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Posted Monday August 12, 2013 9:07 PM GMT
Revealing a hidden talent on the spot, Kerry Washington showed off her vocal skills on "On Air with Ryan Seacrest" on Sunday (August 11).
Backstage at the Teen Choice Awards, Jordin Sparks interviewed the "Django Unchained" star and asked about her go-to karaoke song.
A little sheepishly, the 36-year-old actress replied, "I gotta say, it's really corny. It's like any Disney song...like "A Whole New World..."
Jumping at the opening, the "American Idol" alum asked to sing with Kerry, to which Ms. Washington replied, "Oh my gosh, sing with you?! You're like THE singer!"
After holding her own next to Jordin, the lovely Ms. Washington replied, "Oh my God, I just sang with Jordin Sparks!" Check out the interview below.
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Poor sales performance of the Windows RT platform, which Microsoft hoped would making a dent in the tablet market, has made ASUS announce it?s ceasing making slates running it.
The company is currently only offering the VivoTab RT tablet, powered by the Tegra 3 SoC.
From now on though, ASUS will be focusing exclusively on its Intel-powered devices running the full version of Windows 8. According to the company?s chairman Jerry Shen, the Windows 8 has a more promising future due to its support of regular desktop apps, as well as backward compatibility with older apps.
?It?s not only our opinion; the industry sentiment is also that Windows RT has not been successful, Shen told the Wall Street Journal Friday at a Taipei earnings conference.
A month ago, Microsoft admitted the poor Surface RT sales cost it $900 million.
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In this week's round-up of Good Reads includes fighting domestic violence, a look at how lions survive, why apps can't end poverty, Greek youth unemployment, and the Medicare panel that decides your health-care costs.
By Allison Terry,?Correspondent / August 9, 2013
Male participants in an Ohio domestic violence awareness walk wore red, high-heeled shoes.
Randy Roberts/The Courier/AP
EnlargeBetween 2000 and 2006, more than 10,600 people were killed in domestic homicides in the United States. About 3,200 US soldiers were killed overseas during the same period. A new approach to assessing domestic homicide risk could change the trajectory of these crimes.
Skip to next paragraph Allison TerryCorrespondent
Allison Terry works on the national news desk for the Christian Science Monitor. She also contributes to the culture section and Global News blog.
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In The New Yorker, Rachel Louise Snyder highlights cases overseen by Kelly Dunne, chief operating officer of the Jeanne Geiger Crisis Center in Amesbury, Mass. In 2005, Ms. Dunne created a Domestic High Violence Risk Team, which began including local police, hospitals, and courts when assessing domestic homicide risk case by case.
?Dunne attributes the prevalence of domestic violence, in part, to a deep cultural misunderstanding of how violence operates,? writes Ms. Snyder. ?We assume that victims incite abuse, or that if the situation at home was truly threatening they would leave. Restraining orders, when filed, are thought to keep perpetrators away. And, if a woman fails to ... renew a restraining order, the assumption is that the problem has somehow been resolved.?
It usually means the opposite, but that is where Dunne?s strategy comes into play: recognizing potentially lethal behavior and helping victims take steps to avoid it. Since 2005, none of Dunne?s cases have ended in homicide.
Why do lions live in prides when many other big cats (like jaguars, cougars, and tigers) lead a solitary life?
?Continual risk of death, even more than the ability to cause it, is what shapes the social behavior of this ferocious but ever jeopardized animal,? writes David Quammen for National Geographic. ?The lion is the only feline that?s truly social, living in prides and coalitions, the size and dynamics of which are determined by an intricate balance of evolutionary costs and benefits.?
Mr. Quammen followed a group of researchers in Serengeti National Park in Tanzania, where the highest concentration of the world?s 35,000 lions live. They use 40 years of data to uncover patterns of lion behavior in such wild, harsh conditions.
There are applications that know what you want before you do. But can Silicon Valley?s ingenuity apply to ending global poverty? In Foreign Policy, Charles Kenny and Justin Sandefur raise some doubts. They point out that technology has already done much to improve lives in the developing world ? think vaccines, radios, bicycles, and cellphones. But many well-intentioned high-tech projects (like One Laptop Per Child or Soccket) fail to meet the reality on the ground. Despite the fact that extreme poverty has decreased by half, millions of people still die from preventable diseases.
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Black smoke from a car bomb attack is seen in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013. A wave of car bombings targeted cafes and markets around the Iraqi capital of Baghdad as people celebrate the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, killing and wounding scores of people, officials said. (AP Photo)
Black smoke from a car bomb attack is seen in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013. A wave of car bombings targeted cafes and markets around the Iraqi capital of Baghdad as people celebrate the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, killing and wounding scores of people, officials said. (AP Photo)
Smoke rises frome the scene of a car bomb attack in Kadhimiya, Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013. A wave of car bombings targeted cafes and markets around the Iraqi capital of Baghdad as people celebrate the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, killing and wounding scores of people, officials said. (AP Photo)
Smoke rises after a bomb attack in Tuz Khormato, 130 miles (210 kilometers) north of Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013. A wave of car bombings targeted cafes and markets around the Iraqi capital of Baghdad as people celebrate the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, killing and wounding scores of people, officials said. (AP Photo)
BAGHDAD (AP) ? A wave of car bombings targeting those celebrating the end of Ramadan across Iraq killed 69 people Saturday, a bloody reminder of the inability of Iraqi authorities to stop violence threatening to spiral out of control.
Violence has been on the rise across Iraq since a deadly crackdown by government forces on a Sunni protest camp in April, and attacks against civilians and security forces notably spiked during Ramadan. The surge of attacks has sparked fears that the country could see a new round of widespread sectarian bloodshed similar to that which brought the country to the edge of civil war in 2006 and 2007.
The bloodshed also comes after Iraqi security forces promised to step up efforts to increase security to protect the public during the Eid al-Fitr celebrations that mark the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. This year's Ramadan was the most violence since 2007, with 671 people killed.
"My shop's windows were smashed and smoke filled the whole area," said shoe shop owner Saif Mousa, who survived an attack near his store in New Baghdad. "I went outside of the shop and I could hardly see because of the smoke. ... At the end, we had a terrible day that was supposed to be nice because of Eid."
Many of the attacks occurred within an hour of each other, suggesting a level of coordination in the assaults. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks, though security forces and civilians are frequently targeted by al-Qaida's Iraq branch.
U.S. Department of State spokeswoman Jen Psaki condemned the attacks, saying in a statement that they are similar to suicide and vehicle bomb attacks in the country in the past month-and-a-half conducted by al-Qaida's Iraq branch.
The group is led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and al-Baghdadi has taken personal credit for a series of terrorist attacks in Iraq since 2011, including an attack against the Abu Ghraib prison, Psaki said.
The U.S. has offered a $10 million reward for information leading to his capture or death and the reward is second only to information leading to Ayman al-Zawahiri, the chief of the Al Qaeda network.
"The terrorists who committed these acts are enemies of Islam and a shared enemy of the United States, Iraq, and the international community," the statement said.
Police said the deadliest of Saturday's attacks took place when a suicide bomber drove his explosive-laden car into a residential area in the town of Tuz Khormato, killing eight people and wounding dozens, Mayor Shalal Abdool said. The town is about 200 kilometers (130 miles) north of the Iraqi capital.
Police said a car bomb exploded near an outdoor market in the Baghdad's southeastern suburbs of Jisr Diyala shortly before sunset, killing seven people and wounding 20.
Also in southeastern Baghdad, officials said a car bomb went off inside a parking lot in the mainly Shiite New Baghdad neighborhood, killing three people. Another car bomb exploded in a busy street in the Shiite neighborhood of Amil, killing three people and wounding 14, authorities said. They said another car bomb in Amil killed 3 people and wounded 14.
In the holy Shiite city of Karbala, police said four people were killed in a car bomb attack near a cafe at night. Karbala is 80 kilometers (50 miles) south of Baghdad.
Police said four people were killed and 15 wounded when a car bomb exploded near a cafe in Baghdad's Shiite neighborhood of Abu Dashir.
In northern Baghdad, a car bomb hit a restaurant in the Shiite area of Khazimiyah, killing five people and wounding 14, authorities said. Police also said that five people were killed when a car bomb exploded near a cafe in Baghdad's southwestern neighborhood of Baiyaa.
Six people were killed and 15 were wounded in a car bomb explosion in the Shiite neighborhood of Shaab in northeastern Baghdad, officials said.
A car bomb hit near restaurant in the city's northeastern suburb of Husseiniyah, killing seven people and wounding 15, police said.
Also, a car bomb explosion a commercial street in the Dora area in southern Baghdad killed five and wounded 15, authorities said.
Earlier in the day, four people, including two children, were killed when a bomb exploded near a park just south of Baghdad, authorities said.
Later, a car bomb exploded in a busy street in Nasiriyah city in southern Iraq, killing four people and wounding 41 others, officials said. Nasiriyah is about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad.
In the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, a car bomb hit near a Shiite mosque, killing one person and wounding 20 others, police said.
Medical officials confirmed the casualty figures for all the attacks. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to talk to journalists.
The death toll in Saturday's attacks is the highest single-day total since July 20, when brazen assaults on two prisons near Baghdad plus other attacks left 71 dead.
More than 1,000 people were killed in Iraq in July, the highest monthly death toll in five years, according to the United Nations. The U.N. described the increase as particularly troubling because the numbers had begun declining five years ago following a series of U.S.-led offensives and a Sunni revolt against al-Qaida in Iraq.
Iraqi officials have attributed the recent uptick in the death toll figures to a change in tactics by insurgents who are now trying to attack crowded, soft civilian targets such as cafes, mosques and markets in order to kill as many people as possible.
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Spokane County Raceway: Drifting, Test and Tune (drag strip), Fever 4?s, Road Runners, Hobby Stocks, Bump to Pass, Demo Derby (oval), both?4?p.m.
Northwest League: Spokane at Eugene,?7:05?p.m.
Coeur d?Alene Casino: Horse racing, 9:30?a.m.; dog racing, 10. Greyhound Park & Event Center: Horse racing, 10?a.m.; dog racing, 5?p.m. Northern Quest Resort and Casino: Horse racing:?9:50?a.m.
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Spokane County Raceway: Drifting, Test and Tune (drag strip), Fever 4?s, Road Runners, Hobby Stocks, Bump to Pass, Demo Derby (oval), both?4?p.m.
Northwest League: Spokane at Eugene,?7:05?p.m.
Coeur d?Alene Casino: Horse racing, 9:30?a.m.; dog racing, 10. Greyhound Park & Event Center: Horse racing, 10?a.m.; dog racing, 5?p.m. Northern Quest Resort and Casino: Horse racing:?9:50?a.m.
Source: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2013/aug/09/fridays-area-sports-schedule/
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I bought an unlocked iPhone 5 (T-Mobile version) at an Apple store and purchased the $30 month unlimited text/data, 100 minutes. I was paying $102/month for a grandfathered unlimited data plan at AT&T.
I live in Seattle and will be moving to San Diego. I feel both places get "4G" similar to the places I got 3G with AT&T. It's not bad in the more rural areas I've been in. Contrary to what people told me I got a fine signal all around Wenatchee, for example. LTE is in plenty of places too, but I don't use it much because of how it drains the battery.
100 minutes is not a lot, so beware. Google voice counts towards your minutes, but you can use an app like Talkatone or use FaceTime to other iPhones, and it will only use your data. Talkatone has a bit of interference or whatever that makes it a little unusable sometimes though.
I got tired of paying so much money for AT&T and because that's probably the most important thing to me right now, the T-Mo situation works great.
Source: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1620376&goto=newpost
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In this June 12, 2013 photo, the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant is seen through a bus window in Okuma, in Fukushima prefecture. The Canadian Press
TOKYO ? Japan?s government said Wednesday that it would step in and take ?firm measures? to tackle contaminated water leaks at the country?s crippled nuclear plant, including possibly funding a multibillion-dollar project to fix the problem.
The announcement came a day after the operator of the wrecked Fukushima Dai-ichi plant said some of the water was seeping over or around an underground barrier it created after injecting chemicals into the soil that solidified into a wall.
?There is heightened concern among the public, particularly about the contaminated water problem,? Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Wednesday during a government nuclear disaster response meeting at his office. ?This is an urgent matter that needs to be addressed. The government will step in to take firm measures.?
The latest problem involves underground water that has built up over the last month since the operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., began creating the chemical walls underground to stop leaks after detecting radiation spikes in water samples in May.
Government officials said Wednesday that an estimated 300 tons of contaminated water has been leaking into the sea each day since early in the crisis, which was caused by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. That?s about half of the underground water that escapes into the sea every day.
Since a major leak via a maintenance pit a month after three Fukushima reactors went into meltdown following the disasters, TEPCO had denied any further leaks into the sea until acknowledging them last month, despite repeated warnings by experts.
The underground barrier on the coastal embankment has somewhat slowed the leaks, but has caused underground water to swell at the complex. To prevent an overflow above the surface, which is feared to happen within weeks, TEPCO will start pumping out about 100 tons of underground water from coastal observation wells by the end of this week.
Government officials said Wednesday that they were considering funding a separate, multibillion-dollar project to surround the reactor buildings with a wall of frozen ground to block underground water from entering the buildings.
The same method has been used to build tunnels, but building a wall that surrounds four reactor buildings and their related facilities is ?unprecedented anywhere in the world,? said Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga. ?We believe it is necessary that the country steps forward to support its construction,? he said.
Tatsuya Shinkawa, an official at the Agency for Natural Resources and Energy, said government officials were discussing funding details for the frozen ground wall project, which is expected to cost ?several tens of billions of yen? (several billions of dollars) to construct.
? The Canadian Press, 2013
Source: http://globalnews.ca/news/766210/japan-govt-to-help-stop-radioactive-water-leaks/
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Hesitation over tackling LGBT issues, Gaider said, can come from pessimistic assumptions made ? both by creators and marketers ? about how the audience will react. One of BioWare's earliest gay characters, Juhani in Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, was practically snuck into the game. "I think for a long time it was just assumed that nobody would accept it," he said. "That's what the mentality was. It's not like we went and tried to ask permission or anything - we kind of hid it. She never says, 'She was my lover.' She just says, 'We are very close.'"
Not explicitly addressing the topic, however, "seemed like a very obvious exclusion" to Gaider. BioWare's next role-playing game, Jade Empire, was less subtle in its depiction of a same-sex relationship, and it faced far less resistance than the team had assumed. There was no long conversation after the team asked, "Why don't we just make the romances available to both genders?" According to Gaider, "that was the whole conversation."
A similar anecdote came from panelist David "Rez" Graham, software engineer and AI programmer on The Sims 4, who recalled the introduction of same-sex characters in the first Sims game. Far from leading to a dreaded debate within the company, the equal-opportunity woohoo-ing (the game's euphemism for sex) of the Sims happened without consternation. "The lead engineer on the original sims was openly gay," Rez said. "He had a reputation for just ... implementing things. Nobody really questioned it, which was really cool. It boiled down to exactly one meeting - it was a question of how we support this, it was never about do we support this." (It took until The Sims 3, however, for same-sex marriage to formally appear.)
Of course, the presence of gay or lesbian relationships in a game that playfully simulates humanity is different from the likes of a serious space opera like Mass Effect, which occupies a different space in gaming culture. According to panelist Jessica Merizan, community manager for BioWare Edmonton, "the rules are different" for games that are aimed at consumers beyond the 18+ male demographic.
"I grew up with The Sims, and it didn't really seem like a big issue," she said. "I'm pretty sure that's how I learned about sex in the first place." A game like Mass Effect 3, which drew ire from a subset of fans for its inclusion of a gay pilot named Steve Cortez, broached the subject differently ? and while it was controversial, Merizan was pleased it wasn't a storm obscuring the game. The "man's man" Cortez, she said, illustrated that "you don't have to be a certain way to be gay."
By opting for empathy and inclusion, Gaider said, EA gained new fans that are vocal in their support of those games through forums and social networks. "That's the sort of language that companies listen to," he said. "As developers we are there to make art, but we are also there to survive and make money. In talking about it, they are making their presence heard."
That presence, the panelists suggested, will grow with the increased prominence of independent games, some of which explore LGBT issues in more depth than AAA productions do. The powers that be are "not only capitalists, they're copy cats," Gaider quipped. "They will jump onto that bandwagon so fast."
Source: http://www.joystiq.com/2013/08/04/clearing-the-hump-of-assumptions-in-making-lgbt-inclusive-game/
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Jim Cruz made his way through the crowd that assembled in front of a wall of shiny military-style dog tags. He grabbed one, felt it, read the inscription and took a picture of it.
Cruz, 64, was one of dozens who made it to Saturday's premiere of the Texas Vietnam Heroes Exhibit at the UTSA Institute of Texan Cultures, which included state Sen. Leticia Van De Putte and other dignitaries. The exhibit features commemorative dog tags bearing the names of the 3,417 Texans killed or declared missing in the Vietnam War.
?I don't have no hair, but what I do have stands up,? said Cruz, showing goose bumps on one arm and pointing to the memorial with the other. ?Those are the heroes right there.?
Cruz, who retired in San Antonio after 23 years in the Army, first photographed the dog tag of a man he never met, a favor for a woman who previously stopped him to shake his hand and thank him for his service.
?It was of her father. I told her I was going to blow (the photo) up big and bring it to her,? Cruz said. ?Now I'm going to take pictures of my buddies, the ones I was with ... who didn't make it home.?
He said he lost four friends from Texas in the Vietnam War, and 26 total from all over the country.
Each of the people in the memorial is individually represented by commemorative dog tags embossed with the name, rank, branch of service, home of record and date of death. Black dog tags honor Texans missing in action, such as Army Staff Sgt. Manuel R. Puentes of El Paso.
Don Dorsey, a sniper in the Marine Corps during the war, embossed the dog tags with the help of fellow Marine James Hart. It took about 400 hours.
?As I was doing it ... I had to wonder how they were killed,? Dorsey said. ?I got to introduce myself to everyone and learn a little about them. I could relate to some of them from their ages or where they were from. Some I knew from high school.?
?Emotionally, it is a closure we believe a lot of the families and veterans need,? said Jim Cisneros, whose brother, Roy Cisneros, was killed Sept. 11, 1968, defending his platoon.
Roy Cisneros has an elementary school named after him in the Edgewood School District. More than 50 of the district's students died or were declared missing in Vietnam.
Cisneros was awarded posthumously the Texas Legislative Medal of Honor, and Jim Cisneros said his brother's legacy lives on in the memorial.
?It represents the sacrifices of one of the most horrific wars in American history,? Cisneros said. ?What it represents to me is the courage of all of the veterans who sacrificed their lives.?
Albert Martinez, retired from the Navy, came to see the dog tags of two elementary school friends killed when the trio served in Vietnam: Basilio Gomez and Joe Pierce Jr. They were killed within a couple of months of arrival there, Martinez said.
?For me, I know where they died, but I don't know the circumstances,? Martinez said. ?I got their pictures in uniform and medals they won. But this is like holding their own real dog tags ... It's long overdue.?
The dog tags match a set to be entombed next year at the Texas Capitol Veterans Monument. The traveling exhibit was designed by Excalibur Exhibits' Eriq Moquin, whose father served in the Army in Vietnam. Valero helped bring it to San Antonio, its first stop, where it will be on display at the institute through August.
?I think it helps people get closure because they get to touch and feel and see, and tell their grandchildren, 'This was my war,'? said Robert Floyd, chairman of the monument. ?We hope that it will help in healing and let people across the state know that we're not going to forget about these guys.?
gcontreras@express-news. net
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Posted: July 26, 2013
The next Arts and Society Forum will discuss graphic novels from 7pm on Monday July 29 at Room G24, Ground Floor, Foster Court, Malet Place, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, introduced by Bernie Whelan. It?s not normally a public event, but anyone especially interested in coming should please email Niall Crowley in advance on nialldcrowley[at]gmail.com to enquire about attending. Here?s their summary of what they will be discussing:
?The recent phenomenal growth of graphic novels ? a veritable tsunami ? would indicate that the genre is here to stay. Academics argue this attests to fundamental changes: first, an increasingly visual orientation due to the internet and second, the increasing interpenetration of popular culture and high culture. Unlike the trajectory some see film as having taken ? beginning as either representations of reality (news) or fantasy (art) and then degenerating towards fast, cheap entertainment which ?has steadily undermined the standards people once had both for cinema as art and for cinema as popular entertainment? (Sontag) ? comics began as fast, cheap entertainment and are now seen by some as an increasingly significant art form ? the graphic novel. Are comics developing as an art form we should take seriously or is the elevation of comics to graphic novels part of a more general abandonment of standards in the arts??
Read The Blog At The Crossroads here.
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Oh, the magic of finding a great book through the sheer power of chance! Is the summer the best time for that to happen? ?
By Danny Heitman,?Contributor / August 2, 2013
Monitor book blogger Danny Heitman doesn't often read mystery novels. But this summer he decided to try Alan Bradley?s latest Flavia de Luce novel, ?Speaking From Among the Bones.?
EnlargeAlthough we celebrate summer as a season of freedom, it?s also the time of year when readers get the most direction about which books to pick up for vacation reading.
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Well-meaning arbiters of literary taste ? including, of course, the folks at ?Chapter & Verse? ? offer lots of well-meaning suggestions and reading lists to help connect book lovers with just the right title.
Nothing wrong with any of that, of course. The next best thing to reading a book, after all, is discussing it and ? when it?s a good one ? recommending a page-turner to others.
But today I?d like to offer a few words in praise of serendipity in summer reading ? the magic of finding a great book not because someone pointed you toward it, but through the sheer power of chance.
All of this came to mind recently when I bumped into a book by Robert James Waller and startled myself by liking it. Waller is best known as the author of ?The Bridges of Madison County,? a wildly popular novel about a pair of lovers in a star-crossed romance. Hats off to Waller for penning such a whopping bestseller, but I never opened the covers of ?Madison County? for myself.
The premise of his novel always struck me as firmly in the genre of chick-lit, so I made a point of steering clear. And thanks to Waller?s signature novel, I?d mentally filed him as a?woman?s writer, assured that I could skip all of his books without regret.
But the other day, while visiting my local library, I spotted the spine of Waller?s ?Old Songs In A New Caf?? from the corner of my eye and decided to pick it up. That?s how I learned of Waller?s previous life as a newspaper essayist before he became a publishing sensation.
?Old Songs In A New Caf?? assembles about two dozen of his vintage columns, mostly from ?The Des Moines Register,? and they?re a pleasure from start to finish, bringing Waller?s poetic sensibility to bear on everything from the death of a treasured pet to the departure of a daughter for college.
The happy accident that brought Waller?s work to my attention made me think of the many other times when helpful quirks of fate landed the perfect book in my lap. As a high schooler killing time at a neighborhood rummage sale, I leaned on a table and found my hand resting on a copy of H.L. Mencken?s ?Minority Report,? discounted for a quarter. I?d never heard of Mencken, the gadfly journalist who had his heyday in the 1920s, but through this castoff title, I became a big fan, eventually filling two bookshelves with his work. The joy that Mencken took in the English language encouraged me to pursue writing as a profession.
During a college internship in Washington, D.C., I was leaving a bookstore at the Smithsonian when a shock of green grabbed my attention. It was the cover of Henry David Thoreau?s ?Walden,? which I bought on a whim, not expecting very much in return. Thoreau?s thoughts on simplicity and the power of local landscape stay with me still. I sometimes wonder how things might have turned out if that book jacket hadn?t been so striking.
Can we encourage these kinds of lucky literary meetings? The nature of luck, after all, is that you can?t really plan it.
But there are things that readers can do to become more open to the playful spin of the reading roulette wheel.
The time-honored art of browsing in a bookstore or library is a good way to indulge random acts of discovery. It?s nice to remind ourselves that we readers often don?t know what we?ll like until we try it.
This summer, I?m also nudging myself out of my usual reading habits. Although I can count on one hand the mystery novels I?ve read, I recently decided, just for kicks, to try Alan Bradley?s latest Flavia de Luce novel, ?Speaking From Among the Bones.? Who knows? Maybe Bradley?s prose could please me as much as Mencken?s, Thoreau?s, or Waller?s.??
We all read for the promise of surprise. But sometimes, as readers, we have to put out the welcome mat for chance.
Summer, perhaps more than any other season, is the time to do just that.
Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/CpDuWRFXvgM/Summer-reading-and-the-beauty-of-serendipity
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We expect Houston, Texas based energy exploration and production firm Marathon Oil Corp. (MRO) to beat expectations when it reports second-quarter 2013 results after the market closes on Aug 6, 2013. ?
Why a Likely Positive Surprise?
Our proven model shows that Marathon Oil is likely to beat earnings because it has the right combination of two key factors.??
Positive Zacks ESP:Expected Surprise Prediction or ESP (Read: Zacks Earnings ESP: A Better Method), which represents the difference between the Most Accurate estimate of 72 cents and the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 71 cents, stands at +1.41%. This is a meaningful and leading indicator of a likely positive earnings surprise for shares.?
Zacks Rank #3 (Hold):The stocks with a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy), Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) and Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) have a significantly higher chance of beating earnings. The Sell-rated stocks (#4 and #5) should never be considered while going into an earnings announcement.
The combination of Marathon Oil?s Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) and +1.41% ESP makes us confident of a positive earnings beat. ?
What is Driving the Better-Than-Expected Earnings?
Marathon Oil has a strong inventory of development projects that provides visible production growth over the coming years.? The Eagle Ford and Bakken shale plays are expected to offer Marathon a meaningful growth opportunity and management?s guidance of 7?10% annual production growth for 2013 seems to be on the conservative side.
New contracts and facility designs are expected to increase the company?s pipeline transport capacity, thus increasing reliability and reducing costs.
Marathon Oil?s divestiture program to do away with assets that do not fit in its long-term growth plan is intact. Recently, the company announced that it has entered into an agreement to sell its 10% working interest in Block 31, offshore Angola. Should the deal go through, it will help the company to close approximately $2.9 billion in divestitures, almost reaching the upper end of its target of $1.5?$3 billion through the period of 2011 to 2013.?
The company?s intention of sharing profits with its investors is also seen as a positive. Last month, Marathon Oil announced a 12% hike in its quarterly dividend, bringing the dividend amount to 19 cents per share.
Other Stocks to Consider
Here are some other energy firms that are worth considering as these also have the right combination to post an earnings beat this quarter:
Natural Gas Services Group Inc. (NGS) has an earnings ESP of +3.57% and a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy).
Ferrellgas Partners LP (FGP) has an earnings ESP of +6.90% and a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy).
Oasis Petroleum Inc. (OAS) has an earnings ESP of +3.33% and a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold).
Read the Full Research Report on FGPRead the Full Research Report on MRO
Read the Full Research Report on OAS
Read the Full Research Report on NGS
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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/marathon-oil-mro-beat-earnings-183003995.html
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MONTREAL -- The Dan Hawkins era lasted only five games in Montreal.
The Alouettes, who have struggled to a 2-3 record to start the season, announced Thursday that Hawkins has been fired.
Jim Popp will step in as head coach for the third time in his 18 years as general manager of the Canadian Football League club.
The firing came during a bye week in the Alouettes schedule. The team's next game is Aug. 8 against the Toronto Argonauts.
The offence, which was Montreal's strength under former coach Marc Trestman, looked disorganized and lifeless under Hawkins, who was coaching a professional team for the first time in his career.
Owner Bob Wetenhall asked Popp to step in.
"Jim is the person most responsible for the success we have had over all these years," Wetenhall said in a statement. "I feel confident that he is the best person to coach our team at this time and I am very appreciative of him being willing to make this additional contribution to our franchise.
"He has the respect of our players as well as mine."
Hawkins was hired Feb. 19 after working as a broadcaster. He had previously coached mainly U.S. college teams, taking Boise State to four Western Athletic Conference titles from 2002 to 2005 before compiling a disappointing 19-39 record at Colorado from 2006 to 2010.
It was the second time in a row Montreal hired a coach with no CFL experience.
But while it worked with Trestman, who won two Grey Cups in a five-year stint before being named head coach of the NFL's Chicago bears, Hawkins did not appear comfortable with the 12-man game.
He bowed out a winner, however. Despite the team's spotty play, the Alouettes are in second place in the weak East Division and are coming off a nervy 32-27 win over 1-4 Edmonton.
Popp first stepped in as coach to finish off a disastrous 2001 campaign under Rod Rust, but Don Matthews took over the following season.
He took over as coach again when Matthews fell ill during the 2006 season and brought the Alouettes to the Grey Cup game.
He stayed on for 2007, in which the rookie-laden club that was missing starting quarterback Anthony Calvillo for much of the season went 8-10 and lost in the first round of the playoffs to Winnipeg.
It was the team's only losing record since it returned to Montreal after a 10-year hiatus in 1996. Popp has been general manager all of that time.
His CFL regular-season coaching record is 10-13, with a 1-3 mark in playoff games.
The team did not say if Popp would coach on an interim basis or when the search for a new head coach would begin.
Source: http://www.tsn.ca/cfl/story/?id=428903
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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Thursday, August 01, 2013
TransCanada will construct a pipeline from western Canada to link it with the east's refineries in its bid to seek more export markets. Once complete, the $11.6 billion Energy East line could transport up to 1.1 million barrels of oil daily. ...
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ST LOUIS (LALATE) ? A Nebraska tornado 2013 warning today is growing in Cherry County. The Nebraska tornado alert for today August 1, 2013 was issued by the National Weather Service moments ago after a system was spotted moving through the area.
The National Weather Service in North Platte indicates to news that at 416 PM MDT today ?a severe thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado was located 9 miles south of Merriman?. Reps indicate to news that the system was moving fast, namely ?southeast at 30 mph.?
As a result, NWS has issued a ?Tornado Warning for west central Cherry County in north central Nebraska until 500 PM MDT? today. They indicate that possible hazards may include a tornado and ?ping pong Ball size hail?.
Officials have also been able to determine the storm?s projected path. The National Weather Service indicates that ?Locations impacted include intersection of Highway 61 and shadbolt Road, Highway 61 crossing the Snake River and Medicine Lake. This includes Highway 61 between mile markers 199 and 224.?
Weather Underground on Twitter reports that the alert was issued first three hours ago. But each hour it has been extended. ?Tornado Warning for Cherry County in NE until 5:00 PM MDT?, Weather Underground tweeted moments ago. Elsewhere no other tornado warning remains in place tonight in the U.S.
Source: http://news.lalate.com/2013/08/01/nebraska-tornado-2013-warning-today-grows-in-cherry-county/
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The Tulsa Humane Society is looking for good homes for two pit bulls rescued from a dog fighting ring in Missouri.
Izzy and Duke, both 2 years old, were rescued by the ASPCA and are now being cared for at the Humane Society.
The staff is looking for gentle, loving homes for the animals.
?They need to go to a home a more calm home? one on one... kids aren't the best bet for these dogs,? said one officials.
Izzy and Duke have been working with behaviorists and are available for adoption.
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A St. Augustine attorney was suspended for a year by the Florida Supreme Court.
The Florida Supreme Court disciplined 25 attorneys, disbarring eight, publicly reprimanding two and suspending 15, including one in St. Augustine.
In addition, two attorneys received more than one form of discipline, one was placed on probation and another was ordered to pay restitution.
Marlene Garcia of St. Augustine was suspended for one year, effective immediately, following a June 27 court order. Garcia was charged with possession of cocaine ? a felony. She pleaded no contest to a lesser misdemeanor charge of possession of drug paraphernalia. Four months later she was arrested and later pleaded no contest to a petit theft misdemeanor charge.
She was admitted to practice in 1987.
See all of the most recent disciplinary actions here.
Michael handles our Web coverage, social media accounts and videos.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_18/~3/wHjAqOSjRE0/florida-supreme-court-suspends-st.html
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Source: http://mansfieldnewsjournal.com/article/20130801/NEWS01/308010016/1002/rss01
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