in the common skin cancer that occurs in Australia," he said.

"We know that sunshine is an important contributing factor to that but many people who get exposed to the sun do not get these cancers and we're interested in seeing if the papilloma virus is adding to the burden."

Topics: cancer, diseases-and-disorders, health, skin-cancer, medical-research, science-and-technology, australia

First posted July 25, 2013 09:34:03

Source: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-07-25/hpv-virus-increases-risk-of-oesophageal-cancer-study-finds/4842102

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Thursday, July 11, 2013

Path Doubles Down On Stickers In Version 3.1, Alongside New iPad Design And Real World Friending

tumblr_inline_mpomnxYm4y1qz4rgpPath added stickers to comments, released a new iPad design, and introduced a new way to add friends in person today. Any sticker, old or new, can now be used in comments to respond to friends' moments. Path introduced stickers in version 3.0 in March to extremely positive feedback. In the first 24 hours after the launch, Path saw a million messages sent and made more money than it had in its entire lifetime as a company.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/zCT1a48ty_Q/

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Penn State to start 2014 season in Dublin against Central Florida

Penn State's much-hyped Ireland game against Central Florida has been finalized, according to a report from the Orlando Sentinel, and is scheduled played at Croke Park in Dublin next year.

Paul Tenorio of the Orlando Sentinel wrote that the organizers of the football game would make an official announcement Sunday, revealing other details such as travel packages. A Penn State spokesperson said Penn State did not comment on any future football games until contracts have been signed.

The Irish Times also reported that details of this matchup would be presented in a few days.

The Ireland game was one of the foremost topics on the Penn State coaches caravan in May, and head coach Bill O'Brien said then the game was close to being finalized and likely would be the season opener.

The game is seen as an alternative to a bowl for Penn State, which won't be eligible for the postseason the next three years because of NCAA sanctions.

O'Brien and Central Florida's coach, George O'Leary, have Irish heritage and, from 1998 to 2002, O'Brien coached on O'Leary's staff at Georgia Tech.

?

NOTE -- Penn State tight end Kyle Carter has been selected as a candidate for the 2013 John Mackey Award, presented to the nation's best tight end. Carter, a sophomore, was second on the team in receptions and receiving yards, finishing with 36 for 453 yards. He had two touchdowns but missed three games because of injury.

Source: http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/sports/psu/penn-state-to-start-2014-season-in-dublin-against-central-florida-694851

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Ariane 6 rocket design selected

The basic design for Europe's next generation rocket, the Ariane 6, has been selected.

It will be powered by two solid-fuelled lower stages and incorporate the liquid-fuelled upper-stage currently being developed as an upgrade for the existing Ariane 5 vehicle.

The concept was chosen following six months of trade-off studies.

Member states of the European Space Agency approved Ariane 6 development at a ministerial council last November.

Esa governments expect the new launcher to enter service at the start of the next decade.

The 6 will have less lifting capacity than the five - some 3-6.5 tonnes to the high orbits occupied by telecoms satellites, versus the 11.5 tonnes the 5 will have after its upgrade.

But the 6 will launch just one spacecraft at a time, not the two routinely orbited by the 5 now.

Also, the primary driver to a new configuration is the desire to reduce costs of manufacture and operation.

Ariane 5, although remarkably reliable and successful, is priced above its competition.

Ministers fear the vehicle's current market dominance will be eroded over time unless a cheaper approach is adopted.

The goal is to try produce and launch a rocket for no more than about 70m euros (?60m/?90m).

The 6 hopes to achieve this by slimming down the production consortium, which is spread across the continent, and by including fewer, less complex components in the build itself.

The baseline configuration is what is termed "PPH", where the "P" stands for "poudre" (or "powder" in English) to indicate solid propulsion, and where "H" stands for "hydrogen", to indicate the use of super-chilled liquid propellants.

In the 6, the first stage will have a line of three motors, each loaded with 135 tonnes of solid propellant, to lift the vehicle and its payload off the pad.

The in-line trio of motors will burn for a few minutes before separating and falling away. A second solid stage will then ignite and lift what remains of the vehicle into space.

This too will separate once exhausted, to allow the liquid-fuelled Vinci upper-stage to complete the task of placing the satellite in its final intended orbit.

Unlike the current Ariane 5 upper-stage, Vinci will bring itself out of the sky after the mission to limit the amount of junk circling the Earth.

The clam-shell fairing which protects the payload during the early phases of the ascent will have a diameter of 5.4m - the same as Ariane 5.

Esa says the Ariane 6 will build on the advances made by European industry in recent years, and will benefit from synergies with its newly introduced Vega rocket.

This is much smaller than Ariane but uses a lot of solids knowhow, and is manufactured with composite techniques the 6 would hope to copy.

Ariane 5 was introduced in 1996. After some early failures it has become the main means by which commercial telecoms satellites - the platforms that relay TV, phone and internet traffic - get into orbit.

Flying out of its Kourou base in French Guiana, the rocket also lifts the ATV space truck, the largest cargo vessel supplying the International Space Station.

And in 2018, Ariane 5 is scheduled to launch the James Webb Space Telescope, the $10bn (?7bn/8bn euros) successor to the Hubble observatory.

A site at Kourou for the 6's new pad has already been identified.

Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-23241158#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Ford F-250 pickup -- the new favorite of auto thieves

automobiles

28 minutes ago

In this March 2, 2010 photo provided by Ford Motor Co., the 2011 Ford F-250 Super Duty is shown. This truck has new available off-road features, inclu...

VarnHagen, Sam / AP

In this March 2, 2010 photo provided by Ford Motor Co., the 2011 Ford F-250 Super Duty is shown. This truck just topped the list of the most stolen vehicles in America

The big Ford F-250 pickup has become the favorite of U.S. car thieves, replacing the Cadillac Escalade, the luxury SUV that had topped the theft chart for nearly a decade.

But although the big Caddy fell to only sixth place in the annual survey by the Highway Loss Data Institute, Cadillac?s parent General Motors still had eight of the top 10 spots in terms of theft claims.

Pickups, in particular, proved extremely popular with thieves during the 2010 to 2012 period covered by the new study, accounting for the first five vehicles on the list. Following the four-wheel-drive crew cab version of the F-250 were:

* The Chevrolet Silverado 1500 crew cab;

* The Chevrolet Avalanche 1500;

* The GMC Sierra 1500 crew cab; and

* The Ford F-350 pickup

The rest of the top 10, in order, were the Cadillac Escalade, Chevrolet Suburban 1500, GMC Sierra 1500, extended cab, GMC Yukon and Chevrolet Tahoe.

The fact that the Escalade fell so sharply after leading the theft list since 2003 may be a positive sign for an embarrassed GM, which has promised to improve its anti-theft technology ? something it plans to integrate into new versions of the Chevy Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups for the 2014 model-year.

?General Motors has put a lot of effort into new anti-theft technology, so that may help explain the decline in the Escalade?s theft rate,? said HLDI vice president Matt Moore, who cautioned that, ?On the other hand, sales of the Escalade have fallen in recent years, so there may be less of a market for stolen Escalades or Escalade parts.?

(Heads-Up! New Tech Lets Drivers Keep Their Eyes on the Road)

Ford, meanwhile, contends that it is also taking steps to reduce thefts with new technologies.

Nonetheless, the F-250 had a claim frequency of nearly six times the average for all vehicles sold in the U.S., or seven per 1,000 insured vehicle years, according to HLDI. That?s the equivalent of having seven vehicles stolen out of every 1,000 over the course of a year.

In terms of the average loss payment per theft claim, the F-250 came in at $7,060, second only to the F-350 at $7,517 among the 10 most stolen vehicles.

Then again, the average payment came to $13,803, HLDI reports, for the Audi A4 sedan. But insurance companies don?t pay out very often on that model, which had the third lowest theft rate according to the new study.

The bottom five most stolen vehicles, with just 0.4 thefts per 1,000 insured vehicle year were, the Dodge Journey 4WD, the Volkswagen Tiguan 4WD, the Audi A4 sedan, the Acura RDX and the Toyota Matrix.

To a large degree, the vehicles at the top of the theft chart are higher-volume vehicles that thieves find they can either sell whole or strip for parts. Those at the bottom are either relatively unpopular products or lower-volume luxury models, such as the Audi A4. But there also are some more popular vehicles, like the Honda CR-V, ranked seventh from the bottom, that may benefit from improved anti-theft technologies.

Automotive immobilizers, designed to prevent a vehicle from being hot-wired, were standard in 89 percent of all vehicles sold in the U.S. in 2012, the last of the three years covered by the latest theft study.

Nonetheless, a separate report released a week ago by the National Insurance Crime Bureau found that the national rate for car theft rose 1.3 percent in 2012, largely led by California and other western states. It was the first increase the NICB has reported in eight years.

The average theft rate for all vehicles, HLDI notes, was 1.2 per 1,000 insured vehicle years, and the typical claim payout came to $6,532.

Copyright ? 2009-2013, The Detroit Bureau

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2e6bf6f9/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cford0Ef0E250A0Epickup0Enew0Efavorite0Eauto0Ethieves0E6C10A575428/story01.htm

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

AP Source: Cavs meeting with free agent Bynum

CLEVELAND (AP) ? Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert wondered what other moves general manager Chris Grant had in mind to improve Cleveland this summer.

He knows now.

The Cavs hosted free agent center Andrew Bynum on Monday, a person familiar with the visit told The Associated Press. The 7-foot Bynum, who didn't play one game for Philadelphia last season because of a knee injury, met with team officials at Cleveland Clinic Courts, the club's suburban facility, said the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of negotiations.

On Sunday, Gilbert went on Twitter to applaud the team's acquisition of free agent forward Earl Clark and guard Jarrett Jack, who both agreed to terms on deals with Cleveland last week. On his page, Gilbert wrote: "I am more than excited about @TeamEarlClark & @JarrettJack03 joining the @cavs! Two team players that flat-out make us better. What's next CG?"

Bynum's meeting with the Cavs was first reported by ESPN.

Grant is hoping to land a big man, and with Dwight Howard signing with Houston, the 25-year-old Bynum is the most attractive center on the market. The Cavs want to first make sure Bynum is healthy before offering him a deal.

The Dallas Mavericks are also reportedly interested in Bynum after not getting Howard.

With more than $15 million under the projected salary cap, the Cavs may be interested in offering Bynum a lucrative one-year deal. They don't want to tie up any money beyond next season because they intend to be active in free agency next summer, when their will be several top-tier players available, maybe even LeBron James, who can opt out of his contract with Miami after next season.

Before he was traded to the 76ers last summer, Bynum played for the Los Angeles Lakers under Cleveland coach Mike Brown. In his one season with Brown, Bynum had his best season, averaging 18.7 points and 11.8 rebounds. He was acquired by Philadelphia last year from the Lakers as part of a four-team trade, but he never got on the floor and the Sixers disintegrated.

Bynum underwent arthroscopic surgery on both knees in March.

Last month, his agent, David Lee, told the AP there's "not a concern in the world" that Bynum will be ready for training camp.

If the Cavs are able to sign Bynum, and assuming he's healthy, they would immediately move back into playoff contention in the Eastern Conference. Bynum would be added to a nucleus that includes All-Star guard Kyrie Irving, forwards Anderson Varejao and Tristan Thompson, Jack, guard Dion Waiters and forward Anthony Bennett, the No. 1 overall pick in last month's draft.

Gilbert has already stated he expects the Cavs to make the playoffs next season after winning just 66 total games in the three years since James left.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-source-cavs-meeting-free-agent-bynum-181520929.html

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No cutoff in US aid to Egyptian military _ for now

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney speaks during the daily news briefing at the White House in Washignton, Monday, July 8, 2013. The overthrow of Egypt's Islamist president, and National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, were among the topics Carney discussed. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney speaks during the daily news briefing at the White House in Washignton, Monday, July 8, 2013. The overthrow of Egypt's Islamist president, and National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, were among the topics Carney discussed. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Egyptian army stand guard around the Republican Guard building in Nasr City in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, July 8, 2013. Egyptian soldiers and police opened fire on supporters of the ousted President Mohammed Morsi early Monday in violence that left dozens of people killed, including one officer, outside the military building in Cairo where demonstrators had been holding a sit-in, government officials and witnesses said. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Supporters of the ousted President Mohammed Morsi shout slogans in Nasr City, a suburb of Cairo, Egypt, Monday, July 8, 2013. Egyptian soldiers and police opened fire on supporters of the ousted president early Monday in violence that left dozens of people killed, including one officer, outside a military building in Cairo where demonstrators had been holding a sit-in, government officials and witnesses said. (AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)

(AP) ? The Obama administration signaled Monday that U.S. national security interests will trump its promotion of Egypt's budding democracy, stressing the importance of continued aid to the Egyptian military, which overthrew the elected president last week.

As violence blazed between security forces and supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, the White House and State Department both urged the military to exercise "maximum restraint." They also said the military would not be punished with a cutoff of its $1.3 billion in annual U.S. aid for toppling Morsi.

But if the American government makes a legal determination that the removal was done through a coup d'etat, U.S. law would require ending all non-humanitarian aid to Egypt, the vast majority of which goes to the military.

Administration officials said lawyers were still reviewing developments to make that ruling. However, the absence of a coup determination, coupled with the administration's refusal to condemn Morsi's ouster, sent an implicit message of U.S. approval to the military.

And officials said the White House had made clear in U.S. inter-agency discussions ? as recently as a Monday morning conference call ? that continued aid to Egypt's military was a priority for America's national security, Israel's safety and broader stability in the turbulent Middle East that should not be jeopardized.

"It would not be in the best interests of the United States to immediately change our assistance program to Egypt," White House press secretary Jay Carney said. He stressed that more elements ? notably what the United States deems best for itself, its Mideast allies and the larger region ? than just the physical removal from office of a democratically elected leader would be considered in the legal review.

"We are going to take the time necessary to review what has taken place and to monitor efforts by Egyptian authorities to forge an inclusive and democratic way forward," Carney told reporters. "And as we do, we will review our requirements under the law, and we will do so consistent with our policy objectives. And we will also, of course, consult with Congress on that."

Some members of Congress appeared divided on the question.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., criticized Morsi's performance as president but stressed that he had been elected by a majority of Egyptians in 2012.

"It is difficult for me to conclude that what happened was anything other than a coup in which the military played a decisive role," he said. "I do not want to suspend our critical assistance to Egypt, but I believe that is the right thing to do at this time."

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, in comments Monday emphasized the important role of the Egyptian military.

"Well I think the situation in Egypt is a tenuous one," he said. "One of the most respected institutions in the country is their military. And I think their military, on behalf of the citizens, did what they had to do in terms of replacing the elected president. But anything further, I think we'll wait for consultations with the administration on how we would move ahead."

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., called for the administration to slow U.S. aid until Egypt takes steps to restore democracy.

"I think that we need to suspend aid to the new government until it does in fact schedule elections and put in place a process that comes up with a new constitution," he said.

Some others voiced caution. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said he had accompanied five Republican senators on a trip to the Middle East last week and that close U.S. allies in the region strongly advised against halting funding for Egypt.

"It's important that we not just shoot from the hip on that," he told reporters

Focusing on U.S. spending, Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., tweeted: "In Egypt, governments come and go. The only thing certain is that American taxpayers will continue to be stuck with the $1.5 billion bill."

At the State Department, spokeswoman Jen Psaki used similar, if not identical, language to Carney's to describe the current take on developments, pointing out that the U.S. has long provided significant assistance to Egypt even when it had serious concerns about the actions of its government. She appeared to refer to the tens of billions of dollars in U.S. aid sent to the government and military of authoritarian former leader Hosni Mubarak who ruled Egypt for decades without free and fair elections and under emergency decrees that gave him vast powers.

"The reason we have provided this aid in the past doesn't mean we have supported, even prior to this, every action taken by the government of Egypt," she said. "But there are security interests in the region; there are security interests for the United States."

Psaki demurred when asked if deposing an elected leader, placing him under house arrest and appointing a new head of state ? as the Egyptian military has done over the course of the past five days ? was not a clear example of a military coup. She pointed out that millions of Egyptians opposed Morsi, who had become increasingly autocratic, and did not believe his ouster was a coup.

Some officials, speaking anonymously because they were not authorized to describe internal administration discussions in public, said that a "no-coup" finding may become increasingly difficult to justify given the rising violence among Morsi supporters, his opponents and security forces that has led to fears of a civil war.

Meanwhile, Egyptian soldiers and police clashed with Islamists protesting the military's ouster last week of the president. The bloodshed left more than 50 protesters and three members of the security forces dead, officials and witnesses said, and the Muslim Brotherhood's political party called for all-out rebellion against the army.

The violence outside the Republican Guard building in Cairo ? where Morsi was first held last week ? marked the biggest death count since the beginning of massive protests that led to the fall of Morsi's government. The U.S. has condemned the violence and is appealing for restraint from all sides as well as a speedy return to elected civilian governance.

In the latest high-level contact between Washington and Cairo, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel spoke again with Egypt's defense minister, Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, on Monday ? their fifth conversation in four days, according to Pentagon press secretary George Little.

Little would not disclose details of those conversations, but other officials said they had centered on U.S. concerns that the actions of the Egyptian military might force a suspension in American assistance, something the army relies on. They say that Hagel, and other senior administration officials, have told the Egyptian army brass to appoint a transitional civilian leadership and call for new elections and the drafting of a new constitution so as to give Washington some leeway in its legal review of the situation.

___

Associated Press writers Jim Kuhnhenn, Bradley Klapper and Lolita C. Baldor contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-07-08-US-US-Egypt-Obama/id-8a76a956dc364fe4a8b8d962ee01d88c

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Tiny Chinese enclave remakes gambling world, Vegas

Photo credit: AP | In this Sept. 20, 2012 photo, Croupiers sit at a baccarat gaming table inside a casino during the opening day of Sheraton Macao Hotel at the Sands Cotai Central in Macau. Macau is in the midst of one of the greatest gambling booms the world has ever known. To rival it, Las Vegas would have to attract six times as many visitors essentially every man, woman and child in America. Wynn Las Vegas now makes nearly three-quarters of its profits in Macau. Sands, which owns the Venetian and Palazzo, earns two-thirds of its revenue there. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

LAS VEGAS - (AP) -- Most people still think the U.S. gambling industry is anchored in Las Vegas, with its booming Strip and 24/7 action, a place where years of alluring marketing campaigns have helped scrub away the taint of past corruption.

Yet in just a decade, the center of gambling has migrated to the other side of the world, settling in a tiny Chinese territory an hour's ferry ride from Hong Kong. The gambling mecca of Macau now handles more wagers than all U.S.-based commercial casinos put together, and many of those bets end up swelling the balance sheets of U.S. corporations.

But as U.S. gambling companies have remade Macau, Macau has also remade them.

Chasing riches, these companies have been hit with allegations of improper conduct, prompting investigations and serious questions about how closely U.S. authorities are watching the corporations' overseas dealings, and what, if any, real repercussions they could face. Could these corruption claims revive the specter of gambling's bad old days, when Sin City casinos kept mobsters flush?

"There are some countries where you either have to pay to play and break the law, or you have to not do business there," Indiana-based casino consultant Steve Norton said. "I think the jury's still out on Macau."

A few hours' flight from half the world's population, Macau is the only place in China where gambling is legal. Each month, 2.5 million tourists flood the glitzy boomtown half the size of Manhattan to try their luck in neon-drenched casinos. Most of them are nouveau-riche Chinese who sip tea and chain-smoke as they play at baccarat.

The former Portuguese colony has long been known for its gambling but used to offer a seedier experience, with small-time gambling dens crowding up against textile factories and gangs, prostitutes and money-launderers operating openly in the cobblestone streets. That was the scene in 1999 when China assumed sovereignty of Macau and opened it to outside gambling operators.

"It was a swamp," said Sheldon Adelson, CEO of Las Vegas Sands, as he looked back on his early venture in an obscure city where Chinese officials envisioned conventions and resorts. "Everybody thought that I was crazy."

Nevertheless, he and the two American competitors that tried their luck there succeeded spectacularly. Adelson's first casino opening there caused a stampede that ripped doors off their hinges. Now operating four booming casinos in Macau, he described Sands as "an Asian company" with a presence in America. He makes far more in China, a culture in which notions of luck and fate play integral roles, than in Las Vegas.

"This industry is supply-driven, like the movie 'Field of Dreams:' Build it and they will come." he said. "I believe that."

If Adelson's words and jack-o'-lantern smile suggest all is right in the globalized casino world, consider where he made these statements -- on the witness stand in a Vegas courtroom this spring, defending his company against one of his former Macau consultants.

A jury in May found against Adelson, awarding the consultant $70 million for helping Sands secure a lucrative gambling license in Macau. Sands immediately appealed.

But the lawsuit may be the least of Adelson's worries. His firm is also accused of making improper payments to a Macau lawmaker and collaborating with the Chinese mafia. The U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission are investigating. The company says it's done nothing wrong.

It's not just Sands facing legal and regulatory troubles connected with Macau. Two of the other three major U.S. gambling enterprises are, too: Wynn Resorts Ltd. and MGM Resorts International. Both Sands and Wynn are facing related lawsuits from shareholders who claim Macau mismanagement has damaged the companies.

-- Wynn is being investigated by the Justice Department and the SEC over a $135 million donation to the University of Macau Development Foundation in 2011. Wynn co-founder Kazuo Okada characterized the donation as "suspicious" in a 2012 letter to the SEC. He noted that the Development Foundation's lead trustee is also a member of the Macau government, and said that the donation coincided with Wynn's request for land to develop a third casino.

"I am at a complete loss as to the business justification for the donation, other than that it was an attempt to curry favor with those that have ultimate authority for issuing gaming licenses," said Okada, who is now under Department of Justice investigation himself for possible bribery in the Philippines, and has fallen out with his former Wynn colleagues. Okada denies wrongdoing.

If his claim is true, the Wynn payment could violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, or FCPA -- a law that bars U.S. companies from paying off officials to win business overseas. Wynn says it acted properly and had no need to buy-off authorities. Nevada regulators, in a separate investigation, found no wrongdoing.

-- MGM got into trouble with New Jersey regulators when the company opened a Macau casino with Pansy Ho, the daughter of a gambling kingpin allegedly linked to Chinese gangs. The state found the partnership "unsuitable" in a 2010 report, and forced MGM to sell its stake in an Atlantic City casino. MGM denied that there was anything inappropriate about the relationship, began the process of selling its stake, and did not cut ties with Macau.

Two years later, MGM CEO Jim Murren stands by that choice. "The Macau market is now larger than the entire U.S. gaming market. Unfortunately for Atlantic City, it's gone the other way. It's smaller now than when we entered it. The fortunes of the two couldn't be more different," he said.

Last winter, New Jersey agreed to consider MGM's application for a renewed license.

-- The Sands inquiries stem from a pending wrongful termination case brought by former Sands executive Steve Jacobs in 2010. Jacobs claims that Sands' China subsidiary did business with known gangsters, tacitly condoned prostitution and made inappropriate payments to an attorney who was also a Macau lawmaker. Jacobs claims Sands paid the lawmaker to help settle various regulatory issues in Sands' favor.

Sands has denied all claims, but recently said in an SEC filing that an internal audit had found possible breaches of a section of the FCPA that requires public companies to file proper financial statements and maintain a system of internal controls. In April, Sands' auditor declined to stand for re-election.

Justice Department spokesman Michael Passman declined to comment on the probe. Sands says it is cooperating with federal prosecutors. Spokesman Ron Reese said the company's dealings in Macau attract more scrutiny because it's the world's largest gambling market, but Sands is diligent wherever it operates.

Sands opened for business in Macau in 2004, at the beginning of a massive boom in China's economy that has lifted incomes for hundreds of millions of people, allowing them to afford upscale pleasures like gambling in casinos. Today, the former backwater is in the midst of one of the greatest gambling booms the world has ever known. To rival the money it takes in, Las Vegas would have to attract six times more gamblers each year than it does now-- essentially every adult in America. Wynn Resorts now makes nearly three-quarters of its revenue in Macau. Sands, which owns the Venetian and Palazzo, earns two-thirds of its revenue there.

But like early Las Vegas, Macau has a long history of ties to crime syndicates -- in this case secretive brotherhoods called triads that first formed on the mainland more than a century ago. Machine-gun shootouts, bombings and even assassinations of government officials were commonplace during magnate Stanley Ho's four-decade monopoly of gambling. (He is Patsy Ho's father.) In the late 1990s, a police official tried to reassure visitors by remarking that Macau had "professional killers who don't miss their targets."

The history and regulations governing the enclave continue to make it tricky for modern casinos to avoid gangs, illegal money transfers and at least the appearance of bribery.

Businesses operating there can expect allegations against them, true or not, said Bill Weidner, who was president of Sands until 2009.

He added: "Macau is their country, not ours, and it's their system not ours, and it operates differently than ours. It's not better or worse, just different."

One contributing factor is China's capital controls, which restrict the amount of money that citizens take out of the country, including to Macau, which like Hong Kong, is a semi-autonomous region with its own financial system. Another is the lack of reliable credit risk information in China, which makes it hard for casinos to figure out whom they should lend to.

So-called junket agents provide an easy fix. They use their networks on the mainland to identify wealthy would-be VIP gamblers, whisk them to Macau's tables, lend them money, then settle up when they get home.

Junket operators often assume management of a casino's private VIP room. Casinos provide the facilities, dealers and chips in return for a cut of the profits. Baccarat played in VIP rooms accounts for two-thirds of Macau's $38 billion in annual gambling revenue.

While many of the more than 200 junket operators active in Macau are law-abiding, some have documented ties to organized crime. Operating off the books, junkets pay out winnings in Hong Kong dollars, widely accepted in Macau, which players can then move to another location. As a result, Macau is seen as a conduit for money flowing out of China, with wealthy individuals and corrupt officials suspected of transferring funds abroad.

The enclave has seen a spate of killings and kidnappings associated with debt collection, including one grisly case last year in which two men were stabbed to death in their four-star hotel room, discovered by a friend who had come to lend them the money they needed.

Today, U.S. companies are tweaking their flagship Las Vegas casinos to look and operate more like Macau-style properties. The biggest casinos have imported Asian pop sensations, Chinese delicacies and baccarat, now Nevada's biggest moneymaker. They've outfitted their hallways in red, a lucky color in Asian culture, and set up Macau-style VIP rooms that employ junket operators catering to high-rollers.

Asian visitors now account for 9 percent of tourists to Las Vegas, up from 2 percent in 2008. And the Strip is preparing to welcome its first Asian-owned casino: a multi-billion dollar Chinese-themed extravaganza called Resorts World, complete with pandas and pagodas.

One reason casino bosses are dreaming up ways to lure Macau customers to Las Vegas is that Nevada imposes one-fifth of China's 39 percent tax on winnings. "They can make a lot more money from a big gambler here," said David Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada Las Vegas.

But some of the problems associated with Chinese gambling halls may be migrating to the Strip as well.

In March, a man police described as an enforcer for the Taiwan-based triad United Bamboo began serving a life term for stabbing a man to death in a karaoke bar near the Strip. Prosecutors said he'd been sent to collect a $10,000 gambling debt.

Last year, the U.S. Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network warned casinos to monitor junket operators and report suspicious activity. The warning followed media reports that Sands allowed a man named as a triad member in a congressional report to move a $100,000 gambling credit from Las Vegas to one of its Macau casinos.

Unlike some other states, Nevada allows junket operators to work in casinos without the full suitability checks required for key employees. Some Hong Kong operators licensed in Nevada have been found unsuitable by other jurisdictions, including Singapore.

"The reason why we don't do a full giant investigation on them is that they have no control over the casino operations; they are basically travel agents and hosts," Nevada Gaming Control Board Chairman A.G. Burnett said. If another jurisdiction finds fault with a junket operator licensed in Nevada, state regulators will simply ask the operator to submit to a suitability workup, which is tantamount to telling them to get out, Burnett said.

Still, regulators are not blind to the link between junkets and triads.

At a hearing before a congressional advisory panel in June, Burnett said it is "common knowledge that the operation of VIP rooms in Macau casinos had long been dominated by Asian organized crime."

Steve Vickers, who spent 18 years in the Royal Hong Kong Police Force and commanded its criminal intelligence bureau, believes that nearly all junkets that cater to Chinese tourists collaborate with organized crime.

"You won't find the triad names listed as the junket operators, but they are behind it, because who is it that can reach into China and enforce the debts, move the money? Only one kind of person can do that," said Vickers, who now runs a consulting company.

In the 1980s, state regulations, along with an FBI crackdown, helped push out the mob bosses who had taken refuge in the gambling world and usher in the industry's modern corporate era.

Today, states can impose fines or revoke licenses if any U.S. companies are found to have acted improperly in Macau. But except for rare instances like New Jersey's action against MGM, regulators have so far refrained from public action, preferring to wait until federal probes are complete.

Nevada's Burnett said that does not mean regulators are sitting idle. "A lot of what goes on is dialogue between the board and the companies that the public doesn't necessarily see," he said.

Conventional wisdom is that no U.S. companies will lose their licenses over the allegations, even if proven true. At worst, they could get fined, said Michael Paladino, an analyst at the credit rating agency Fitch. "They can handle that," he said, noting that the largest FCPA fine to date -- imposed on German engineering giant Siemans A.G. for bribery -- amounted to about $1 billion. That's less than one month's revenue for Sands.

The balance of power between casinos and regulators has shifted as gambling companies have achieved their own version of outsourcing, according to I. Nelson Rose, a professor at Whittier Law School in California who writes a blog called Gambling and the Law.

"Macau forced the casinos to see that they could become like other large U.S. corporations: Set up their plants and operations in other nations and make far more than they can being stuck just in Las Vegas," he said, speaking from his hotel room near Macau University, where he teaches a summer course.

Sands, Wynn and MGM have structured their China operations as subsidiaries that could eventually be spun off entirely.

In any case, public officials aren't exactly clamoring for investigations. Among the ranks of the unconcerned is former Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman, a one-time lawyer for mob figures. Sitting on an overstuffed green leather couch his living room, Goodman, whose wife is now mayor, said he doesn't worry about Macau because Americans are not paying attention to the murky allegations there.

"You ask people who Sheldon Adelson is, if 10 out of 50 recognize the name, I'd be surprised. If they associated him with the Venetian and the Palazzo, I'd be even more surprised. People are busy," he said.

Of course, within the industry, Adelson is an object of fascination. As the Sands chief appeared in court this spring, a former rival, Phil Satre, who headed Harrah's Entertainment, followed the coverage from his home in Reno. Harrah's, the nation's largest casinos company when Satre stepped down in the early 2000s, was later renamed Caesars Entertainment Corporation.

While Wynn, MGM and Sands have taken off, Caesars, the industry's fourth major player, has been left behind. Caesars did not apply for the finite number of gambling licenses in Macau in the early 2000s for fear of upsetting domestic regulators.

At that time, Satre said, the U.S. gambling industry had at last gained a legitimacy and mundane familiarity that had been unthinkable a generation ago. He said he didn't think American regulators would tolerate any hint of ties to criminal activity in Asia.

"There are some things that still have to play out, but when I look back and think about the opportunity to go back in Macau," Satre said, "I'd probably take a different posture."

___

Kelvin Chan in Hong Kong contributed to this story.

Hannah Dreier can be reached at http://twitter.com/hannahdreier.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Source: http://www.newsday.com/news/region-state/tiny-chinese-enclave-remakes-gambling-world-vegas-1.5643886

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Monday, July 8, 2013

New Gophone Samsung Galaxy Express

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Mexico volcano spits three kilometer-high ash cloud

MEXICO CITY: The Popocatepetl volcano just east of Mexico City has spit out a cloud of ash and vapor 2 miles (3 kilometers) high over several days of eruptions, and Mexico City residents awoke Saturday to find a fine layer of volcanic dust on their cars.

It has been years since the center of the nation's capital has seen a noticeable ash fall because prevailing winds usually blow the volcanic dust in other directions. Ash fell earlier this week in some neighborhoods on Mexico City's south and east sides.

The city's legion of car washers quickly wiped the fine coating from cars on Saturday with no apparent ill effects.

Claudia Dominguez, spokeswoman for the Mexico City civil defense office, said the very fine ash had probably been floating around the city from eruptions in previous days and had been brought to Earth by a rainfall late Friday. She said no new ash fall had been reported Saturday, despite continuous eruptions of vapor and ash into the air from the 15,000-foot (5,450 meter) volcano.

While city residents were surprised by the talcum-like ash, inhabitants of towns nearer the volcano have had to deal with much thicker accumulations that have coated their crops, homes and sidewalks.

In San Pedro Nexapa, located about nine miles (15 kms) from the volcano, residents swept up small piles of ash from a few square yards (meters) of sidewalk. Some residents wore surgical masks to ward off the dust raised by passing vehicles.

"The ash affects us a lot, because we get our water from the snow melt from Popocatepetl, and right now we can't use the water for bathing, for cooking, we can't even give it to our animals," said Agustina Perez Gutierrez, a housewife in San Pedro Nexapa. "The children get sore throats from the ash, and it affects the few vegetables and corn crops we are able to plant."

Mexico's National Center for Disaster Prevention raised the volcano alert from Stage 2 Yellow to Stage 3 Yellow, the final step before a Red alert, when possible evacuations could be ordered. A Stage 3 Yellow alert had been in effect during eruptions earlier this year until early June, when it was lowered.

Mexico's National Center for Disaster Prevention reported there had been three explosive eruptions at the peak late Friday and early Saturday - events that usually toss glowing-hot rock on the volcano's flanks. It said that Popocatepetl has also continuously spewed clouds of ash into the air, most of which was headed northwest, toward Mexico City.

U.S. airlines canceled at least one flight at Mexico City's airport on Friday as a precautionary measure, though airport authorities said the terminal was fully able to operate. Alaska Airlines had cancelled its route to Los Angeles, the airport press office said in its Twitter account.

On Friday, four airlines cancelled a total of 17 flights "due to climate conditions and in accordance with their own internal policies," the airport said in a statement.

The volcano is about 40 miles (65 kilometers) from the airport, which is in turn a few miles east of the city's center.

The Environment Ministry has urged residents to take preventive measures to deal with the ash, including wearing dust masks, covering water supplies and staying indoors as needed.

Mexico City authorities recommend that people sweep up any ash and put it plastic bags to keep it from mixing with water and forming a concrete-like substance that can block drains.

Source: http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/International/2013/Jul-07/222805-mexico-volcano-spits-three-kilometer-high-ash-cloud.ashx

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Dempsey Discusses U.S.-Egyptian Military Relations

Dempsey Discusses U.S.-Egyptian Military Relations

By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, July 5, 2013 ? U.S. and Egyptian military leaders are building on relationships developed over more than 30 years as Egypt goes through political turmoil, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a July 3 interview with CNN.

During the interview, CNN correspondent Candy Crowley spoke with Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, before the Egyptian military forced out President Mohammed Morsi, in preparation for a ?State of the Union? show that will air July 7.

DOD leaders have spoken with Egyptian leaders -- including the military chief, Army Col. Gen. Abdul Fatah al-Sisi -- since demonstrations against the Morsi regime escalated in late June, department officials said.

U.S. military leaders have a close working relationship with Egyptian leaders, built on years of officer exchanges, joint exercises and operations. The U.S. military was working with the Egyptians to help the military define its way under a new system, Dempsey said.

?The armed forces ran the country for several decades, and they were transitioning themselves into their role in a democracy,? Dempsey told Crowley. ?I?m not in the know about exactly what they?re going to do.?

Dempsey said his conversations with the Egyptians revolved around getting assurances that the military would protect U.S. citizens in the country.

?I wanted to encourage them to protect all the Egyptian people, not to take sides in any particular issue, and to ensure that they were a part of the resolution of this, but in their proper role as a military which is to ensure stability, but not try to influence the outcome,? Dempsey said.

The Egyptian leaders listened to the chairman?s concerns, he said, noting that ?at the end of the day, it?s their country and they will find their way. But there will be consequences if it?s badly handled.?

Morsi has been forced from office and Adlay Mansour has taken his place.
?

Source: http://www.defense.gov//news/newsarticle.aspx?id=120413

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Jenny McCarthy in "Serious" Talks to Join The View

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/jenny-mccarthy-in-serious-talks-to-join-the-view/

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AP IMPACT: MIA work 'acutely dysfunctional'

In this photo taken Monday, July 1, 2013, in Chapel Hill, N.C., Shelia Reese, right, holds hands with her mother Chris Tench while holding a portrait of Tench and her father Kenneth F. Reese, a soldier who is still Missing In Action from the Korean War. Tench, who was later remarried, has never known what happened to her husband. The Pentagon?s effort to account for tens of thousands of Americans missing in action from foreign wars is so inept, mismanaged and wasteful that it risks descending from ?dysfunction to total failure,? according to an internal study suppressed by military officials. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

In this photo taken Monday, July 1, 2013, in Chapel Hill, N.C., Shelia Reese, right, holds hands with her mother Chris Tench while holding a portrait of Tench and her father Kenneth F. Reese, a soldier who is still Missing In Action from the Korean War. Tench, who was later remarried, has never known what happened to her husband. The Pentagon?s effort to account for tens of thousands of Americans missing in action from foreign wars is so inept, mismanaged and wasteful that it risks descending from ?dysfunction to total failure,? according to an internal study suppressed by military officials. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

In this photo taken Monday, July 1, 2013 in Chapel Hill, N.C., Chris Tench holds a portrait of her and her husband Kenneth F. Reese, a soldier who is still Missing In Action from the Korean War. Tench, who was later remarried, has never known what happened to Reese. The Pentagon?s effort to account for tens of thousands of Americans missing in action from foreign wars is so inept, mismanaged and wasteful that it risks descending from ?dysfunction to total failure,? according to an internal study suppressed by military officials. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

In this photo taken Monday, July 1, 2013 in Chapel Hill, N.C., Shelia Reese, right, sits with her mother Chris Tench holding a portrait of Tench and her father Kenneth F. Reese, a soldier who is still Missing In Action from the Korean War. Tench, who was later remarried, has never known what happened to her husband. The Pentagon?s effort to account for tens of thousands of Americans missing in action from foreign wars is so inept, mismanaged and wasteful that it risks descending from ?dysfunction to total failure,? according to an internal study suppressed by military officials. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

Graphic shows missing service members for conflicts since World War II; 1c x 3 inches; 46.5 mm x 76 mm;

(AP) ? The Pentagon's effort to account for tens of thousands of Americans missing in action from foreign wars is so inept, mismanaged and wasteful that it risks descending from "dysfunction to total failure," according to an internal study suppressed by military officials.

Largely beyond the public spotlight, the decades-old pursuit of bones and other MIA evidence is sluggish, often duplicative and subjected to too little scientific rigor, the report says.

The Associated Press obtained a copy of the internal study after Freedom of Information Act requests for it by others were denied.

The report paints a picture of a Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, a military-run group known as JPAC and headed by a two-star general, as woefully inept and even corrupt. The command is digging up too few clues on former battlefields, relying on inaccurate databases and engaging in expensive "boondoggles" in Europe, the study concludes.

In North Korea, the JPAC was snookered into digging up remains between 1996 and 2000 that the North Koreans apparently had taken out of storage and planted in former American fighting positions, the report said. Washington paid the North Koreans hundreds of thousands of dollars to "support" these excavations.

Some recovered bones had been drilled or cut, suggesting they had been used by the North Koreans to make a lab skeleton. Some of those remains have since been identified, but their compromised condition added time and expense and "cast doubt over all of the evidence recovered" in North Korea, the study said. This practice of "salting" recovery sites was confirmed to the AP by one U.S. participant.

JPAC's leaders authorized the study of its inner workings, but the then-commanding general, Army Maj. Gen. Stephen Tom, disavowed it and suppressed the findings when they were presented by the researcher last year. Now retired, Tom banned its use "for any purpose," saying the probe went beyond its intended scope. His deputy concurred, calling it a "raw, uncensored draft containing some contentious material."

The AP obtained two internal memos describing the decision to bury the report. The memos raised no factual objections but said the command would not consider any of the report's findings or recommendations.

The failings cited by the report reflect one aspect of a broader challenge to achieving a uniquely American mission ? accounting for the estimated 83,348 service members still listed as missing from World War II, Korea and Vietnam.

This is about more than tidying up the historical record. It is about fulfilling a promise to the mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers and sons and daughters of the missing. Daughters like Shelia Reese, 62, of Chapel Hill, N.C., who still yearns for the father she never met, the boy soldier who went to war and never returned.

She was 2 months old when heartbreaking word landed at her grandmother's door a week before Christmas 1950 that Pfc. Kenneth F. Reese, a 19-year-old artilleryman, was missing in action in North Korea. To this day, the military can't tell her if he was killed in action or died in captivity. His body has never been found.

"It changed my whole life. I've missed this man my whole life," she says.

She's not alone.

Reese is among 7,910 unaccounted for from Korea, down from 8,200 when the war ended 60 years ago this month.

A sense of emptiness and unanswered questions haunted many families of the missing throughout the second half of the 20th century, when science and circumstance did not permit the almost exact accounting for the dead and the missing that has been achieved in Iraq and Afghanistan. While the government's efforts have provided closure for hundreds of families of the missing in recent years, many others are still waiting.

Over time, the obscure government bureaucracies in charge of the accounting task have largely managed to escape close public scrutiny despite clashing with a growing number of advocacy groups and individuals such as Frank Metersky, a Korean War veteran who has spent decades pressing for a more aggressive and effective U.S. effort.

The outlook for improvement at the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, he says, is not encouraging.

"Today it's worse than ever," he says.

People disagree on the extent of the problem. But even the current JPAC commander, Air Force Maj. Gen. Kelly K. McKeague, says he would not dispute those who say his organization is dysfunctional.

"I'd say you're right, and we're doing something about it," McKeague said in a telephone interview last week from his headquarters in Hawaii. He said changes, possibly to include consolidating the accounting bureaucracy and putting its management under the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington, are under consideration.

The internal report by Paul M. Cole was never meant to be made public. It is unsparing in its criticisms:

?In recent years the process by which JPAC gathers bones and other material useful for identifications has "collapsed" and is now "acutely dysfunctional."

?JPAC is finding too few investigative leads, resulting in too few collections of human remains to come even close to achieving Congress's demand for a minimum 200 identifications per year by 2015. Of the 80 identifications that JPAC's Central Identification Laboratory made in 2012, only 35 were derived from remains recovered by JPAC. Thirty-eight of the 80 were either handed over unilaterally by other governments or were disinterred from a U.S. military cemetery. Seven were from a combination of those sources.

?Some search teams are sent into the field, particularly in Europe, on what amount to boondoggles. No one is held to account for "a pattern of foreign travel, accommodations and activities paid for by public funds that are ultimately unnecessary, excessive, inefficient or unproductive." Some refer to this as "military tourism."

?JPAC lacks a comprehensive list of the people for whom it's searching. Its main database is incomplete and "riddled with unreliable data."

?"Sketch maps" used by the JPAC teams looking for remains on the battlefield are "chronically unreliable," leaving the teams "cartigraphically blind." Cole likened this to 19th century military field operations.

Absent prompt and significant change, "the descent from dysfunction to total failure ... is inevitable," Cole concluded.

He directed most of his criticism at the field operations that collect bones and other material, as opposed to the laboratory scientists at JPAC who use that material to identify the remains. Cole is a management consultant and recognized research expert in the field of accounting for war remains; he still works at JPAC.

More broadly, the government organizations responsible for the accounting mission, including the Pentagon's Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office, or DPMO, which is in charge of policy, have sometimes complicated their task by making public statements that their critics view as disingenuous or erroneous.

The head of DPMO, for example, retired Army Maj. Gen. W. Montague Winfield, said last month at a public forum that the U.S. government has "no evidence" that U.S. servicemen taken prisoner in North Korea during the 1950-53 war were later moved to the former Soviet Union against their will and never returned.

Washington made a detailed case in writing to Moscow in 1993 that such transfers did happen, and the AP has obtained a videotape produced by U.S. officials and given to the Russians at the same time to support the U.S. case.

The tape, which has never before been made public, was provided to the AP by a former government official who was not authorized to release it. It says that based on interviews and other research, U.S. investigators believe "10s if not 100s" of American POWs were transferred to the territory of the former Soviet Union. In some cases they were moved to Russia through rail transfer points in China, the tape asserts.

"Certainly we understand that these operations were never meant to see the light of day," the film says.

The Russian government has repeatedly denied it received American POWs from Korea.

Mark Sauter, a private researcher and co-author with John Zimmerlee of "American Trophies and Washington's Cynical Attitude," an e-book about POWs to be published this month, found in government archives a U.S. intelligence report from August 1955, two years after the war, calling for a bigger intelligence effort to learn about such POW transfers.

"Continued and numerous fragmentary intelligence reports give credence to possible detention of a large number of American POWs in China, Manchuria, U.S.S.R., and North Korea," it said. It cited one "significant report" describing "a large number of U.S. POWs being shipped into U.S.S.R. by rail" from northeast China.

Accounting for the nation's war dead has been a politically charged issue for decades. The debate is not about the practicality of the mission, which some might question, but how it should be pursued.

Sometimes overlooked amid the squabbling is the emotional toll on the families of the missing. They are often bewildered by the bureaucracy and left to watch hope wear away with the passage of time.

In 1975, more than two decades after Pfc. Kenneth F. Reese was declared missing in Korea, his widow, Chris Tench, who had by then remarried, described her feelings in her local newspaper, the Gastonia (N.C) Gazette.

She wrote that initially she was relieved to realize that the policeman who delivered the news about Reese on Dec. 18, 1950, was saying that her husband was missing, not dead. He might turn up alive, she recalled thinking.

Later she thought differently.

"No, missing isn't dead," she wrote. "It's worse than dead."

___

Follow Robert Burns on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/robertburnsAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-07-MIAs%20in%20Limbo/id-a925f616543146e485afb6c1c4ea5251

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Saturday, July 6, 2013

Meadows Wallpaper Collection for Your iPad

meadows-wallpaper-collection-for-ipad-series-one-00

Meadows are wonderful places to explore, play and have fun in, or just relax in with a great picnic. Bring the beauty of peaceful, sunny days to your iPad with the first in our series of Meadows Wallpaper collections.

Meadows Series 1

Note: Click on the pictures to view and download the full-size versions at their individual homepages. The images shown here are in thumbnail format.

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Source: http://www.howtogeek.com/167138/meadows-wallpaper-collection-for-your-ipad-series-1/

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