Friday, October 11, 2013

Elizabeth Smart: My Faith And 'My Story'





Elizabeth Smart at NPR headquarters in Washington DC.



Amy Ta/NPR


Elizabeth Smart at NPR headquarters in Washington DC.


Amy Ta/NPR


Elizabeth Smart dominated headlines back in 2002. She was just 14 years old when she was kidnapped at knifepoint from her Salt Lake City home by Brian David Mitchell and his wife Wanda Barzee. Smart was held captive for nine months. Mitchell forced her to act as his second wife, raped her nearly every day, and told her that the ordeal was ordained by God.



Smart's Mormon faith played a key part in her survival and spiritual health today. She says there were moments when she felt there was no one to turn to – except God. She writes about all of this in her new memoir My Story.


"When I was kidnapped and he was telling me all of these things, I remember what my parents said: 'You'll know a person by their actions.' And so even though he was sitting there telling me that he was a prophet, that I should be thankful for what was happening to me, I was really a lucky girl – I realized that he wasn't a good person. He was hurting me. He made me feel terrible," Smart tells NPR's Michel Martin. "And growing up believing that I have a kind and loving heavenly father, I couldn't believe that God had called him to do what he was doing to me."


Smart says that — even when she feared for her life — she never lost faith. "You don't just take what's given to you and say, 'Okay this is what we're supposed to do.' But that you pray about it, you think about it, and you find your own answer. That's what true faith is."


A central question for people of faith is why God allows bad things to happen. Smart says that her experience gives her a unique perspective on that issue. "Although I never asked to be kidnapped or for something like that to happen to me, I can find that goodness can still come out of it, and that I can be grateful for the opportunities that it's opened up to me that otherwise wouldn't have been."


As for Smart's captors, they have been sentenced to long prison terms without parole. Smart says she's not focused on what happens to them anymore, but that she forgives them. "I have let go of the past. I have let go of what they have done to me. And I've let go of them. They no longer have a part in my life, and I have no desire to see them. I have just moved on."



Smart says that one lesson she wants people to take from her story is the importance of treating sexual assault victims with compassion. "After being raped, I felt completely worthless. I didn't even feel like I was human anymore. And it is just so important to let these survivors know that they're not any less of a person. You don't love them any less. And that to pretend like it never happened, or to pretend like rape doesn't exist or that it only happens in the wrong parts of town – you're doing that survivor a disservice."


The kidnapping is not the final chapter of Smart's story. She is now married, and working as an advocate on children's issues. Smart says writing the book was a healing experience that helped her realize how far she has come. "All of us have the potential inside us to reach so much further and grow so much more than any of us think we can," she notes.



Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/11/232110407/elizabeth-smart-my-faith-and-my-story?ft=1&f=1016
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Thursday, July 11, 2013

Verizon, AT&T Galaxy S4s also getting software upgrade [Updated]

GS4 update on Verizon

New firmware includes apps-to-SD, Samsung Knox

Update: Looks like AT&T is pushing out a similar GS4 update over-the-air.

Original story: Following the international and Sprint versions of the phone, Verizon's Galaxy S4 is today receiving a software update with a couple of significant new features. While a full changelog isn't yet available, the new "VRUAME7" firmware update seems to include apps-to-SD card support as well as Samsung's Knox security software for BYOD — both features found in the recent Sprint GS4 update. In addition, the same firmware update for the international GS4 brought improved performance, so that's something else to watch out for.

Knox in particular might be of concern to rooted users wanting to maintain superuser access to their devices, so if you're rooted you might want to hold off applying this update for the moment. Right now it seems the new firmware is only going out through Samsung's Kies desktop app, rather than over-the-air, as a hefty 1.8GB download.

Source: Android Central forums

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/lk6ls3wBdbQ/story01.htm

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

World's biggest debt collector hit with $3.2 million penalty

PhotoThe world?s largest debt collection agench, Expert Global Solutions, has agreed to stop harassing consumers and will?pay a $3.2 million civil penalty,?the largest ever obtained by the Federal Trade Commission against a third-party debt collector.

In its complaint, the?FTC charged that the Expert Global and its subsidiaries used illegal tactics such as calling consumers multiple times per day, calling even after being asked to stop, calling early in the morning or late at night, calling consumers? workplaces despite knowing that the employers prohibited such calls, and leaving phone messages that disclosed the debtor?s name, and the existence of the debt, to third parties.?

According to the FTC?s complaint, the companies also continued collection efforts without verifying the debt, even after consumers said they did not owe it, a violation of the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

Helen of Bisbee, AZ, recently wrote to ConsumerAffairs about her experience with NCO.

"I do not owe any money and have no debts. This company uses an automated phone system to call me at least once a day, sometimes twice, to request from me a return call," she said. "I attempted once to do this -- to request they stop calling or an option to contact me in writing only. I only got an automated system. So I did not get anywhere."?

With more than 32,000 employees and revenues in 2011 of more than $1.2 billion, the Texas-based Expert Global Solutions and its subsidiaries ? ALW Sourcing, LLC; NCO Financial Systems, Inc.; and Transworld Systems, Inc., which also does business as North Shore Agency, Inc. ? collectively are the largest debt collector in the world.? In addition to their U.S. offices, the companies operate in Canada, Barbados, India, the Philippines, and Panama.

Must verify the debt

PhotoUnder the proposed settlement, whenever a consumer disputes the validity or the amount of the debt, the defendants must either close the account and end collection efforts, or suspend collection until they have conducted a reasonable investigation and verified that their information about the debt is accurate and complete. ?

Juan of China, CA, is one of many consumers who've complained about ?NCO refusing to verify the amount of the alleged debt. Jua said he received a bill for $389.76 but had no clue what it was for.

"They proceeded to [say] you do owe this money with an angry tone and that it was from a hospital bill. I mentioned to them I received one bill only from the hospital and never an additional one. They argumentatively wanted me to accept these charges," Juan said.

"I never did receive a bill for any other charges. I had received one and has been paid for. I have proof of a zero dollar balance. They push it to the limit where I asked to speak to a supervisor and they didn't have anyone to which to speak to only other sales rep. I had also called the hospital asking if I had ever sent any bill to collection. I received a no from the accounts payable personnel named Julie."

The proposed FTC order also restricts situations in which the defendants can leave voicemails that disclose the alleged debtor?s name and the fact that he or she may owe a debt.?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/consumeraffairs/SXJd/~3/XSStQ_70Pao/worlds-biggest-debt-collector-hit-with-32-million-penalty-070913.html

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NRA-ILA | Court finds NYC pistol licensing application fees are legal

NRA-ILA

Established in 1975, the Institute for Legislative Action (ILA) is the "lobbying" arm of the National Rifle Association of America. ILA is responsible for preserving the right of all law-abiding individuals in the legislative, political, and legal arenas, to purchase, possess and use firearms for legitimate purposes as guaranteed by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
READ MORE

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11250 Waples Mill Rd. Fairfax, VA 22030? 1800-392-8683(VOTE)

Source: http://www.nraila.org/news-issues/in-the-news/2013/7/court-finds-nyc-pistol-licensing-application-fees-are-legal.aspx

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Local charity hopes to roll strike against cancer with bowling fundraiser

During the 2012 fiscal year, 33 children from Douglas County were treated for cancer at Children?s Mercy Hospital and Clinics. Michelle Derusseau, founder of Rock?n Bowl, hopes to raise awareness of that number and funds for both Children?s Mercy Cancer Center and Baby Jay?s Legacy of Hope, a local children?s cancer charity, during the annual Rock?n Bowl event planned for July 13 at Royal Crest Lanes, at 933 Iowa St.

The cosmic bowling event was started last year in an effort to help local cancer patients. Derusseau said the event concentrates on children?s cancer because of the complications that go along with it.

?The recurrence rate (of cancer in children) is really high,? she said. ?At least 65 percent later in life will have chronic health issues from the treatments they went through (during cancer).?

Because children?s cancer is different than cancer found in adults, children are unable to be treated at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, which is why the money will be donated to Children?s Mercy.

?That is the local children?s cancer center,? Derusseau said. ?These kids don?t have any choice where they can go.?

The cost of commuting and financial burden from hospital bills can become astronomical, Derusseau said, and Rock?n Bowl is a fun way to help local parents trim those costs. The event costs $33 for adults, to represent the 33 Douglas County children who were treated for cancer this year. Children 14 and younger cost $15. The cost is tax deductible and includes pizza and drinks, shoes and two hours of bowling.

The event will be cosmic bowling as well as a head pin challenge, where if bowlers knock down a specific colored pin, they get to spin a wheel to win a prize. There will also be a silent auction sponsored by locally owned businesses.

Derusseau said Rock?n Bowl is a good activity for the summertime because participants don?t have to worry about weather and don?t have to have experience bowling.

?It?s hot in July so it?s in a nice, cool bowling alley,? Derusseau said. ?You don?t have to be good at it to participate.?

Rock?n Bowl raised $10,500 last year, and the goal for this year is to raise at least that much.

Guests can attend Rock?n Bowl from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. or 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. July 13. Tickets are available at the door or online. For more information about the event or to purchase tickets, visit lawrencerocknbowl.com.

Copyright 2013 The Lawrence Journal-World. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. We strive to uphold our values for every story published.

Source: http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2013/jul/09/local-charity-hopes-strike-out-cancer-bowling-fund/

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Car bomb rocks Hezbollah stronghold in Lebanon

Forensic experts and security forces stand at the scene of a bombing in the Beir el-Abed, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A large explosion rocked a stronghold of the Shiite militant Hezbollah group south of the Lebanese capital Tuesday, setting several cars on fire, sending a thick plume of black smoke billowing into the sky and wounding more than a dozen people, security officials said. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Forensic experts and security forces stand at the scene of a bombing in the Beir el-Abed, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A large explosion rocked a stronghold of the Shiite militant Hezbollah group south of the Lebanese capital Tuesday, setting several cars on fire, sending a thick plume of black smoke billowing into the sky and wounding more than a dozen people, security officials said. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Security forces stand at the scene of a bombing in the Beir el-Abed, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A large explosion rocked a stronghold of the Shiite militant Hezbollah group south of the Lebanese capital Tuesday, setting several cars on fire, sending a thick plume of black smoke billowing into the sky and wounding more than a dozen people, security officials said. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Security forces stand at the scene of a bombing in the Beir el-Abed, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A large explosion rocked a stronghold of the Shiite militant Hezbollah group south of the Lebanese capital Tuesday, setting several cars on fire, sending a thick plume of black smoke billowing into the sky and wounding more than a dozen people, security officials said. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Security forces and civilians stand at the scene of a bombing in the Beir el-Abed, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A large explosion rocked a stronghold of the Shiite militant Hezbollah group south of the Lebanese capital Tuesday, setting several cars on fire, sending a thick plume of black smoke billowing into the sky and wounding more than a dozen people, security officials said.(AP Photo/Ahmed Omar)

Security forces and civilians stand at the scene of a bombing in the Beir el-Abed, a southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, July 9, 2013. A large explosion rocked a stronghold of the Shiite militant Hezbollah group south of the Lebanese capital Tuesday, setting several cars on fire, sending a thick plume of black smoke billowing into the sky and wounding more than a dozen people, security officials said.(AP Photo/Ahmed Omar)

(AP) ? A powerful car bomb exploded in a Hezbollah stronghold in the southern suburbs of Beirut on Tuesday, wounding at least 53 people in the most troubling sign yet that Syria's civil war is beginning to consume its smaller neighbor.

The blast in the heart of the Shiite militant group's bastion of support raised the worrying specter of Lebanon being pulled into the violent Sunni-Shiite struggle in the region, with sectarian killings similar to those plaguing Syria and Iraq.

The Syrian conflict, now in its third year, is whipping up sectarian fervor. Sunni-Shiite tensions have risen sharply, particularly since Hezbollah raised its profile by openly fighting alongside President Bashar Assad's forces. Lebanese Sunnis support the rebels fighting to topple Assad.

While there was no immediate claim of responsibility, there have been growing fears in Lebanon that Hezbollah could face retaliation for its now overt role fighting alongside Assad's troops. The group's fighters played a key role in a recent regime victory to retake control of the strategic town of Qusair, near the Lebanese border, where rebels held sway for more than a year. Syrian activists say Hezbollah fighters are now aiding a regime offensive in the besieged city of Homs.

Syria-based rebels and militant Islamist groups have threatened to target Hezbollah strongholds in Lebanon in retaliation.

The car bomb struck a bustling commercial and residential neighborhood in Beir el-Abed, an area of particularly strong Hezbollah support, as many Lebanese Shiites began observing the holy month of Ramadan. The blast went off in a parking lot near the Islamic Coop, a supermarket usually packed with shoppers.

"The explosion was so strong I thought it was an Israeli air raid," said Mohammad al-Zein, who lives near the blast site. "My wife was sleeping in bed and all the glass fell on her, injuring her in the mouth, arms and legs."

Beir el-Abed is only few hundred yards (meters) from what is known as Hezbollah's "security square," where many of the party's officials live and have offices. It was heavily bombed by Israeli warplanes during the monthlong war between Israel and Hezbollah in 2006.

The area, where Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah once received dignitaries before the 2006 war, was completely destroyed by Israeli airstrikes. He has since gone underground, only rarely appearing in public and never for more than few minutes, fearing Israeli assassination.

Tuesday's attack inflamed long-simmering tensions in Lebanon, where deadly clashes between Shiites and Sunnis have grown increasingly common as the civil war in Syria has taken on ever darker sectarian overtones. Some Sunnis in Lebanon, many of whom support Syria's rebels, have expressed resentment over what they see as Hezbollah's unchecked power in the country.

The anger was clear among residents of Dahyeh, Hezbollah's stronghold in Beirut's southern suburbs. At the scene of the explosion, some cursed Sunni politicians and Syrian rebels, calling them Israeli agents.

With smoke still hanging in the air, about 100 outraged Hezbollah supporters stormed through the area, carrying posters of Nasrallah and chanting sectarian slogans.

"Shiite blood is boiling!" they shouted as dozens of Hezbollah operatives wearing red caps and holding radios kept watch.

At one point, the Hezbollah agents fired in the air to disperse protesters pelting the interior minister with stones after he inspected the scene of the blast, trapping him for 45 minutes in a building before he was escorted through a backdoor.

Interior Minister Marwan Charbel is seen by some Shiites as sympathetic to hard-line Sunni cleric Ahmad al-Assir, who has agitated against Hezbollah for months and is now on the run.

Clashes between al-Assir's supporters and Lebanese army troops last month in the coastal city of Sidon further increased sectarian tensions in the country.

"We, the sons of Imam Hussein, have been targeted for 1,400 years," said Abbas Kobeissi, a 32-year-old barber being treated for head wounds from flying glass after Tuesday's blast. He referred to the grandson of Islam's Prophet Muhammad, a key figure in Shiite Islam whose death in the 7th century increased divisions between Sunnis and Shiites.

"History is repeating itself," Kobeissi added. "This is a message to Dahyeh. They (Hezbollah) think this will make people rise against the resistance."

Tuesday's explosion was one of the biggest in the capital's southern suburbs since the end of Lebanon's 15-year civil war in 1990, and a major breach of a tightly controlled, high security area.

"It is a large area, heavily populated. No force in the world can protect every area and every street," Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Moqdad said.

The breach raised questions about the group's ability to control the anger it helped unleash through its involvement in the Syrian civil war. At the same time, Lebanese Sunni groups have also joined the fight alongside Syria's rebels, offering logistic and other support.

"Both sides, Hezbollah and Sunni fighters, are directly involved in the Syrian conflict and it's becoming increasingly clear that it's impossible to keep the fighting there away from Lebanon," said Ayham Kamel, a Middle East analyst at the Eurasia Group in London.

"The Syrian conflict has put Hezbollah in a tough spot, with limited choices for its leader Hassan Nasrallah to pursue," he said. "There is a regional Sunni-Shiite confrontation going on in Syria and that puts pressure on all parties in Lebanon, including Hezbollah."

Syria's civil war is increasingly being fought along sectarian lines, with Sunnis dominating the rebel ranks fighting Assad's regime, which is composed mostly of Alawites, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. The fighting has threatened the stability of Syria's neighbors ? including Iraq, where a recent surge in car bombings have targeted Shiite areas.

Health Minister Ali Hassan Khalil said 53 people were wounded in Tuesday's blast, which shattered windows and damaged several buildings in the busy area. A security official said the bomb was placed in a car and weighed 35 kilograms (70 pounds).

At least one Syria-based Islamist brigade claimed responsibility for the attack on its Facebook page, but its authenticity could not be verified. The Syrian National Coalition, the main Western-backed Syrian opposition group, denounced "in the strongest terms the terrorist explosion."

"Targeting civilians is a criminal act that goes against the aims of the (Syrian) revolution and its principles," it said in a statement.

Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Ammar blamed "Israel and its tools in the region" for the attack. Hezbollah, like the Syrian regime, refers to those fighting to topple Assad as agents of Israel and the U.S.

The European Union condemned the Beirut bombing, calling it an "appalling act of violence (that) underlines the need for all Lebanese to maintain their national unity."

Television footage from the scene revived memories of the 1975-90 Lebanese civil war when car bombs set by sectarian groups were common. There have been numerous car bombs targeting politicians and journalists since then, but random car bombings have been rare.

In May, two rockets struck the Hezbollah stronghold, wounding four people hours after Nasrallah vowed in a speech to help propel Assad to victory. In June, a rocket slammed into the same area, causing no casualties.

"A further destabilization of Lebanon's security is now very likely," said Charles Lister, an analyst at IHS Jane's Terrorism and Insurgency Center.

"Another line has been crossed," he said, "but the result will likely be a further hardening of the stances held by Hezbollah and its increasingly confident Sunni militant adversaries."

___

Associated Press writer Barbara Surk contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-09-ML-Lebanon/id-513466e7d5394a8991584e3cae78feca

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Non-Profit ?Bleep Cancer? Raising Awareness ? Lu Parker Reports ...

Chances are you know someone who has or had cancer.
For most of us our initial reaction to hearing the news is shocking.
For one young woman, the words that came to her mind when her mom was diagnosed with breast cancer have become the name of her fast growing non-profit called ?bleep cancer.?

Yael Cohen, Founder and CEO of F**k Cancer
@Yael
@letsfcancer
www.letsfcancer.com

Source: http://ktla.com/2013/07/09/non-profit-bleep-cancer-raising-awareness-lu-parker-reports/

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Potential biomarker for cancer diagnosis identified

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Source: www.sciencedaily.com --- Monday, July 08, 2013
Findings of disrupted micronuclei may prove to be a valuable tool for detecting Cancer. ...

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ggZ6OyOpUWI/130708200014.htm

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Video: Best States for Business

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52422432/

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Sunday, July 7, 2013

Jobs Minister Shirley Bond defends B.C.'s Bollywood awards

VICTORIA ? TV ratings of around 30 million households in India don't mean an unhappy ending for B.C.'s $11 million investment in hosting a Bollywood movie awards show, Jobs Minister Shirley Bond says.

Premier Christy Clark was widely criticized for the decision to invest $11 million to host the Times of India Film Awards, an upstart competitor to India's 60-year-old National Film Awards that was staged in Vancouver April 6. At the time, Clark said the show would be seen by 400 million people.

NDP leader Adrian Dix zeroed in on the TV ratings in the legislature Wednesday, calling it a "vastly inflated" and "totally fictitious" rationale for spending millions on the awards show.

An NDP freedom of information request for the business case behind the awards uncovered "a couple of emails, a press release ? and a poster with the premier's picture on it," Dix said.

Bond said the Indian newspaper group reports 32 million TV screens for the June 16 telecast in India, with as many as 20 million South Asian people in other countries seeing an international simulcast. A webcast by Sony reached another eight million online viewers, and the program will be rebroadcast on TV as many as 11 more times, Bond said.

Asked if B.C. would sponsor the event again, Bond didn't rule it out.

"We recognize the benefit of reaching out to India, and this is one way to do it," she said. "We're going to measure the outcomes."

Bond said the week-long event, with launch news conferences in Vancouver and Mumbai, a global voting campaign and a music event at the PNE before the main awards show, generated 6,000 direct and indirect jobs in B.C. The Times Group also booked 3,000 hotel rooms in Vancouver.

Surrey-Newton MLA Harry Bains told the legislature the $11 million would have been better spent on school expansions for students in portable classrooms in his constituency.

Source: http://www.revelstoketimesreview.com/news/214196421.html

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[JH] "I also discussed President Obama's climate plan along with Daniel Kessler...

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Saturday, July 6, 2013

Church Health Center, MIFA Farmers Market in full swing

The?Church Health Center?and MIFA will host a farmers market from?10 a.m. to 2 p.m.?on Tuesdays?running through?September 24?at Church Health Center Wellness,?1115 Union Ave.?

The Center is also offering a free cooking class at 9 a.m. that uses market ingredients.?

The Market accepts credit, debit, cash and EBT. For more information, call Suzanne Ray at?(901) 259-4673, Ext. 2237 or visit ChurchHealthCenter.org.

http://churchhealthcenter.org/farmersmarket

Source: http://eastmemphis.wmctv.com/news/community-spirit/164142-church-health-center-mifa-farmers-market-full-swing

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Evidence of Ancient Farming in Iran Discovered

Agriculture may have arisen simultaneously in many places throughout the Fertile Crescent, new research suggests.

Ancient mortars and grinding tools unearthed in a large mound in the Zagros Mountains of Iran reveal that people were grinding wheat and barley about 11,000 years ago.

The findings, detailed Thursday (July 4) in the journal Science, are part of a growing body of evidence suggesting that agriculture arose at multiple places throughout the Fertile Crescent, the region of the Middle East believed to be the cradle of civilization. [In Photos: Treasures of Mesopotamia]

"The thing that's most astounding is that it extends the Fertile Crescent much farther east for the early agricultural sites, which are dated to 11,500 to 11,000 years ago," said George Willcox, an archaeologist at the CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research) in France, who was not involved in the study.

Cradle of civilization

The agricultural revolution transformed human society. Most researchers believe the domestication of animals and grains allowed small bands of hunter-gatherers to rapidly expand their populations, settle down, build the first cities in Mesopotamia and develop advanced civilization.

In the 1950s, archaeologists unearthed evidence of early agriculture in Jericho, Israel, which led researchers to believe agriculture first arose in Israel and Jordan. Newer genetic evidence from wild and domestic plants in recent years points to multiple origins for agriculture, from Southwest Turkey to Iraq to Northern Syria. But archaeological evidence has been scarce.

But in 2009, Nicholas Conard, an archaeologist at the University of Tuebingen, and his colleagues unearthed a tell, or a large mound formed by continuous human settlement, at Chogha Golan in the Zagros Mountains of Eastern Iran. [See Photos from the Chogha Golan Excavation]

"The earthen buildings were often flattened or destroyed or rebuilt but in the same place," Willcox told LiveScience. "Each time they rebuilt, the floor level would go up so you get these deep stratigraphic levels of habitation."

The site contained mortars and grinding tools, stone figurines and other tools, suggesting a large social group lived there under fairly stable economic conditions. The team also found thousands of examples of wild barley, wild wheat, lentil and grass pea remains throughout the site, some of the earliest evidence of agriculture in the world.?

Based on levels of radioactive isotopes, or atoms of the same elements with different molecular weights, the team estimated that the site was occupied almost continuously between 9,800 and 12,000 years ago.

During early periods, humans were simply gathering wild plants, but evidence for domestication of wild strains of grains such as wild barley and lentils gradually emerge in the middle layers of the tell. By the end of the period, people had begun cultivating truly domesticated crops such as emmer, an early form of wheat.

Chogha Golan bolsters the notion that agriculture emerged at multiple sites, but exactly how that happened isn't clear, said Mark Nesbitt, an ethnobotanist and curator at Kew Gardens in London, who was not involved in the study.

"There are signs of contact and broad zones across the Fertile Crescent," Nesbitt told LiveScience.

For instance, obsidian from Turkey and shells from the Red and Mediterranean Seas are found throughout the Fertile Crescent, Willcox said.

So it's possible cultures had limited contact and spread agricultural technologies at around the same time period.

Another possibility is that agriculture emerged from one region further back in time and that crop cultivation is even older than these ancient human settlements suggest, Willcox said.

But so far, no trace of even earlier agriculture has been found.

Follow Tia Ghose on Twitter and Google+.?Follow?LiveScience @livescience, Facebook?& Google+. Original article on?LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/evidence-ancient-farming-iran-discovered-140704891.html

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Scraps and the City: Composting coming to an apartment near you

Matt Nighswander / NBC News

Mara Lowenstein sits next to her compost bin with her dog Charlie in her Manhattan apartment. Lowenstein's building is part of a pilot program that sorts food waste from other trash -- a practice that will become mandatory for New York City residents in 2016.

By Tracy Jarrett, NBC News

When new residents move into The Helena building on New York City's West Side, they get access to a rooftop lawn, a Pilates studio, onsite dry-cleaning -- and a personal compost bin.?

The building on West 57th street in Manhattan is part of a pilot program in which residents separate food scraps from the rest of their waste.

The Helena is a shining example of New Yorkers aiding composting efforts from their apartments ? a practice that Mayor Michael Bloomberg will mandate as he initiates plans to hire a composting plant to manage residential food waste and directs the city?s sanitation department to collect food scraps curbside. By 2016, all New York City residents will be required to separate their food waste for collection to be composted.
?
According to Eric Goldstein, senior lawyer at Natural Resources Defense Council in New York, food waste is the largest single portion of municipal waste in the United States, with 97 percent thrown into landfills.
?
?This proposal is very positive because it means we will be able to complete food cycle here and restore food to compost and reuse it as fertilizer or soil stabilizer,? said Goldstein. ?If successful, this program will both save taxpayers money, because we won?t need to send food waste to distant landfills, and will be good for the planet.?

Matt Nighswander / NBC News

Mara Lowenstein looks at a sign abover her floor's compost bin after dumping items at her Manhattan apartment building.

Composting occurs when leftover food waste such as coffee grounds, egg shells or apple cores are combined with what are called bulking agents ? wood chips, foliage or dirt, allowing the organic materials to break down. The resulting material can be used to create healthy soil, reducing the need for fertilizers and pesticides when growing food.

New York is not the first city to promote composting citywide. San Francisco has a mandatory recycling and composting ordinance, and as a result sends 600 tons of food compost a day to farms and vineyards around the Bay Area, according to spokesman Robert Reed of Recology Sunset Scavenger. Seattle and Portland, Ore., have similar rules.
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Linda Corso manages a building in San Francisco that much like The Helena began a composting pilot program before the city made it mandatory. Corso says that New Yorkers can learn from some of the complications San Francisco faced, such as difficulties with food waste bags, compost pick up, educating building tenants, access to compost receptacles and navigating how landlords can enforce separating food waste.
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The key, she said, ?is making it as easy as possible for tenants.?

When Mara Lowenstein moved into The Helena in May, she was attracted to the building?s location and dog-friendly residents and staff. The compost bin was an unexpected bonus.

?I am someone who recycles anyway, I bring my No. 5 containers to places that recycle them and I recycle my plastic bags, so I thought it was wonderful,? Lowenstein said. ?I would compost my stuff at the green market, and this is much more convenient.?

The Helena began by providing individual compost bins to residents on five of its 40 floors, as well as access to a larger communal bin located in the trash room on each floor.?Eventually the program was adopted on every floor.

?When it first rolled out, there were concerns that ?Oh, no, it?s going to smell in my apartment' or that the hallway will stink,? said Clayton Surratt, a building resident who attended the first meetings on composting and supported the program since its initial trial.

Despite the worries, Surratt said that, ?generally nobody has said this is stinking up my apartment or told me they have vermin or bug infestations, which they previously feared.?

But New Yorkers who have yet to start separating their scraps are not so convinced.

Jennifer Cohn Beugelmans lives in an elevator building in Gramercy Park and does not like the idea of separating food scraps for compost in her apartment. Despite knowing that it is good for the environment, Cohn Beugelmans thinks that Bloomberg?s policy is out of touch with the lives of average New Yorkers.

?Most people barely have the room for one garbage bin, let alone a recycle bin, and now a disgusting festering compost pile,? she said.

?I think it?s disgusting. I could get mice or bugs. I just don?t think it?s practical. If you live in a huge apartment and you have an opportunity to have covered compost piles, maybe that?s practical, but for the average New Yorker I don?t see where they would have room to have open piles of old food without risk of a huge rodent problem.?

Other New Yorkers are already doing voluntarily what the mayor will soon mandate.

Christine Rico lives in Brooklyn and has been composting her own food scraps for the 12 years. She uses the compost to improve the soil in her backyard where she grows her own food.

Rico says that the nutrients her compost adds to the soil has changed her yard from overgrown and full of trash to ?a vibrant place where trees are growing.? Rico has also noticed a change in front of her house.
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?It makes a huge difference in how much waste we put out on the curb. When we moved houses, there was a year that we didn?t compost and our trash was much bigger,? she said.
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While Rico is a huge supporter of composting, she does have concerns about the mayor?s plans.
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?In apartment buildings they take their trash out every day and someone has to manage that," she said. "It?s important for residents to be on board and know what constitutes good food scraps and what?re bad food scraps. If someone puts batteries in compost, that ruins whole batch of and on a city scale that?s huge."
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Rico is also concerned about what the convenience of curbside food waste pickup could mean for community compost sites.

?Most food scraps coming from New York are going to go into bio-gas converters,? rather than into community gardens that produce fresh food for local residents, Rico said.

Bonnie Weber has been taking her scraps to a community compost site for the past 25 years and today keeps compost food waste bags in her Upper East Side apartment. Each week, she travels from East 91st Street to Union Square with a suitcase that at times can weigh as much as 30 pounds to compost her waste.

While Weber will continue to make her weekly compost trip, she thinks that curbside pickup will make things easier for New Yorkers who don?t want to deal with composting in their own yards or at community sites.
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Accessibility will be a challenge for apartment dwellers in New York who live in older style walk-ups that do not have trash rooms on each floor, like The Helena does, and there will likely be other kinks to work out along the way. Attorney Goldstein thinks the hurdles are worth the reward.

?New York City?s size and density, combined with the resulting complexities of doing almost anything in New York, show that if you can implement innovative policies on waste here, then other cities around the nation, other large cities, don?t have much of an excuse as to why they can?t at least seriously consider the same waste alternatives.?

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2e42aa98/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A70C0A50C190A60A6380Escraps0Eand0Ethe0Ecity0Ecomposting0Ecoming0Eto0Ean0Eapartment0Enear0Eyou0Dlite/story01.htm

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Friday, July 5, 2013

Sheriff's Honor Guard to host fundraising golf tourney next Friday

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/krnvnews4/posts/10151573484843043

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HTC finances improve over last quarter, but show just $41.6 million profit in Q2 2013

HTC picks up the pace with for Q2 with $125 billion in earnings

Though HTC has fallen shy of the $66.7 million in earnings investors were looking for in Q2 2013, at least it's a marked improvement over last quarter's disaster. It managed to improve profits to $41.6 million from a mere $2.8 million last quarter, based on unaudited figures. Revenue also jumped to $2.4 billion over $1.4 billion in Q1, likely due to demand for its flagship One model along with the ability to finally produce it in numbers. However, all that pales over last year's Q2 results, when the company earned $250 million on $3 billion in revenue. According to Reuters, the problems occurred towards the end of the quarter, as sales for June swooned 26.4 percent over Q2 2012 -- a trend it no doubt hopes won't continue for the rest of the year.

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Source: Reuters

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/05/htc-misses-estimates-but-picks-up-the-pace-with-for-q2-with-1/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Left 4 Dead 2 mutates past Linux beta, adds more mod tools

DNP Left 4 Dead 2 mutates beyond Linux beta, adds more mod tools

Left 4 Dead 2 is the latest game in Valve's catalog to clamber out of the Steam for Linux beta. Unlike last week's Half-Life 2 news however, the extra something coming along for the ride isn't VR headset support -- it's a powerful suite of customization tools. The Extended Mutation System (EMS) gives the already robust modding community additional options for crafting one-off episodes and game type variants. For a glimpse of what EMS enables, play a round of "Holdout." This new multi-map mode introduces buildable items and the concept of resources to the co-op zombie-slaying calamity. What's more, Valve said it will add the most popular EMS creations to the official servers. Maybe with this, the world can finally witness our vision of the zombie apocalypse. Yeah, it involves marmosets.

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Via: Left 4 Dead Blog

Source: Steam

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/uYorGHR1IFk/

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Thursday, July 4, 2013

50 Cent Arrested on Domestic Violence Charges

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/07/50-cent-arrested-on-domestic-violence-charges/

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The Weirdest Thing on the Internet: I Want to Taste You

In space, no one can hear you be a total perv and tell women that you want to taste them "like yogurt." Good thing too.

This music video by Whatchya features Flula Borg and Flynt Flossy (of Treat Me Like a Pirate fame). h/t Thanks Brent!

Source: http://gizmodo.com/the-weirdest-thing-on-the-internet-i-want-to-taste-you-601843146

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Ubisoft security breach exposes user data, account holders urged to update passwords

Ubisoft security breach exposes user data, Uplay account holders urged to change passwordsUbisoft security breach exposes user data, Uplay account holders urged to change passwords

If you've ever signed up for a Uplay account, your information could now be in the hands of criminals. Ubisoft's confirmed that a security breach at one of its sites, now closed, has granted hackers access to sensitive user data (i.e., usernames, emails and passwords). Critically, no actual financial information was leaked, owing to the fact that Ubisoft doesn't retain personal credit or debit card account numbers on its servers. Regradless, the Montreal-based developer's taking proactive measures, contacting account holders directly and strongly advising them to update any related passwords. You can find the full email just after the break.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/gjLPA3bbugo/

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Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The Nail Trimmer Has Gotten a Stylish, Ultra-Flat Upgrade

The Nail Trimmer Has Gotten a Stylish, Ultra-Flat Upgrade

If, for whatever reason, you've decided that simply biting your fingernails isn't the best way to keep them short, you'll want to invest in a nice trimmer. But not some giant monstrosity that requires a purse or a murse to keep it on hand. Go for Kershaw's ultra-thin nail clippers that fold down to an easily pocketable four millimeter package.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/skreIjCVflI/the-nail-trimmer-has-gotten-a-stylish-ultra-flat-upgra-645944173

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What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

The search engine wars are many things: one-sided, enduring, non-violent. But like all good immutable conflicts, they can also be catty.

Using the magic of autocomplete, we took a look at what the four major search engines (or, more accurately, their users/algorithms) really think of each other, based on autocompleted search results in a Chrome incognito window. Advanced warning that it's a more civil war than you might have expected. And that, more than anything, the internet is filled with some very confused people.

Google

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

Bing

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

Yahoo

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

What Search Engines Really Think of Each Other

Note: Yahoo has no idea what DuckDuckGo is.

DuckDuckGo

DuckDuckGo rises above the fray (in that it has no autocomplete).

Top image inspired by Shutterstock/sharpshutter

Source: http://gizmodo.com/what-search-engines-really-think-of-each-other-646206384

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