Sunday, 31 March 2013

Kidsquash Completes 8th Season with Smiles | Tariq Mohammed's ...

March 30, 2013 ? 11:21 pm

Since the 2004 pilot of Kidsquash, we marked the completion of the 8thKidsquash season with ten students from the Greater Boston community. They played in a friendly round robin under the supervision of Laura Gemmell, a Harvard senior and 4-time All-American on the women?s varsity squash team, Octavio Chiesa, a volunteer peer coach and myself.

Beginner junior squash players make progress at Kidsquash.

Beginner junior squash players make progress at Kidsquash.

From October 2012 to March 2013, Kidsquash students gathered for Saturday morning recreational squash clinics. Thanks to donations from the Harvard Athletics Department, we were able to recognize 4 students who are newcomers to the sport with Harvard squash apparel. These students were ? Megan Yoh (Best Female Player), Seamus Buckley (Most Improved Player), Will Gladstone (Most Valuable Player) and Samuel Esquivel (Sportsmanship Award).

Many thanks to Luke Hammond, Lead Coach for Kidsquash , Mike Way, Head Squash Coach at Harvard and Coach Bajwa, Founder of Kidsquash for their guidance and support of the program. Also, thank you to Kidsquash parents and sponsors for making it a great season!

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Source: http://tariqmohammed.wordpress.com/2013/03/30/kidsquash-completes-8th-season-with-smiles/

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Official Vatican text of pope's speech

(AP) ? Following is the official English language translation provided by the Vatican of Pope Francis' Easter Sunday message, delivered in Italian from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica.

___

Dear brothers and sisters in Rome and throughout the world, Happy Easter! Happy Easter!

What a joy it is for me to announce this message: Christ is risen! I would like it to go out to every house and every family, especially where the suffering is greatest, in hospitals, in prisons.

Most of all, I would like it to enter every heart, for it is there that God wants to sow this Good News: Jesus is risen, there is hope for you, you are no longer in the power of sin, of evil! Love has triumphed, mercy has been victorious! The mercy of God always triumphs!

We too, like the women who were Jesus' disciples, who went to the tomb and found it empty, may wonder what this event means (cf. Lk 24:4). What does it mean that Jesus is risen? It means that the love of God is stronger than evil and death itself; it means that the love of God can transform our lives and let those desert places in our hearts bloom. The love God can do this!

This same love for which the Son of God became man and followed the way of humility and self-giving to the very end, down to hell - to the abyss of separation from God - this same merciful love has flooded with light the dead body of Jesus, has transfigured it, has made it pass into eternal life. Jesus did not return to his former life, to earthly life, but entered into the glorious life of God and he entered there with our humanity, opening us to a future of hope.

This is what Easter is: it is the exodus, the passage of human beings from slavery to sin and evil to the freedom of love and goodness. Because God is life, life alone, and we are his glory: the living man (cf. Irenaeus, Adversus Haereses, 4,20,5-7).

Dear brothers and sisters, Christ died and rose once for all, and for everyone, but the power of the Resurrection, this passover from slavery to evil to the freedom of goodness, must be accomplished in every age, in our concrete existence, in our everyday lives. How many deserts, even today, do human beings need to cross! Above all, the desert within, when we have no love for God or neighbour, when we fail to realize that we are guardians of all that the Creator has given us and continues to give us. God's mercy can make even the driest land become a garden, can restore life to dry bones (cf. Ez 37:1-14).

So this is the invitation which I address to everyone: Let us accept the grace of Christ's Resurrection! Let us be renewed by God's mercy, let us be loved by Jesus, let us enable the power of his love to transform our lives too; and let us become agents of this mercy, channels through which God can water the earth, protect all creation and make justice and peace flourish.

And so we ask the risen Jesus, who turns death into life, to change hatred into love, vengeance into forgiveness, war into peace. Yes, Christ is our peace, and through him we implore peace for all the world.

Peace for the Middle East, and particularly between Israelis and Palestinians, who struggle to find the road of agreement, that they may willingly and courageously resume negotiations to end a conflict that has lasted all too long. Peace in Iraq, that every act of violence may end, and above all for dear Syria, for its people torn by conflict and for the many refugees who await help and comfort. How much blood has been shed! And how much suffering must there still be before a political solution to the crisis will be found?

Peace for Africa, still the scene of violent conflicts. In Mali, may unity and stability be restored; in Nigeria, where attacks sadly continue, gravely threatening the lives of many innocent people, and where great numbers of persons, including children, are held hostage by terrorist groups. Peace in the East of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and in the Central African Republic, where many have been forced to leave their homes and continue to live in fear.

Peace in Asia, above all on the Korean peninsula: may disagreements be overcome and a renewed spirit of reconciliation grow.

Peace in the whole world, still divided by greed looking for easy gain, wounded by the selfishness which threatens human life and the family, selfishness that continues in human trafficking, the most extensive form of slavery in this twenty-first century; human trafficking is the most extensive form of slavery in this twenty-first century! Peace to the whole world, torn apart by violence linked to drug trafficking and by the iniquitous exploitation of natural resources! Peace to this our Earth! Made the risen Jesus bring comfort to the victims of natural disasters and make us responsible guardians of creation.

Dear brothers and sisters, to all of you who are listening to me, from Rome and from all over of the world, I address the invitation of the Psalm: "Give thanks to the Lord for he is good; for his steadfast love endures for ever. Let Israel say: 'His steadfast love endures for ever'" (Ps 117:1-2).

Greeting

Dear Brothers and Sisters, to you who have come from all over the world to this Square at the heart of Christianity, and to you linked by modern technology, I repeat my greeting: Happy Easter!

Bear in your families and in your countries the message of joy, hope and peace which every year, on this day, is powerfully renewed.

May the risen Lord, the conqueror of sin and death, be a support to you all, especially to the weakest and neediest. Thank you for your presence and for the witness of your faith. A thought and a special thank-you for the beautiful flowers, which come from the Netherlands. To all of you I affectionately say again: may the risen Christ guide all of you and the whole of humanity on the paths of justice, love and peace.

__

Copyright Vatican Publishing House

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-31-Vatican-Easter-Text/id-b731751ba9d34091ad034e741a04ad82

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Syrian economy scarred by war

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How Facebook Is Replacing Ad Agencies With Robots - Business ...

REUTERS/Brian Snyder

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg: turning his back on creatives?

Facebook served $4.3 billion worth of ads last year, a staggering sum. It's forecast to sell about $5.5 billion in ads in 2013, too.

We're all used to seeing ads all over Facebook, inside our news feed and down the right-hand side of the page. Facebook is working furiously to find more ways to make ads work better inside its ecosystem.

Many of those ads, however, are untouched by ad agency art directors or "creative" staffers of any kind.

And a vast number, from Facebook's larger e-commerce advertisers ? think Amazon or Fab.com ? are generated automatically by computers. Advertisers can't even choose their own typeface: the text comes in one typeface only, in black or blue.

These ads aren't "created" by humans in any meaningful sense.

If you're a creative director ? or a copywriter or an art director ? at an ad agency, this ought to make you think. Even digital ad agencies, which employ armies of interactive ad designers, should take pause for thought.

Never has there been such a gigantic volume of advertising displayed in which professional agency creative types have had so little involvement.

Google, of course, started this. Its text-based search ads and associated products now generate $46 billion a year.

In the agency business, those ads are largely regarded as replacements for the old classified ads that used to appear in newspapers. Agencies rarely handled those (although the Bernard Hodes Group, a talent recruitment ad agency, still writes tons of them).

Facebook's ads, however, are competitors to web display ads.

Traditionally, digital ad agencies have employed teams of people to design web banners as thoughtfully as possible. A lot of design jobs that used to be about making magazine and TV ads were destroyed in favor of digital advertising jobs.

On Facebook, however, these jobs are often not needed by major advertisers.

If you're an e-commerce site selling shoes, you want to serve ads that target people who have previously displayed an interest in, say, red high-heels. Rather than serve an ad for your brand ? "Buy shoes here!" ? it's better to serve an ad featuring a pair of red heels specifically like the one the user was browsing for. The problem is that any shoe seller sells thousands of shoes, and it's impossible to create from scratch an ad for every single SKU.

So Facebook media buying companies ? like TBG Digital or Turn or Triggit or Nanigans ? simply load up tens of thousands of product images into a database, and when a relevant user appears in Facebook an ad is generated, automatically, based on the characteristics of that user.

It's called "retargeting" (because you're retargeting someone who previously displayed an interest elsewhere on the web). And it's fantastically efficient. The ads are monitored for performance, so any subjective notions of "taste" or "beauty" or "style" or whatever go out the window ? the client just wants the best-performing ads. There's no need for a guy with trendy glasses who lives in a loft in Williamsburg, N.Y., to mull over the concepts for hours before the ad is served.

Creatives employed to make TV ads, for instance, should be very, very afraid.

Facebook is gunning for TV ad dollars by trying to convince clients that its ads perform better and are more trackable than commercials. That's where the money is, after all.

They should also be prepared for change. Online advertising laid waste to a huge number of boutique ad agencies that handled small, local clients who did print, radio, and local TV advertising. Facebook's programmatic ads don't necessarily require a creative director to direct them either. Might their jobs be destroyed?

"Destroy," of course, is a harsh term.

There are plenty of new creative jobs being generated by Facebook. The company has a Facebook Studio project which highlights the way advertisers can get more creative on Facebook. It also has a creative council, which draws in senior staff from various agencies.

Larger advertisers employ teams of creative people to maintain their pages and create Page Post ads ? the viral items they're hoping you'll "like" the most. Many of those items require a lot of photography and skillful writing.

But note that these new teams are often not springing up inside traditional ad agencies. They're often in-house social media teams at clients, or within the ranks of Facebook's Preferred Marketing Developers ? new companies with access to Facebook's API ? not agencies.

Advertisers will sometimes use agencies to launch campaigns that run on Facebook, but the real money is in "always on" advertising ? and that requires auto-ad generation.

The creative tasks ? shooting photos that can be used in multiple formats, creating logos that can be pieced into Facebook ads ? aren't so much about creating ads any more as they are about creating assets that can be assembled into ads later, if need be.

By robots. Not humans.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-facebook-is-replacing-ad-agencies-with-robots-2013-3

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Saturday, 30 March 2013

Obama touts infrastructure in Florida trip focused on economy

By Jeff Mason

MIAMI (Reuters) - President Barack Obama walked into the mouth of a giant tunnel in Miami on Friday to highlight proposals to boost investment in U.S. infrastructure, a move designed to show a leader still focused on the economy in the midst of broader policy battles in Washington.

Obama's tour of the Port of Miami tunnel project and a subsequent speech were aimed at convincing members of the U.S. Congress to back proposals that would leverage taxpayer dollars into funds to rebuild American roads, bridges and other infrastructure.

"My main message is, let's get this done," he said. "Let's rebuild this country that we love."

Obama, as he has in the past, said he wanted to develop a national infrastructure bank and capitalize it with $10 billion. The idea is to pull in private-sector funding and pick projects based on merit.

He would also create "America Fast Forward Bonds" that would help state and local governments attract money for infrastructure projects. These would be direct subsidy bonds in which the issuer would receive a 28 percent subsidy of the borrowing cost as a way of attracting a wider set of investors.

In addition, Obama would add $4 billion to support two programs that are used to provide grants for infrastructure projects like the Miami tunnel.

It is unclear how far the proposals will go in Congress. Republicans are reluctant to support what they consider government stimulus spending after a much criticized $787 billion stimulus plan that Obama managed to push through Congress in 2009.

The president noted that some people on both sides of the political spectrum, such as labor unions and the Chamber of Commerce, had supported his infrastructure ideas.

"Building bridges and schools, that's not a partisan idea," he said.

Obama was criticized in his first term for focusing too much on his signature policy goal of revamping the U.S. healthcare system, which critics said resulted in him giving less attention to the slow economic recovery.

The White House rejects that charge.

Since his re-election in November and his January inauguration, Obama has steered a policy push focused primarily on passing both immigration reform and tighter gun control measures.

However, his State of the Union address in February included a series of measures to boost the economy, and the Florida trip fleshed out some of those ideas.

Alan Krueger, Obama's chief economist, told reporters traveling with Obama on Air Force One that the three main proposals outlined by the president would cost some $21 billion but that cuts would be made elsewhere to avoid increasing the budget deficit.

Obama's fiscal 2014 budget proposal, which will be released on April 10, would spell out how they are paid for, he said. All of the proposals require congressional approval.

Although Obama will not run for re-election again, Florida is still important for him and his fellow Democrats. The political swing state backed the president in 2012 and will be critical to determining whether a Democrat holds on to the White House or whether a Republican recaptures it in 2016.

The White House believes an increase in infrastructure investment would make the United States more competitive while providing a boost to the construction industry, which is still suffering high levels of unemployment.

(Additional reporting by Steve Holland in Washington; editing by Christopher Wilson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-touts-infrastructure-florida-trip-focused-economy-185512785--business.html

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Rotary International awards education grant

Education Center

The Education Center addition at the Palomas Library will receive a grant from Rotary International.

Through the efforts of the Silver City (NM) Rotary Club, Border Partners will receive a major grant from the Rotary International. ?The full monetary award of $16,250 will outfit the new Education Center recently build by Border Partners in Palomas.

This funding will pay for computer technology, software and a wireless printer. ?We?re now able to obtain desktop computers, laptops and tablets as well as a server to network them.

In addition, thanks to this grant, the Education Center will be equipped with the latest in electronic audiovisual equipment: a projector, a white board and interactive stylus, and a large television suitable for viewing by a class. The Rotary funding will also provide security equipment and the resources needed to set up all the new equipment.

Rotary International

Rotary International logo as it is displayed on a memorial at El Paso?s Archaeology Museum

In order to apply for the Rotary International grant, the Silver City Rotary Club secured the support of their District here in the U.S. and also searched out a Rotary Club in Saltillo, Coahuila,?Mexico to co-sponsor the project, since there is not a local Rotary Club in Palomas. ?Each of the two local Rotary Clubs pledged money to the project.

We want to express our heartfelt thanks to the SC Rotary Club, especially Kathy Eaton, Sunny Yates and Elizabeth Silva who were the committee members responsible. With their valuable assistance, the Education Center will be fully equipped with equipment designed to deliver educational materials to the border community in Palomas.

With the assistance of the Rotary International, the people of Palomas will see their dream of accessing educational advancement ?opportunities fulfilled?right in their own town.

Source: http://borderpartners.org/programs/edu/rotary-international-awards-education-grant-to-border-partners/

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Suicide attack kills 6 in northwest Pakistan

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) ? A suicide bomber attacked a convoy carrying a paramilitary police commander in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, killing at least six people, including two women, police said.

The apparent target of the attack in the main northwest city of Peshawar, Abdul Majeed Marwat who heads the Frontier Constabulary, was not hurt, said police official Dost Mohammed Khan.

The dead included three members of the security forces and three civilians, said Khan. Two of the civilians were women. Over 15 people were wounded, said Khan.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack.

Peshawar is located on the border with Pakistan's semiautonomous tribal region, the main sanctuary for Taliban militants in the country. The Pakistani Taliban have carried out many bombings in the city and other parts of the country targeting both security forces and civilians.

There is concern that the militants could step up the pace of attacks ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for May 11.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suicide-attack-kills-6-northwest-pakistan-055523486.html

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Robert Pattinson Banks $12 Million for "Sexually Explicit" Dior Campaign

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/03/robert-pattinson-banks-12-dollars-million-for-sexually-explicit/

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Friday, 29 March 2013

Trailer For Long-Delayed 'You're Next' Is Undeniably Terrifying

The first trailer for Adam Wingard's home invasion horror movie "You're Next" has us feeling conflicted. On one hand, the movie won accolades when it originally premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2011. Wingrad and writer Simon Barrett in the mean time have kept themselves busy with the "V/H/S" series. The film is [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/03/29/youre-next-trailer/

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UK carrier Three is in 'no rush' to switch on LTE, probably won't do so until Q4

UK carrier Three is in 'no rush' to active LTE, probably won't do so until Q4

Three's CEO could teach Vodafone's CEO a thing or two about diplomacy. Whereas Vittorio Colao dismissed British LTE users as "technofreaks", Dave Dyson has merely said that he's "fairly relaxed" about upgrading Three's network. During a quarterly earnings report yesterday, he said he's in "no rush for LTE" and told people not to expect Three's newly acquired chunks of LTE spectrum to be brought to life until Q4 of this year. He intends to wait and see how O2 and Vodafone position themselves, and that's fine -- just so long as he sticks to the earlier promise not to charge extra for unlimited LTE data.

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Via: Android Central

Source: Mobile News

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/zmYBb6JKjQk/

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Thursday, 28 March 2013

Worker denies drinking thousands of dollars of old whiskey in mansion

SCOTTDALE, Pa. (AP) ? A former mansion caretaker denied that he drank four dozen bottles of well-aged whiskey worth $100,000, claiming it would have been unsafe to drink and saying the booze had "evaporated" instead.

"Yuck! That stuff had floaters in it and all kind of stuff inside the bottles," John Saunders, 63, of Irwin, told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (http://bit.ly/16jQrhx) outside a district judge's courtroom on Wednesday. "I don't think it would even be safe to drink."

Saunders' comments came after his preliminary hearing on theft and receiving stolen property charges was postponed until May 15 so he could apply for a public defender.

Patricia Hill found the Old Farm Pure Rye Whiskey hidden in the walls and stairwells of her century-old Georgian mansion, which was built by coal and coke industrialist J.P. Brennan. She converted the mansion into a bed and breakfast and hired Saunders as a live-in caretaker, only to discover the bottles had been emptied and replaced back into slots in their original wooden cases.

Scottdale police charged Saunders with stealing the whiskey ? by drinking it ? after his DNA was found on the lips of some empty bottles, Chief Barry Pritts said.

Saunders downplayed that evidence and denied drinking the booze which, police said, Saunders claimed must have "evaporated" over time.

"I moved those cases three times for Hill. ... I can't believe she would accuse me of doing that. I have nothing to hide," Saunders said, noting he's been friends with Hill and her family for 40 years.

Hill told police she stored the 52 bottles of whiskey in the original cases, which contained 12 bottles each. After Saunders moved out, Hill said she discovered last March that the bottles in four cases were empty.

Police had Bonhams, a New York City auction house, appraise four remaining bottles and concluded the value of all 52 bottles ? had 48 of them not been emptied ? would have been $102,400. Bonhams' whiskey specialist said the liquor would have remained valuable as long as the corks remained sealed and the whiskey untouched.

Saunders disputed that appraisal saying he believed Hill was "looking for money. I'd say that whiskey's real value is about $10 a bottle and she hired someone to inflate the price."

___

Information from: Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, http://pghtrib.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/worker-denies-drinking-old-whiskey-pa-mansion-132227763.html

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LGBT Legal Eagles Jon Davidson and Jennifer Pizer Await DOMA ...

Lambdalegal

Here's Lambda Legal Legal Director Jon Davidson and National Marriage Project Director Jennifer Pizer in line outside the Supreme Court this morning, awaiting entrance for the consideration of the Edie Windsor DOMA case.

Davidson reports on Twitter: "Smaller crowds today, but those present clearly are aware of how momentous the case being heard shortly is. Can the federal government disregard some couples' marriages? How should courts judge constitutionality of laws that discriminate based on sexual orientation? Weighty issues indeed...Waiting in line for hours gives me a whole new appreciation of the legal question of 'standing.'"

Said Pizer: "Pizer: No protesters yet. It's a lot calmer."

Source: http://www.towleroad.com/2013/03/lgbt-legal-eagles-jon-davidson-and-jennifer-pizer-await-doma-case-outside-scotus-photo.html

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HTC Butterfly said to be getting a sequel, thanks to strong sales in Asia

HTC reports strong demand for Butterfly phone in Asia, says there'll be a sequel

It's anyone's guess how the HTC One will fare in the West. After all, quality doesn't guarantee success. If we look across to Asia, though, we can see that the One's counterpart in that hemisphere, the Butterfly, has already gained some traction. Supply has failed to meet demand in its Taiwanese homeland and, according to Focus Taiwan, the phone has enjoyed "brisk sales" in Japan too -- at one point toppling the iPhone 5 to become KDDI's bestselling handset. There's been sufficient interest, in fact, that HTC's marketing boss Ben Ho has been quoted as promising a successor to the Butterfly, which will carry the same brand name. He didn't say when a Butterfly II might arrive, or what new "innovations" it might deliver, but it's an encouraging sign nonetheless.

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Via: Android Beat

Source: Focus Taiwan

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/26/htc-butterfly-said-to-be-getting-a-sequel/

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EADS says Spain may sell 1.15 percent stake in shake-up

Mar 26 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $3,787,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $2,859,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,154,500 4. Steve Stricker $1,820,000 5. Phil Mickelson $1,650,260 6. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 7. John Merrick $1,343,514 8. Dustin Johnson $1,330,507 9. Russell Henley $1,313,280 10. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 11. Keegan Bradley $1,274,593 12. Charles Howell III $1,256,373 13. Michael Thompson $1,254,669 14. Brian Gay $1,171,721 15. Justin Rose $1,155,550 16. Jason Day $1,115,565 17. Chris Kirk $1,097,053 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eads-says-spain-may-sell-1-15-percent-073004214--finance.html

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Wednesday, 27 March 2013

10 Things We Wish Ryan Gosling Would Say to Us

Now that The Place Beyond the Pines is hitting theaters, we're gearing up for some quality time with our boyfriend Ryan Gosling. (Okay, fine, he's not our boyfriend, but as soon as Eva Mendes is done with him, we call dibs.) Though he's threatened to take a break from acting -- say it ain't so! -- he's given us plenty of magical moments to re-watch over and over. Here, 10 things we wish we could hear Ryan Gosling say to us in real life!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/ryan-gosling-movie-quotes-we-wish-he-would-say-real-life/1-a-529821?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aryan-gosling-movie-quotes-we-wish-he-would-say-real-life-529821

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Codeblack Films, Tugg Partner to release Angela Davis documentary to theaters nationwide

By Lucas Shaw

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - Codeblack Films has turned to online platform Tugg to identify new audiences for "Free Angela and All Political Prisoners," its upcoming documentary about political activist Angela Davis. Tugg allows users to pick a film they want to see in theaters and gather support for public screenings.

Since its launch at South by Southwest last year, it has helped close to 200 films screen in more than 300 cities.

Rather than rely on someone else to start a campaign, Codeblack has partnered with Tugg to launch one of its own. Codeblack, a subsidiary of Lionsgate focused on films that appeal to urban audiences, acquired the theatrical rights to the documentary in January.

The movie opens in select cities April 5 at AMC Theaters while additional screenings at other theaters will be available through Tugg.

"Much like Angela Davis used her voice and the voices of others for change, our initiative with Tugg will allow individuals the ability to come together and share a common experience," Jeff Clanagan, CEO of Codeblack Films, said in a statement. "We hope that everyone takes the opportunity to join the revolution and take advantage of this unique program."

Davis was a leader of the Community Party USA who rose to prominence for her association with that party, her relations with the Black Panther Party and her activism on issues such as civil rights and feminism. Ronald Reagan attempted to bar her from teaching at any University of California schools in 1969, when Reagan was the state's governor. She twice ran for vice president on the Community Party's ticket in the 1980s. A retired professor, Davis researched topics such as feminism, African American studies, Marxism and philosophy.

"We're incredibly excited to empower individuals and groups across the country to host their own screenings of this gripping and inspirational film," Tugg co-founders Nicolas Gonda and Pablo Gonzalez said in a statement. "'Free Angela' is a perfect film for local communities to rally around and participate in a conversation about social justice that is still relevant today."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/codeblack-films-tugg-partner-release-angela-davis-documentary-014449693.html

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Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Spotify may be taking a cue from Netflix | SiliconBeat

Mike Murphy Mike Murphy (197 Posts)

Mike Murphy is a web producer at the Mercury News, and also writes for Good Morning Silicon Valley and 60-Second Business Break.


Spotify may be taking a cue from Netflix

Spotify is reportedly gearing up to challenge Netflix as a streaming-video provider.

According to a report by Business Insider?s Nicholas Carlson, the Sweden-based streaming music giant is seeking partners to help fund original ? and exclusive ? video content.

Entering the streaming video field already dominated by Netflix, Amazon and Hulu appears to be a daunting task at first glance, but it may be a profitable option for Spotify. According to the report, the high cost of licensing rights for streaming music makes Spotify?s profit margins razor thin, and the music labels can dictate their terms ? much like the problems Netflix has faced with streaming video. So instead of competing with rival services for studio-produced movies and TV shows, Spotify would create a new revenue stream by producing original content.

It?s a strategy that seems to be working for Los Gatos-based Netflix. After years of costly negotiations with studios and competing with cable channels for streaming rights, Netflix last year launched an effort to develop its own original content, and with it add more subscribers. Its first venture into original content, the David Fincher-Kevin Spacey drama ?House of Cards,? has proven to be a hit, and Netflix is betting on repeating that success with a new season of the cult-favorite sitcom ?Arrested Development? later this year.

Spotify is not the only one taking notice. YouTube, the home to billions of free online videos, is also considering adding subscription channels to create new revenue streams, according to a recent report by the Wall Street Journal. While still in the planning stages, subscription channels could be a boon for video makers with ?passionate but very narrow audience segments,? Lucas Watson, head of YouTube?s global sales, told the Journal.

Launched in the U.S. in 2011, Spotify already has more than 6 million subscribers and is launching an aggressive effort to land more with? its first major advertising campaign, according to a report by The Verge. By first solidifying its place as a leader in streaming music, the company could be in good position to branch out into new video ventures as home entertainment moves from the living room to the smartphone.

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Mike Murphy Mike Murphy (197 Posts)

Mike Murphy is a web producer at the Mercury News, and also writes for Good Morning Silicon Valley and 60-Second Business Break.


Source: http://www.siliconbeat.com/2013/03/25/spotify-may-be-taking-a-cue-from-netflix/

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Normal brain activity linked to DNA damage

msnbc.com

By Charles Choi
LiveScience

Brain activity from experiences as common as exploring new locations surprisingly damages the noggin's DNA, hinting that such disruptions may be a key part of thinking, learning and memory, researchers say.

This damage normally heals rapidly, but abnormal proteins seen in Alzheimer's disease can increase this damage further, perhaps overwhelming the ability of brain cells to heal it. Further research into preventing this damage might help treat brain disorders, scientists added.

Explorer mice
Scientists analyzed young adult mice after they were placed into new, larger cages with different toys and odors that they were allowed to explore for two hours. They measured brain levels of a protein known as gamma-H2A.X, which accumulates when breaks occur in double-stranded molecules of DNA.

"DNA comes in double strands, and has the shape of a twisted ladder," said researcher Lennart Mucke, a neurologist and neuroscientist at the Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease and the University of California at San Francisco. "Breaks in one strand, in one rail of the ladder, occur quite frequently, but breaking both takes quite a bit of damage and, in the brain, was thought to happen mostly in the context of disease." [10 Odd Facts About the Brain]

Unexpectedly, the researchers found such breaks also happened in the neurons of perfectly healthy mice, with up to six times more breaks in the neurons of explorer mice than in mice that remained in their home cages.

"Breaks of double strands of DNA seem to be a part of normal healthy brain activity," Mucke told LiveScience.

These DNA breaks occurred in various brain regions, especially in the dentate gyrus, an area necessary for spatial memory.

"It is both novel and intriguing, (the) team's finding that the accumulation and repair of DSBs (double-strand breaks) may be part of normal learning," said neuroscientist Fred Gage, of the Salk Institute, who did not take part in this study.

Mystery of DNA breaks
It remains uncertain why brain activity causes DNA breaks. Active neurons do generate DNA-damaging chemicals such as free radicals, but neurons in lab dishes did not have significantly fewer breaks when given antioxidant molecules that counteract free radicals.

Instead, the researchers suggest these breaks could actually help with the genetic activity linked with mental activity.

"We are now very excited to explore why neuron activity causes these breaks in DNA?? whether these breaks somehow facilitate the rapid conversion of genes into proteins involved in memory and learning and in processing all the information you take in when you do something new," Mucke said.

Many of the DNA breaks were fixed within 24 hours via DNA repair mechanisms in the cells. However, mice genetically engineered to produce a protein fragment known as amyloid beta, which accumulates in the brains of Alzheimer's patients, had more DNA breaks than normal in their brains, a problem that worsened during exploration.

Mice that produce human amyloid beta in their brains often have abnormal brain activity, including epileptic seizures, which can also occur in Alzheimer's patients. The researchers found that blocking this abnormal brain activity with the widely used anti-epileptic drug levetiracetam reduced the number of DNA breaks in the neurons of these mice.

"Levetiracetam is already an FDA-approved drug, and a very small clinical trial has already shown that it could provide some benefits in people with early-stage Alzheimer's," Mucke said. "These findings support the idea that the drug might be able to modify the disease by preventing the accumulation of DNA breaks that may promote its progress."

"We're in the process now of designing a larger-scale carefully controlled clinical trial to see if such a strategy is of benefit," Mucke added. "We encourage people to wait until this data becomes available and not jump the gun and start taking this drug when it hasn't been validated thoroughly yet."

The scientists also found that when mice lacked a protein known as tau, excess amyloid beta no longer caused more DNA breaks.

"Tau is intimately involved with Alzheimer's ? it seems to cooperate with amyloid beta," Mucke said. "In the absence of tau, amyloid beta doesn't seem to elicit detrimental effects. We're in the process of developing strategies to manipulate tau in Alzheimer's, and these findings encourage us to intensify and accelerate these efforts."

The scientists detailed their findings online Sunday in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

Follow?LiveScience @livescience, Facebook?and 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.

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Answer to mystery of Pluto's moons could depend on 2015 flyby

Pluto and its moon Charon act like a double-planet system with wreath of other, smaller moons. NASA's New Horizons mission could help explain how those moons got there.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / March 25, 2013

This photo by the Hubble Space Telescope shows the five moons in their orbits around Pluto.

Hubble Space Telescope/NASA/AP

Enlarge

New research by two astronomers has the potential to make the current NASA mission to Pluto and beyond more than just a first close-up glimpse of the distant, demoted planet. It could help scientists understand how planets form around other stars.

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The reason: While Pluto's companion, Charon, is widely considered a moon, its orbital relationship to Pluto is identical to that of stars in a binary-star system. Indeed, some astronomers hold that Charon is not a moon, but part of a binary dwarf-planet system, with Pluto as the senior partner.

With at least four other small moons orbiting beyond Charon, the Pluto system could be a unique laboratory for scientists.

"Not only could we try to understand the outer part of the solar system, we could actually have an idea of how planets form around binary stars and actually test it real life," says Scott Kenyon, a researcher at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., who performed the analysis along with University of Utah's Benjamin Bromley.

Charon is thought to have formed from a collision between Pluto and another object, Dr. Kenyon explains. To try to determine how the smaller outer moons might have formed thereafter, the researchers used computer simulations. Did the outer moons form from the debris of the collision? Or did they take shape long afterward from the primordial disk of dust, rock, and ice that Pluto-Charon captured from its general neighborhood?

The simulations suggest that both scenarios are possible, but that each would yield moons with different compositions. NASA's New Horizons mission could help prove if either scenario is right. New Horizons is now half way to Pluto and is expected to reach the dwarf planet in 2015.

The results of the calculations by Kenyon and Dr. Bromley have been submitted for publication and have been posted on an astrophysics website in hopes that the New Horizons science team can work in observations that would test these competing ideas into the mission's science plan during the Pluto flyby.

Over the years, the known size of the Pluto system has expanded. Pluto itself was discovered in 1930 by astronomer Clyde Tombaugh. It took another 48 years to pick out Charon. In 2005, astronomers discovered Nix and Hydra. And between July 2011 and July 2012, researchers detected another two moons ? P4 and P5. (A recent nonbinding poll to name the two moons suggested Vulcan and Cerberus.)

Assuming a giant impact formed Charon, the raw material for the other moons could have come from debris that formed a disk outside Charon's orbit.

For moons to form in this way, there would have needed to be enough debris, and it would have needed to be orbiting Pluto and Charon at a distance relatively undisturbed by their gravity ? so clumping could occur. "If you can't get material out past the orbit of P5 [the closest known moon to Pluto and Charon], then you're doomed," Kenyon says, because gravity from Pluto-Charon would sweep the material into those two objects.

But simulations of the impact scenario suggested that material did pass the orbit of P5 and that this scenario was the most efficient means of producing moons, Kenyon says. The collision yields more than enough debris to make moons with the masses astronomers think the system's moons have. Moreover, in the simulations, the innermost moon tends to settle into an orbit at a distance comparable to P5.?

But the approach that focuses on the primordial disk of dust and ice can also form moons, simulations found. At some point after the giant collision, the Pluto-Charon system could have drawn in a ring of dust and ice from material in the vicinity ? material that was part of the solar system's original inventory of dust, gas, and ice.

"You just gradually accumulate stuff over millions and millions of years, and that coagulates into the satellites," Kenyon says.

But simulations found that the masses of the moons formed in this scenario are at the lowest end of the range of mass estimates astronomers have calculated for the moons in the Pluto-Charon system. And those less-massive moons would appear in orbits much farther from Pluto-Charon than the existing moons.

Either way, if both scenarios start out with the same amount of mass in the debris disks, the same number of satellites will form, but their composition will be different.

If the satellites are formed from the collision debris, their composition will look much like Charon's. Charon is less dense than Pluto, consisting of a roughly 50-50 mix of ice (mostly water ice) and rock with a very icy surface. This allows it to reflect a relatively larger amount of sunlight from its surface than would a more mixed surface composition.

If the satellites formed via gradual accretion of primordial ice and rock well after a giant impact, Kenyon adds, the satellites would be darker and with a higher proportion of rock to ice.

In that way, they would look more like typical objects in the Kuiper Belt ? the broad expanse of rocky and icy objects left over from solar system's construction phase some 4.6 billion years ago. The belt's inner edge is about 2.8 billion miles from the sun, just beyond Neptune's orbit. The outer edge is thought to lie about 4.7 billion miles from the sun.

Pluto, which orbits the sun at an average distance of 3.7 billion miles, is the second largest known dwarf planet. The solar system's largest, most massive dwarf planet is Eris, which orbits the sun at an average distance of 6.3 billion miles.

Based on the simulations, New Horizons could find perhaps five to 10 more moons in the Pluto-Charon system, Kenyon says. They would be small, perhaps ranging from 1,000 feet to a mile or two across, and outside the orbit of Hydra. And there would be enough material for a tenuous disk of particles whose size are measured in inches.

New Horizons can begin its observations of the Pluto-Charon system about 70 days before its closest encounter and for some days after.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/FmuskSbrWAI/Answer-to-mystery-of-Pluto-s-moons-could-depend-on-2015-flyby

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Anonymity risk from phone place data

Scientists say it is remarkably easy to identify a mobile phone user from just a few pieces of location information.

Whenever a phone is switched on, its connection to the network means its position and movement can be plotted.

This data is given anonymously to third parties, both to drive services for the user and to target advertisements.

But a study in Scientific Reports warns that human mobility patterns are so predictable it is possible to identify a user from only four data points.

The growing ubiquity of mobile phones and smartphone applications has ushered in an era in which tremendous amounts of user data have become available to the companies that operate and distribute them - sometimes released publicly as "anonymised" or aggregated data sets.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

Even if there's no name or email address it can still be personal data, so we need it to be treated accordingly?

End Quote Yves-Alexandre de Montjoye MIT

These data are of extraordinary value to advertisers and service providers, but also for example to those who plan shopping centres, allocate emergency services, and a new generation of social scientists.

Yet the spread and development of "location services" has outpaced the development of a clear understanding of how location data impact users' privacy and anonymity.

For example, sat-nav manufacturers have long been using location data from both mobile phones and sat-navs themselves to improve traffic reporting, by calculating how fast users are moving on a given stretch of road.

The data used in such calculations are "anonymised" - no actual mobile numbers or personal details are associated with the data.

But there are some glaring examples of how nominally anonymous data can be linked back to individuals, the most striking of which occurred with a tranche of data deliberately released by AOL in 2006, outlining 20 million anonymised web searches.

The New York Times did a little sleuthing in the data and was able to determine the identity of "searcher 4417749".

Trace amounts

Recent work has increasingly shown that humans' patterns of movement, however random and unpredictable they seem to be, are actually very limited in scope and can in fact act as a kind of fingerprint for who is doing the moving.

The new work details just how "low-resolution" these location data can be and still act as a unique identifier of individuals.

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the Catholic University of Louvain studied 15 months' worth of anonymised mobile phone records for 1.5 million individuals.

They found from the "mobility traces" - the evident paths of each mobile phone - that only four locations and times were enough to identify a particular user.

"In the 1930s, it was shown that you need 12 points to uniquely identify and characterise a fingerprint," said the study's lead author Yves-Alexandre de Montjoye of MIT.

"What we did here is the exact same thing but with mobility traces. The way we move and the behaviour is so unique that four points are enough to identify 95% of people," he told BBC News.

"We think this data is more available than people think. When you think about, for instance wi-fi or any application you start on your phone, we call up the same kind of mobility data.

"When you share information, you look around you and feel like there are lots of people around - in the shopping centre or a tourist place - so you feel this isn't sensitive information."

Privacy formula

The team went on to quantify how "high-resolution" the data need to be - the precision to which a location is known - in order to more fully guarantee privacy.

Co-author Cesar Hidalgo said that the data follow a natural mathematical pattern that could be used as an analytical guide as more location services and high-resolution data become available.

"The idea here is that there is a natural trade-off between the resolution at which you are capturing this information and anonymity, and that this trade-off is just by virtue of resolution and the uniqueness of the pattern," he told BBC News.

"This is really fundamental in the sense that now we're operating at high resolution, the trade-off is how useful the data are and if the data can be anonymised at all. A traffic forecasting service wouldn't work if you had the data within a day; you need that within an hour, within minutes."

Dr Hidalgo notes that additional information would still be needed to connect a mobility trace to an individual, but that users freely give away some of that information through geo-located tweets, location "check-ins" with applications such as Foursquare and so on.

But the authors say their purpose is to provide a mathematical link - a formula applicable to all mobility data - that quantifies the anonymity/utility trade-off, and hope that the work sparks debate about the relative merits of this "Big Data" and individual privacy.

Sam Smith of Privacy International said: "Our mobile phones report location and contextual data to multiple organisations with varying privacy policies."

"Any benefits we receive from such services are far outweighed by the threat that these trends pose to our privacy, and although we are told that we have a choice about how much information we give over, in reality individuals have no choice whatsoever," he told BBC News.

"Science and technology constantly make it harder to live in a world where privacy is protected by governments, respected by corporations and cherished by individuals - cultural norms lag behind progress."

But Mr de Montjoye stressed that there is far more to location data than just privacy concerns.

"We really don't think that we should stop collecting or using this data - there's way too much to gain for all of us - companies, scientists, and users," he said.

"We've really tried hard to not frame this as a 'Big Brother' situation, as 'we know everything about you'. But we show that even if there's no name or email address it can still be personal data, so we need it to be treated accordingly."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21923360#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Apple iPad and iPhone distribution monitored by European regulator

The European Union is examining potential antitrust violations involving the distribution of Apple iPhones and iPads, after receiving what sources said were informal complaints from telecoms operators.

The complaints involve handset subsidies and marketing that the world's most valuable technology corporation sign-off with operators that carry its smartphones and tablets, and also includes subsidies that carriers pay to Apple, one of the three sources told Reuters on Friday.

The source insisted on anonymity because contracts with carriers are business secrets.

"Apple insists on a certain level of subsidies and marketing for the iPhone," said the source, who declined to identify the companies that had approached the Commission.

US and European operators pay hefty subsidies to smartphone makers including Apple, offering customers an attractive discount on devices in exchange for tying them into lucrative two-year wireless contracts.

Historically, Apple has been able to command higher fees for its devices because of its market dominance. It also tended to tightly regulate launch prices for its devices, while rival handset makers with less market share tended to defer to operators on pricing announcements.

Since 2012, however, Samsung Electronics unseated Apple as the world's most-used smartphone brand, which industry experts say will erode the US corporations' ability to negotiate the best subsidies and marketing support.

US regulators are unlikely to launch their own investigation into Apple's industry practices because of a different regulatory approach, and also recognition that the company's own market clout is diminishing.

"They're one failure to innovate away, or one innovation by somebody else away, from being in a very different spot," said a US telecom industry lobbyist close to both carriers and device manufacturers, but who asked not to be named due to a lack of authorization to speak to the media.

"Apple is an important, powerful and innovative company but I don't think they've got the kind of market power that maybe some in Europe are alleging where it would rise to the level of running afoul of the antitrust laws," the person said.

A Commission spokesman on Friday said that EU competition regulators had been informed about concerns over Apple and its distribution practices. Three people familiar with the matter said that several telecoms companies had aired their grievances to the Commission.

Their concerns focused on the commercial terms in contracts with Apple, said one of the sources, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.

"There have been no formal complaints, though," Antoine Colombani told a regular Commission briefing. "Generally, we are actively monitoring developments in this market. We will, of course, intervene if there are indications of anticompetitive behaviour to the detriment of consumers."

Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris said: "Our contracts fully comply with local laws wherever we do business, including the EU."

A second source said that the companies expressed their concerns to the Commission late last year.

It is not the first time Apple has come under the scrutiny of the EU antitrust regulators. The company was the target of an investigation nearly three years ago over its iPhone business practices.

It subsequently allowed cross-border repair services and eased restrictions on applications for the iPhone, which resulted in the Commission dropping its investigation.

"Historically, carriers have looked at themselves as being at the centre of the ecosystem, and if there was a party in the relationship ... that held the power, it was them," the industry lobbyist said.

"The dynamic is a little different with respect to Apple, but I don't think that's a problem because Apple has rivals."

The New York Times first reported that the EU was looking into complaints about Apple.

Source: http://feeds.itpro.co.uk/~r/ITPro/Today/~3/VjCXJc_NNj0/apple-ipad-and-iphone-distribution-monitored-european-regulator

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Monday, 25 March 2013

AWS Reveals In Job Listing It's Launching ?A New Business,? Looks To Be Pushing Deeper Into Mobile

amazon-web-servicesAmazon Web Services believes wholeheartedly that the cloud is the future. And not just the cloud, but the AWS public cloud. As a result, Amazon sees big opportunity for its technology in the enterprise market and has been making some aggressive moves to fluster the incumbents and stalwarts, like Microsoft.

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

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Far-Reaching American Legacy in Iraq Debated (Voice Of America)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/294088597?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Draft deal reached to rescue Cyprus, shut a bank: sources

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Cyprus's president and the European Union have agreed the outlines of a rescue deal that would see the creation of a "good bank" and a "bad bank" and include the shutting down of Cyprus's second largest lender, EU sources said.

The draft proposal was agreed by Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades in negotiation with European Council President Herman Van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso. The plan will now be presented to euro zone finance ministers for discussion, the officials said.

Two sources said the proposal involved shifting deposits below 100,000 euros from the Popular Bank of Cyprus (also known as Laiki) to the Bank of Cyprus to create a "good bank".

Uninsured deposits -- those above 100,000 euros -- would be held and would face a heavy levy, the officials said, and the bank would then effectively be shuttered. It was not immediately clear how big the levy would be.

The Bank of Cyprus would also assume all of the emergency lending that Popular Bank has taken on from the European Central Bank, which totals 9 billion euros. That would leave the Bank of Cyprus with total ELA exposure of 10 billion, the source said.

(Writing by Luke Baker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyprus-seeks-11th-hour-deal-avert-financial-collapse-020917086--business.html

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Sunday, 24 March 2013

NFL Draft Buzz - Michigan S Jordan Kovacs - Mar 24,2013

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    NBC's Chris Hansen. Chris is known for his show 'To Catch a Predator' and this Sunday he is airing a special on Dateline to try and catch one of the FBI's Most wanted Fugitives!

  • Former banker turned thought leader and strategist Bill Donius discusses his book Thought Revolution: How to Tap Into Your Inner Genius.

  • Patriots Jermaine Wiggins, Bucks Kicker Michael Husted, Dolphins & Eagles Ronnie Brown & Giants Randy Minniear join Thursday Night Tailgate.

  • Kid Build Nation! PBS Kids' 'Design Squad Nation' host Deysi Melgar joins us to talk about kid-inspiring feats of engineering.

  • Maggie Rose welcomes NYC-based band, The Assembly Line to her show this week. This is a lively interview, plus, the WORLD DEBUT of their new single, Empires.

  • "Chef K" is the recent winner of ABC's "The Taste," from past guest Chef Brian Malarkey's team. She is currently private chef to Charlie Sheen.

  • Grammy award winner Fantasia stops by to talk about her upcoming album "Side Effects of You" which will be released on April 23, 2013.

  • Author Carla Cannon, will be talking about her debut novel, "The Power In Waiting". In this book, Carla shares key principles in many areas.

  • Tune in as the very talented singer and actress Jill Scott stops by on 6th Man Radio to discuss motherhood, music, and all things Jill!

  • Visit Sonoma - Snoopy, Wildlife and Wine: We explore Snoopy's Home Ice, the Charles Schulz Museum, and have a wild encounter at Safari West.

  • Listen in as Deborah A. Klein, MS, RD, the Health Director for the Kirstie Alley Organic Liason, gives us the real scoop on this fun weight loss program.

  • Join NFOTUSA Soldiers Speak Radio this week as they welcome country music singer-songwriter, Ayla Brown.

  • This week is all about The Guardians of the Galaxy. The news has been popping up about the new movie for months. It's time to dig in and break it all down.

  • Dr. Diane MD welcomes Dr. Bert Herring, the creator and author of one of the most effective and revolutionary weight-loss, Fast-5 Diet and Lifestyle.

  • NWP welcomes breast cancer survivor, turned best selling author, Regina Brett. Brett turned her life and death experience into motivation for the mainstream.

  • Americas food industry is poisoning us & there is a conspiracy that the government is making us fat!

  • The Witch's Tale-a horror-fantasy radio series which aired from 1931 to 1938. The program was created, written and directed by Alonzo Deen Cole.

  • Come sit and relax as we chat with Blues Man "Ira Walker"-Recently nominated for a Grammy as a producer, singer/songwriter.

  • The Movie Geeks speak with acclaimed actor William Fichtner (Armageddon, Heat, Prison Break) about his new film Wrong, and highlights from his career.

  • On Storytellers, we have New York Times best-selling authors James Rollins and Rebecca Cantrell discussing their first-ever book collaboration, The Blood Gospel.

  • America's Most Haunted welcomes John Zaffis of the hit TV show Haunted Collector. John is the eminent paranormal researcher and world-renowned demonologist.

  • Noah Munck, best known as Gibby Gibson, the scene-stealing, shirt-shedding lovable pal on Nickelodeon?s hit television series iCarly joins Nia & Friends.

  • Israel Houghton, 5 Time Grammy Winner who is mostly known for his cross-cultural style of Christian music that fuses elements from gospel, jazz and rock joins Get Real Live.

  • Marly Bird welcomes John Levisay and Josh Scott, Owners of Craftsy.com to discuss their journey from Ebay to the crafting industry. Quilting, Knitting and Cake

  • Charles Lanktree, CEO of Eggland?s Best eggs will share his strategies for success, dedication to quality and his secret to building the #1 branded egg in the world.

  • Source: http://cdn2.btrcdn.com/nfldraftcombine/2013/03/24/nfl-draft-buzz--michigan-s-jordan-kovacs

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