Thursday, March 28, 2013

New DNA test identifies ingredients in foods

Mar. 27, 2013 ? Almost all foodstuffs contain the genetic material of those animal and plant species that were used in their preparation. Scientists at the Institute of Molecular Genetics, Genetic Security Research and Consulting at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) have developed a novel screening procedure that provides for highly sensitive, quantifiable analysis of animal, plant, and microbial substances present in foodstuffs. For this, the researchers have adapted the latest techniques of DNA sequencing, which are otherwise currently employed in human genetics to unravel the genetic information of thousands of patients.

"The innovative aspect in comparison with conventional DNA detection methods such as polymerase chain reaction, or PCR for short, is that by means of bioinformatic analysis of all biological DNA data available worldwide we can identify the presence of material from species that we would not otherwise expect. And, using a simple digital method of counting short snippets of DNA, we will also probably be able to determine the relative incidence of individual species-related material more precisely than was previously the case," explained molecular geneticist Professor Dr. Thomas Hankeln, who developed the method in collaboration with bioinformaticist Professor Bertil Schmidt, Ph.D. and colleagues at the German and Swiss food control authorities.

In pilot studies, the researchers were able to use the new DNA method to detect the presence of a 1% content of horse meat in products and to determine the actual amount with a high level of precision. The Mainz researchers even found slight traces of the DNA of added mustard, lupin, and soy in a test sausage prepared for calibration purposes, something that could also be of interest with regard to allergy testing of foods.

Because of its potential, the method -- dubbed 'All-Food-Seq' by its developers -- has already attracted the attention of food inspection experts. "This method is very interesting in connection with efforts to promote the molecular traceability of food," said Hermann Broll of the German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment in Berlin and Dr. Ren? K?ppel of the Zurich Cantonal Laboratory in Switzerland. The method developed by the Mainz scientists is thus to be validated in comparison with conventional detection techniques in the near future.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Universit?t Mainz.

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/d3cVK4GL0Ts/130327092739.htm

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Astronomers discover new kind of supernova

Mar. 26, 2013 ? Supernovae were always thought to occur in two main varieties. But a team of astronomers including Carnegie's Wendy Freedman, Mark Phillips and Eric Persson is reporting the discovery of a new type of supernova called Type Iax.

This research has been accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal.

Previously, supernovae were divided into either core-collapse or Type Ia categories. Core-collapse supernovae are the explosion of a star about 10 to 100 times as massive as our sun. Type Ia supernovae are the complete disruption of a tiny white dwarf.

This new type, Iax, is fainter and less energetic than Type Ia. Although both types come from exploding white dwarfs, Type Iax supernovas may not completely destroy the white dwarf. "A Type Iax supernova is essentially a mini supernova," says lead author Ryan Foley, Clay Fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). "It's the runt of the supernova litter."

The research team--which also included Max Stritzinger, formerly of Carnegie--identified 25 examples of the new type of supernova. None of them appeared in elliptical galaxies, which are filled with old stars. This suggests that Type Iax supernovas come from young star systems.

Based on a variety of observational data, the team concluded that a Type Iax supernova comes from a binary star system containing a white dwarf and a companion star that has lost its outer hydrogen, leaving it helium dominated. The white dwarf collects helium from the normal star.

Researchers aren't sure what triggers a Type Iax. It's possible that the outer helium layer ignites first, sending a shock wave into the white dwarf. Alternatively, the white dwarf might ignite first due to the influence of the overlying helium shell.

Either way, it appears that in many cases the white dwarf survives the explosion, unlike in a Type Ia supernova where the white dwarf is completely destroyed.

The team calculates that Type Iax supernovae are about a third as common as Type Ia supernovae. The reason so few have been detected is that the faintest are only one-hundredth as bright as a Type Ia supernova.

"The closer we look, the more ways we find for stars to explode," Phillips said.

The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope could discover thousands of Type Iax supernovas over its lifetime.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Ryan J. Foley, P. J. Challis, R. Chornock, M. Ganeshalingam, W. Li, G. H. Marion, N. I. Morrell, G. Pignata, M. D. Stritzinger, J. M. Silverman, X. Wang, J. P. Anderson, A. V. Filippenko, W. L. Freedman, M. Hamuy, S. W. Jha, R. P. Kirshner, C. McCully, S. E. Persson, M. M. Phillips, D. E. Reichart, A. M. Soderberg. Type Iax Supernovae: A New Class of Stellar Explosion. The Astrophysical Journal, 2013; 767 (1): 57 DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/767/1/57

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/zVYa_cE92VM/130326133337.htm

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Supreme Court justices suggest they may avoid a major ruling on California's gay marriage ban (Star Tribune)

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Video: BlackBerry: Buy or Sell?

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/51324373/

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10 Things to Know for Wednesday

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about Wednesday:

1. DAY 2 FOR GAY MARRIAGE IN HIGH COURT

The justices on Wednesday will consider the law that prevents legally married gay couples from receiving a range of federal benefits.

2. WHY TRIP TO ITALY IS UNLIKELY FOR AMANDA KNOX

Despite a court decision ordering a new trial in her murder case, she says she won't willingly return for it. And the hurdles to extradite her are high.

3. HEALTH CARE REPORT COULD CAUSE OBAMA A HEADACHE

Insurers will pay an average of 32 percent more for medical claims on individual health policies under his overhaul, a study says.

4. FIRST WOMAN NAMED TO LEAD SECRET SERVICE

Obama signals his desire to change the culture at the male-dominated service by appointing law enforcement veteran Julia Pierson.

5. WHICH STATE HAS THE NATION'S TOUGHEST ABORTION LAW

North Dakota's governor signs a measure banning the procedure as early as six weeks into a pregnancy ? any time a fetal heartbeat can be detected.

6. LAST CELLPHONE DOMINO FALLS

T-Mobile ? the only major U.S. carrier without the iPhone ? says it will begin offering Apple's popular device April 12.

7. HOW VENEZUELA'S BIG COMPANIES BECAME ARMS OF THE GOV'T

During his reign, Chavez transformed the country's enormous state industries into pools of patronage.

8. WHAT A NEW JERSEY MAN FELT AFTER WINNING POWERBALL JACKPOT

"Pure joy," says bodega owner Pedro Quezado as he officially claims his $338 million prize.

9. IT'S ROCKET SCIENCE AND CHILD'S PLAY

The private SpaceX capsule returns to Earth with old space station equipment ? and Legos that crews used to teach children about science.

10. WHO'S IN A HUGE TAX HOLE

Singer Dionne Warwick says she owes $10 million to the IRS and the state of California.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/10-things-know-wednesday-103500895.html

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PFT: Raiders to cut ties with DT Kelly

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The 2011 labor agreement included an important provision:? HGH testing is coming to the NFL.? Nearly 20 months later, HGH testing is no closer than it was before the agreement was signed.

The latest evidence comes from the case of Andrus Veerpalu, an Estonian skier whose three-year suspension was overturned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport.? Naturally, the NFL and the NFLPA disagree as to the meaning of the ruling, and the incident has caused Albert Breer of NFL Network to learn that the two sides have scrapped an agreement to conduct a so-called ?population study? aimed at gauging the permissible natural levels of HGH in football players.

The details don?t matter, because neither the NFL nor Congress is willing to do anything more than huff and puff about the union?s refusal to honor the agreement to submit to HGH testing.? As a result, the perception is that neither the NFLPA nor the NFL truly want HGH testing.

Since the day the NFL banned the use of HGH, the prohibition has been enforced via the honor system.? The problem with the honor system? ? It works roughly as well as the rhythm method.? So with no way to test for HGH, players will get caught only if a vial of HGH falls out of their letterman jackets, or if the player?s name pops up in the records of an HGH supplier the government is prosecuting.

Surely, the NFL and the NFLPA realize that, if/when HGH testing begins, plenty of players will be caught.? Which will reduce the supply of healthy players.? In turn, players who quit using HGH will not recover as quickly from injuries, likewise reducing the supply of healthy players.

And it won?t be good for the game if players are busted for using HGH, even though most fans presume that they?re using something to get big, to stay big, and/or to rebound from big hits applied by other big men.

If the NFL truly wanted to force the issue on HGH testing, wouldn?t the league unleash the legal hounds and push the issue in court or via an arbitration?? The players already have agreed to submit to testing, and the NFL has more than enough ammunition to argue that the NFLPA deliberately is dragging its feet.? The idea that the NFL doesn?t want to force players to the needle by court order only goes so far.? At some point, the NFL needs to do more than complain about the NFLPA?s refusal to proceed, or the NFLPA will continue to refuse to proceed.

Likewise, Congress has proven to be impotent on the topic, periodically issuing hollow threats but never taking action.Through it all, the delay has given those who use HGH an opportunity to find better masking agents ? or to develop the next wave of substances that work like HGH but for which testing doesn?t yet exist.

The best news for the NFL, the NFLPA, and Congress is that neither the media nor the fans seem to care that the NFL and the NFLPA have struck a deal to abandon the honor system, but that the honor system has continued to be used for two seasons, and counting.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/27/raiders-to-release-tommy-kelly/related/

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

Washington state weighs first abortion insurance mandate in U.S. ...

OLYMPIA, Wash. ? In 1970, Washington became the first ? and remains the only ? state in the country to legalize elective abortions by a popular vote.

A generation later, and 40 years removed from the landmark United States Supreme Court Roe v. Wade ruling that extended abortion access nationwide, Washington is once again poised to stand out.

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With 21 states having adopted bans or severe restrictions on insurance companies from paying for abortions, Washington is alone in seriously considering legislation mandating the opposite.

The Reproductive Parity Act, as supporters call it, would require insurers in Washington state who cover maternity care ? which all insurers must do ? to also pay for abortions.

The bill passed the state House earlier this month by a vote of 53-43, though it faces an uncertain future in the Senate. A similar bill in the New York state Assembly has been introduced each session for over a decade but has never received a public hearing.

"This is a core value for Washingtonians," said Melanie Smith, a lobbyist for NARAL Pro-Choice Washington. "We should protect it while we still have it and not leave access to basic health care up to an insurance company."

The proximate cause of Washington state's measure is the federal Affordable Care Act. Thanks to language in it pushed by congressional Republicans, insurers selling their plans on the state exchanges taking effect next year will have to segregate the premiums they collect for abortion coverage.

In addition to that built-in disincentive to insuring abortion, the law also invites states to enact stricter rules of their own. Thus far, 16 states have followed suit, barring or restricting insurance companies on their exchanges from covering the procedure. Three of those states are joining the five that have barred or limited all insurers from covering abortions since the early 1980's.

Supporters of Washington state's proposed abortion insurance mandate are careful to stress that it wouldn't lead to a dramatic uptick in abortions or require carriers with a religious bent to cover the procedure. They also note that a pair of federal plans that will be sold on all 50 state exchanges will be barred from covering elective abortions.

"It's not expanding abortion coverage," said Democratic Rep. Eileen Cody of West Seattle, the bill's primary sponsor. "It's ensuring the rights of women to get what they're paying for now and to continue their freedom of choice."

Opponents counter that the measure would require businesses and individuals to pay for abortion coverage they'd rather not have.

"Washington state would be the only state in the country that would force employers to pay for abortion," said Peggy O'Ban, spokeswoman for Human Life of Washington.

Source: http://www.politico.com/story/2013/03/washington-state-abortion-insurance-mandate-89254.html

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Obama visits Israeli holy sites (CNN)

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Bloomberg, mayor group tout big gun control push

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2013, file photo, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks at a gun violence summit at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. On Saturday, March 23, 2013, Bloomberg announced on a new $12 million television ad campaign from Mayors Against Illegal Guns will push senators in key states to back gun control efforts including comprehensive background checks. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2013, file photo, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks at a gun violence summit at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. On Saturday, March 23, 2013, Bloomberg announced on a new $12 million television ad campaign from Mayors Against Illegal Guns will push senators in key states to back gun control efforts including comprehensive background checks. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

(AP) ? A new $12 million television ad campaign from Mayors Against Illegal Guns will push senators in key states to back gun control efforts, including comprehensive background checks.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced the ad buy Saturday ? just days after Senate Democrats touted stronger background checks while acknowledging insufficient support to restore a ban on assault-style weapons to federal gun control legislation.

"These ads bring the voices of Americans ? who overwhelmingly support comprehensive and enforceable background checks ? into the discussion to move senators to immediately take action to prevent gun violence," Bloomberg said in a statement issued by the group he co-founded in 2006.

The two ads posted on the group's website, called "Responsible" and "Family," show a gun owner holding a rifle while sitting on the back of a pickup truck.

In one ad, the man says he'll defend the Second Amendment but adds "with rights come responsibilities." The ad then urges viewers to tell Congress to support background checks.

In the other ad, the man, a hunter, says "background checks have nothing to do with taking guns away from anyone." The man then says closing loopholes will stop criminals and the mentally ill from obtaining weapons.

The Senate is scheduled to debate federal gun control legislation next month. On March 28, the group plans for more than 100 events nationwide in support of passing gun control legislation that includes background checks.

Mayors Against Illegal Guns and other gun-control advocates frequently cite a mid-1990s study that suggests about 40 percent of U.S. gun transfers were conducted by private sellers not subject to federal background checks. Based on 2011 FBI data, the group estimates 6.6 million firearms transfers are made without a background check for the receiver.

A spokesman for Bloomberg could not immediately say if the $12 million was coming from Bloomberg or the mayor's political action committee, Independence USA. The New York Times, which first reported the ad campaign Saturday night, said Bloomberg was bankrolling the ad buy.

A spokesman for the National Rifle Association blasted Bloomberg and the new ads, saying NRA members and supporters would be calling senators directly and urging them to vote against proposed gun control legislation.

"What Michael Bloomberg is trying to do is ... intimidate senators into not listening to constituents and instead pledge their allegiance to him and his money," said spokesman Andrew Arulanandam.

Bloomberg has long supported efforts to curb gun violence, including sending New York City undercover investigators into other states to conduct straw purchases from dealers. Last month, Bloomberg's PAC poured more than $2 million into ads supporting Illinois state Rep. Robin Kelly, who won a special primary and ran partly on a platform of supporting tougher gun restrictions.

The new ads will air in 13 states the group believes are divided on gun control: Arkansas, Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-23-US-Gun-Control-Ads-Mayors/id-f9827398f1834142b2cbbe2ea8bc24eb

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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Yahoo acquires mobile app created by former employees

By Alexei Oreskovic

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Yahoo Inc acquired a small mobile start-up company that was founded by former employees of the struggling Web portal two years ago.

Yahoo did not disclose the price of its deal to acquire Jybe, which developed a mobile app that recommends movies, books and restaurants based on data contained in social networks.

Yahoo said it would shut down the Jybe service, while five Jybe engineers and data scientists, all ex-Yahoo staffers, would focus on Yahoo's efforts to bolster its product line-up.

Since Marissa Mayer became Yahoo chief executive in July she has made several small, so-called acqui-hires, similar to the Jybe deal, that have brought small teams of software engineers focused on mobile products to Yahoo. Wednesday's deal comes amid media reports that Yahoo is also in talks to acquire a controlling stake in video website Dailymotion from France Telecom-Orange, which would represent Mayer's biggest deal to date.

Shares of Yahoo were off 15 cents at $22.02 in midday trading on Wednesday.

(Reporting By Alexei Oreskovic; editing by Gunna Dickson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/yahoo-acquires-mobile-app-created-former-employees-162219447--sector.html

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Universe ages 80M years; Big Bang gets clearer

This image released on Thursday March 21, 2013 released by the European Space Agency (ESA) shows the most detailed map ever created of the cosmic microwave background acquired by ESA's Planck space telescope. George Esfthathiou, an astrophysicist who announced the Planck satellite mapping on Thursday, says the findings also offer new specificity of the universe's composition. (AP Photo/ESA?Planck Collaboration)

This image released on Thursday March 21, 2013 released by the European Space Agency (ESA) shows the most detailed map ever created of the cosmic microwave background acquired by ESA's Planck space telescope. George Esfthathiou, an astrophysicist who announced the Planck satellite mapping on Thursday, says the findings also offer new specificity of the universe's composition. (AP Photo/ESA?Planck Collaboration)

(AP) ? New results from a look into the split second after the Big Bang indicate the universe is 80 million years older than previously thought but the core concepts of the cosmos ? how it began, what it's made of and where it's going ? seem to be on the right track.

The findings released Thursday bolster a key theory called inflation, which says the universe burst from subatomic size to its now-observable expanse in a fraction of a second.

The Big Bang is the most comprehensive theory of the universe's beginning. It says the visible portion of the universe was smaller than an atom when, in a split second, it exploded, cooled and expanded rapidly, much faster than the speed of light.

The European Space Agency's Planck space probe looked back at the afterglow of the Big Bang, and those results have now added about 80 million years to the universe's age, putting it 13.81 billion years old.

The probe also found that the cosmos is expanding a bit slower than originally thought, has a little less of that mysterious dark energy than astronomers figured and a tad more normal matter. But scientists say those are small changes in calculations about the cosmos, nothing dramatic when dealing with numbers so massive.

"We've uncovered a fundamental truth of the universe," said George Esfthathiou, director of the Kavli Institute for Cosmology at the University of Cambridge who announced the Planck satellite mapping. "There's less stuff that we don't understand by a tiny amount."

The $900 million Planck space telescope was launched in 2009. It has spent 15 1/2 months mapping the sky, examining light fossils and sound echoes from the Big Bang by looking at the background radiation in the cosmos. The device is expected to keep transmitting data until late 2013, when it runs out of cooling fluid.

Officials at NASA, which also was part of the experiment, said this provided a deeper understanding of the intricate history of the universe and its complex composition.

Outside scientists said the result confirms on a universal scale what the announcement earlier this month by a different European group confirmed on a subatomic scale ? that they had found the Higgs boson particle which explains mass in the universe.

"What a wonderful triumph of the mathematical approach to describing nature," said Brian Greene, a Columbia University physicist who was not part of the new research. "It's an amazing story of discovery."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-21-Birth%20of%20the%20Universe/id-1f843221cad7425aaa99a1d79b62ffc4

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Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Mitt was right (Unqualified Offerings)

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The art and science of Feng Shui | INDIGOMEMOIRS

Today, on my way to home from the gym, I stopped by the flower stand next to the station and bought a fresh bouquet of peachy orange tulips for home.

Each time I use the tube to travel around London the space is packed with passengers, shopping bags, briefcases, baby strollers but never with flowers, besides the occasional romantic who buys a bouquet for his sweetheart or that day that everyone?s To-Do list signals buy flowers for mum on Mothers Day.

But the tulips I bought today are just for myself, or rather, for my work desk, sending me radiant energy while I write.

The mere fact that we reside on mother earth also makes us full time recipients of her energy.

Energy moves constantly, through wind and water, while the spaces where we reside, work or play act as traffic lights that regulate her movement.

Many of us feel frustrated when we waste time blocked in traffic or when hanging around, waiting for the next train on a delayed service; with energy is the same- how we arrange our interior space can either foster or hinder movement.

Positive, fluid and unimpeded energy is not only vital for our health but also as a tool that extends the reach of our goals? I chose orange for the tulips because its fire ignites my ideas into action.

Feng Shui is a method that canalizes the mass of energy into most appropriate individual use.

Its principles teach us that our house, or the space where we work from or return to after work either energizes us or drains us, because objects and their position foster or impede the fluidity of movement.

The underlying theory emanates from ancient Oriental philosophy, particularly rooted in Yin and Yang or the two forces that simultaneously oppose and complement each other, ultimately creating universal harmony.

We know that yin and yang maintains balance once the energy force or chi passes through the natural five-element cycle of tree, fire soil, metal and water freely.

Once we understand the five element cycle and chi?s progressive transformation we can then adapt it holistically and hone it to build a home that will increase the quality of our existence dramatically;

one will find that each room and the objects residing in it actively take on the role they intended to take in the first place.

For example yang energies combined by sharp, rectangular, glass and metal pieces ideally suit an office space that in turn is especially energized when combined by a fiery element, such as orange tulips.

Moving on to the kitchen: wooden surfaces and earthenware create a sense of motherly groundness and add a loving touch to the food we prepare.

Sofas and armchairs made from soft natural materials in the living room bring a sense of yin, inviting us to calm down and unwind while the defined edges of white minimalist shelves implode our books with rapid dynamism.

The location where energy travels from also paints chi with distinctive qualities: East resonates with early spring while West, with late autumn.

Correspondingly, rooms and objects facing eastward take on active, yang quality while rooms and objects facing westward are introvert, calm or yin.

North, represented by an ivory white hue is creative and transformative while south, painted in purple, is social and pleasurable.

Last Thursday I went to the Conran shop to specifically choose a selection of Feng Shui-inspired pieces for the season ahead of us.

For someone who prefers minimalism, now is the best time to unleash its chi potential.

Thus we conclude the winter with objects that charge us with explosive energy that pave the path for a productive spring, a season that invites us to plant our seeds of labor into fertile soil.

As spring progresses, we can add green and blue details to transform the haphazard chi of minimalist surfaces into a continuous stream of stable energy.

If we choose soft materials for the interiors that make up the living room, then we add a spiritual and calming yin dimension.

I would choose a bold red ?thinking? chair to create a whirlpool of power in an otherwise serene setting.

Spring is the perfect time to fine tune or ?feng? tune our home.

Very few of us are awarded with the opportunity to build a Feng Shui space from scratch and yet many of us have been living at our home for such a long time that we?ve become oblivious of the bad energies that reside in it.

Feng Shui is the art and science of mindful living that once applied to our home, will project harmony to our work, relationships and wellbeing.

Tags: conran, feng shui, harmony, interiors, self improvement,

Source: http://www.indigomemoirs.com/2013/03/19/wind-and-water/

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

'Star Wars' Spotlight: Bossk

By Ryan Rigley Listen up, Padawans. Are you anxious to get a kickstart on your Jedi apprenticeship but finding yourselves at a loss without any new "Star Wars" movies to flock to? Well, just because the next "Star Wars" trilogy won't be out for a long, long time (with a release date far, far away) [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/03/18/star-wars-spotlight-bossk/

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Jury deliberates case against Michigan grandmother

Sandra Layne testifies in the Oakland County Circuit Courtroom of Judge Denise Langford Morris in Pontiac, Mich., Wednesday, March 13, 2013. The 75-year-old woman charged in the slaying of her teenage grandson said she shot him in self-defense because she feared the drug-crazed 17-year-old would harm her. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Sandra Layne testifies in the Oakland County Circuit Courtroom of Judge Denise Langford Morris in Pontiac, Mich., Wednesday, March 13, 2013. The 75-year-old woman charged in the slaying of her teenage grandson said she shot him in self-defense because she feared the drug-crazed 17-year-old would harm her. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Sandra Layne, left, looks at her lawyer Jerome Sabbota during closing arguments in her trial at the Oakland County Circuit Court on Monday, March 18, 2013 in Pontiac, Mich. Layne, 75, is on trial in the shooting death of her 17-year-old grandson Jonathan Hoffman. (AP Photo/Detroit Free Press, Mandi Wright) DETROIT NEWS OUT, TV OUT, INTERNET OUT, MAGS OUT, NO SALES, MANDATORY CREDIT DETROIT FREE PRESS

Jennifer Hoffman, right, mother of Jonathan Hoffman, is comforted during closing arguments in the trial of Jonathan Hoffman's grandmother, Sandra Layne, 75, in Oakland County Circuit Court, Monday, March 18, 2013 in Pontiac, Mich. Layne is on trial in the shooting death of her 17-year-old grandson Jonathan Hoffman. (AP Photo/Detroit Free Press, Mandi Wright) DETROIT NEWS OUT, TV OUT, INTERNET OUT, MAGS OUT, NO SALES, MANDATORY CREDIT DETROIT FREE PRESS

Jerome Sabbota, attorney for Sandra Layne, holds a photo of Layne as he makes closing arguments during her trial in Oakland County Oakland County Circuit Court, Monday, Mar. 18, 2013 in Pontiac, Mich. Layne is on trial in the shooting death of her 17-year-old grandson Jonathan Hoffman. (AP Photo/Detroit Free Press, Mandi Wright) DETROIT NEWS OUT, TV OUT, INTERNET OUT, MAGS OUT, NO SALES, MANDATORY CREDIT DETROIT FREE PRESS

Oakland County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Paul Walton urges jurors to convict Sandra Layne of first-degree murder during closing arguments in the trial of Layne, 75, in the Oakland County Oakland County Circuit courtroom, in Pontiac, Mich., Monday, Mar. 18, 2013. Layne is on trial in the shooting death of her 17-year-old grandson Jonathan Hoffman. (AP Photo/Detroit Free Press, Mandi Wright) DETROIT NEWS OUT, TV OUT, INTERNET OUT, MAGS OUT, NO SALES, MANDATORY CREDIT DETROIT FREE PRESS

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) ? A woman "hunted down" her teenage grandson in her suburban Detroit home and shot at him 10 times over a six-minute span, ignoring his desperate pleas for help to a 911 dispatcher, a prosecutor told jurors Monday, urging them to convict her of first-degree murder.

Summing up his case against 75-year-old Sandra Layne, prosecutor Paul Walton again played Jonathan Hoffman's 911 call last May in which he said his grandmother had just shot him. "I'm going to die," the 17-year-old said before he was shot again with the dispatcher on the line.

There is no dispute that Layne, then 74, fired the shots in her West Bloomfield Township home, striking her grandson six times. The question for jurors: Should she be held criminally responsible for Hoffman's death and, if so, how?

Jurors deliberated for less than two hours before going home. They could acquit Layne based on her self-defense argument or convict her of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter or involuntary manslaughter.

Layne testified that she was afraid of her grandson and acted in self-defense. She said she shot him after he struck her during an argument over money that he had demanded from her so he could flee Michigan. A drug test earlier that day had detected so-called synthetic marijuana, which could have triggered a parole violation.

Walton reminded jurors that Layne didn't report any injuries to police when they arrived at her home during the shooting.

"Not I was afraid, I acted in self-defense, he came after me," Walton said. "I murdered. I shot. I killed ? those are her first statements to law enforcement. ... She hunted down Jonathan Hoffman because he wouldn't listen."

He called it a "massacre." Walton said Hoffman had made plans to attend a bonfire that night with friends, not escape in Layne's car.

"Her glasses aren't askew. Her makeup isn't smudged. No injuries to her face. ... If there's a self-defense claim here it belongs to Jonathan Hoffman, not Sandra Layne," the prosecutor said.

Defense attorney Jerome Sabbota urged jurors to acquit Layne, asking them to view the incident through the eyes of a woman in her 70s. He said Layne was taking care of a teenager who had used drugs and brought strangers to the home. Hoffman's parents were divorced and living in Arizona during his senior year of high school.

"Is there really a motive to murder her grandson? What does she gain?" Sabbota asked. "She killed a child she was trying to protect and trying to save. That's a tragedy. Only one reason she did what she did: fear."

Sabbota also played a 911 recording for the jury, a call that Layne made to police two months before Hoffman was killed. Sounding desperate and anguished, she said she needed help because her grandson wanted to run away from her home.

"Does she sound calm, cool and collected? Does she sound like Tony Soprano?" Sabbota said, referring to the mob kingpin on HBO's "The Sopranos."

Oakland County Judge Denise Langford Morris told jurors that acquittal based on self-defense could be appropriate if Layne "honestly and reasonably believed" that her life was in danger ? even if she was wrong.

___

Follow Ed White at http://twitter.com/edwhiteap

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-18-Teen%20Slain-Grandmother/id-904b9457cb124d91855268e90cc7068a

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Cyprus works on tax levy deal to get bailout approved

By Michele Kambas

NICOSIA (Reuters) - Cyprus's government was working on a proposal to soften the blow of a bank deposit levy on smaller savers ahead of a parliament vote on Monday on the measure central to a euro zone bailout designed to avert bankruptcy.

Breaking with previous EU practice that depositors' savings are sacrosanct, Cyprus and international lenders agreed at the weekend that savers in the island's outsized banking system would take a hit in return for the offer of 10 billion euros ($13 billion) in aid.

That not only infuriated Cypriots, it unnerved depositors in the euro zone's weaker economies and investors fearing a precedent that could reignite market turmoil.

The euro fell sharply early on Monday in Asian trade.

On Monday afternoon, Cyprus's fractious 56-member parliament is scheduled to vote on whether depositors should forfeit part of their savings to fund a bailout, mainly needed to recapitalize banks.

Approval of the deposit cut is far from a given. No party has an absolute majority, three parties say outright they will not back the tax, and a vote initially planned for Sunday was rescheduled to allow more time to build a consensus.

Faced with a growing public backlash, Cypriot finance ministry officials began discussions with lenders on Sunday to lessen the blow for smaller savers.

A source close to the consultations told Reuters authorities were hoping to cut the tax band to 3.0 percent from 6.7 percent for deposits under 100,000 euros.

The rate for deposits above that would then be jacked up to 12.5 percent from 9.9 percent.

In Brussels, a spokesman for Olli Rehn, the European commissioner in charge of economic affairs, said changes to the amounts paid by different depositors could be acceptable given that the financial impact would be the same.

News of the tax triggered a run on cashpoints in Cyprus over the weekend. Monday is a bank holiday and measures need to be approved before banks reopen on Tuesday.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades, a conservative elected just three weeks ago, said the tax on deposits was an alternative to a disorderly bankruptcy.

In a televised address, he said it was painful but "will eventually stabilize the economy and lead it to recovery."

Savers who lost money would be compensated by shares in commercial banks, with equity returns guaranteed by future revenues expected from natural gas discoveries, Anastasiades said.

But many legislators remain unconvinced.

"Essentially parliament is called to legalize a decision to rob depositors blind, against every written and unwritten law," said Yiannakis Omirou, speaker of parliament and head of EDEK, the small Socialist party. "We refuse to subscribe to this."

Even though there was no immediate sign of savers taking fright in other parts of Europe badly hurt by the regional debt crisis, some feared a precedent had been set.

"European countries are very calm thinking it could never happen to them. But we'll all get involved sooner or later," said Ana Garcia, a 62-year-old worker at a mental health center in Madrid.

(Editing by Matthew Tostevin)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cyprus-works-tax-levy-deal-bailout-approved-002853875--business.html

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Monday, March 18, 2013

Apple and Google Seek Alternatives to Computer Passwords

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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Sunday, March 17, 2013
Forgetting your computer password could be a problem of the past, if solutions under development by Apple and Google fulfil their promise. ...

Source: http://www.ibtimes.comhttp:0//www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/447038/20130317/apple-google-computer-password-android-phone.htm

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Cover Letters | Manager Tools

Submitted by Mjoyce on Sun, 03/17/2013 - 13:37.

?Hello,

Can anyone offer advice about the value of cover letters.

As a hiring manager, I know I have not read most of the ones that came through. ?I probably read a few if the short listed resumes.

They seem to contain information that would come through in a good interview.

So, arn't they just another way to not get an interview, a way to hinder the resume?

?

Regards

?

Matt

Source: http://www.manager-tools.com/forums-7619

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Sunday, March 17, 2013

In Twitter era, pope not a social media maven

Twitter

1 hour ago

Pope Francis speaks during a meeting with the media at the Pope VI hall, at the Vatican, Saturday, March 16, 2013. Pope Francis offered intimate insig...

AP

Pope Francis speaks during a meeting with the media at the Pope VI hall, at the Vatican, Saturday, March 16, 2013.

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina ? Pope Francis has 1.2 billion followers in the Roman Catholic Church, but he's not following a single one of them on Facebook or Twitter.

In a fast-paced, globalized world in which billions send emails, share photos on smartphones and get their instant news online, the newly elected pope still uses a typewriter for work. On his time off, he follows the games of his favorite soccer club on the radio.

Yet, even though he's not busy chatting, poking and commenting online, the pope recognizes the importance of technology in today's world.

As a cardinal, Francis had a Facebook account, although he didn't manage it himself, and he blessed the creation of a virtual parish where many could join in prayer online.

"The cardinal didn't understand any of that but I explained it to him. I showed him the computer screen ... he looked at the site and authorized us to pray to the Holy One, online," said Guillermo Marco, the pope's former spokesman.

"He's a man who likes to listen," Marco said. "As cardinal, many would ask to get an audience with him. They'd talk for 45 minutes straight and he'd stay quiet. Then, he'd say three phrases. In modern terms you could say that he's very Twitter-like."

Francis seems likely to follow the Vatican's social media strategy to help with missionary outreach. In a 2012 interview with veteran Italian Vatican journalist Andrea Tornielli, then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio said the church in Argentina knew well that digital outreach was necessary to reach the faithful.

"We try to make contact with families that don't come to church. Rather than being a church that welcomes and receives, we try to be a church that goes outside to men and women who don't come to us, who don't know us or are indifferent to us," he said.

Organizing masses in public squares is part of that, but there's more.

"We also try to reach those farther away by digital means, using the Web and brief (text) messages," he said.

Pope Benedict XVI joined the Twittersphere late last year tweeting from a personal account along with the world's celebrities, leaders and ordinary folk. Many were expecting Francis to take over his Twitter handle, but few knew that he wasn't tech savvy.

Even if he takes the account, it is unlikely that Francis himself will type his punchy one-liners about reaching out to the poor and ending corruption into 140-character bites. The 85-year-old Benedict, who didn't carry a cellphone and wrote longhand, left that job to one of his aides.

Associated Press writers Luis Andres Henao in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Nicole Winfield at Vatican City contributed to this report.

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

Source: http://www.today.com/tech/twitter-era-new-pope-not-social-media-maven-1C8907810

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South Africa to use Incident Command System - WILDFIRE article

First responders in South Africa currently employ multiple systems to manage fires and other emergency incidents. But this lack of a uniform system can bring chaos. In an effort to establish order, experienced disaster management professionals from the United States have been introducing South Africans to the Incident Command System, creating a resource that gradually is being introduced into wildland firefighting operations.

"It is critical that South Africa starts using a common global incident management system," said Louis Buys, chairperson of the South African Incident Command System Working Team. "I've had my share of experiences where things have gotten out of control, often because of bad communication. With a good system and a good team in place, it makes all the difference."

The SA ICS Working Team is responsible for developing and promoting the use of ICS as a national management tool in South Africa. For the past five years, South Africans have been receiving ICS training both in their country and in the United States.

The training and exchange program is coordinated by the Working on Fire program. WOF has a mutually beneficial relationship with the U.S. Forest Service and the Northern Rockies Coordinating Group ? federal, state and local government agencies in Idaho, Montana and North Dakota. The exchange program provides South Africa with needed support to implement ICS by exposing wildland firefighting agencies to U.S. concepts of training, command and control, dispatch, initial attack and large fire management. Ultimately, the goal is to explore interest in an international cooperative firefighting agreement between the South African and U.S. governments for forest and veldt fire programs.

Johan Heine, WOF general manager, first visited North America in the late 1990s to study how firefighting and management systems could be applied in South Africa. When WOF was established in 2003, William Teie of the California Department of Forestry and Tim Murphy of the Northern Rockies Coordinating Group invited Heine and several colleagues to Montana to attend training sessions and view ICS in action. A strong partnership soon was established, with both sides annually exchanging instructors and students to aid wildfire management in both countries and implement ICS in South Africa. Teie also adapted some of his work for South African audiences, resulting in The Fire Manager's Handbook on Veldt and Forest Fires. Murphy remains at the forefront of the ICS training and exchange program.

Today, WOF is a multipartner organization focused on integrated fire management and wildland firefighting. First established as a poverty-relief program, WOF has recruited and trained previously unemployed men and women into a national resource of more than 1,500 firefighters. Sixty-four teams of 25-person Hot Shot crews, led by 155 crew leaders, are deployed at 64 fire bases in eight fire-prone regions across South Africa. The crews act primarily as hand crews, using mainly hand tools to accomplish their work.

WOF includes a team of aerial firefighting professionals who operate helicopters, fixed-wing bombers and spotter aircraft. These aerial resources are coordinated locally, provincially and nationally, forming a pool to support ground forces with initial-attack actions. WOF also runs provincial operational centers, which coordinate the movements of all WOF ground and aerial resources. The program has received acclaim, winning several awards and, more importantly, successfully combating wildfires across South Africa.


ICS was recommended as a global standard for fire management at the third International Wildland Fire Conference in Sydney, Australia, in 2003. Heine sees it as critical to South African disaster management.

"Wildfire-fighting worldwide is usually a crisis situation," Heine said. "There is often a complex involvement of various stakeholders, with diverse people making strategic decisions. What is needed is a common terminology and a clear chain of command, in which trained personnel can be deployed to maximum efficiency."

Source: http://wildfiremag.com/tactics/south-africa-use-ics-200905/index.html?imw=Y

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Saudi dissidents jailed ? a post Arab Spring crackdown?

A judge recently sentenced two activists to a decade in prison and ordered their civil rights organization, which lobbied against government corruption, to be shut down.

By Christa Case Bryant,?Staff writer / March 11, 2013

Mohammad al-Qahtani is one of the Saudi Arabia's most outspoken human rights activists. While many activists appear undeterred, the sentencing of Qahtani, together with that of Abdullah al-Hamid, cofounders of the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association (ACPRA), represents a significant step backward in reform efforts.

Christa Case Bryant/The Christian Science Monitor

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Saudi Arabia?s decision this weekend to sentence two of the country?s most prominent human rights activists to 10 and 11 years in prison, respectively, has sparked a surge of discontent among the kingdom's reformers. In just one indication, an economist-blogger?s poll on Twitter drew 10,000 responses, 85 percent of them opposed to the decision.?

Skip to next paragraph Christa Case Bryant

Jerusalem bureau chief

Christa Case Bryant is The Christian Science Monitor's Jerusalem bureau chief, providing coverage on Israel and the Palestinian territories as well as regional issues.

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While many activists appear undeterred, the sentencing of Mohammad al-Qahtani, together with that of Abdullah al-Hamid, cofounders of the Saudi Civil and Political Rights Association (ACPRA), represents a significant step backward in reform efforts.

The small opening for reform created by King Abdullah when he took over in 2005 has been gradually closing since the Arab Spring, says Prof. Gregory Gause, a scholar of Saudi Arabia at the University of Vermont.

"The last two years have seen a closing of what had been a very small opening of what had been acceptable discourse in Saudi Arabia," says Professor Gause, who chairs UVM's political science department. "I do think it?s a signal ? it?s part of the post-Arab Spring Saudi crackdown."

On March 9, a judge sentenced Mr. Hamid to 11 years in prison and Mr. Qahtani to 10 years, and also ordered ACPRA to be shut down immediately and its property confiscated. Qahtani, one of 11 activists who established the organization in 2009, had served as head of the organization since 2011 and was recently ranked 47th ?on?Foreign Policy?s 100 Top Global Thinkers list.?

ACPRA lobbied hard against the moral and financial corruption of the government and particularly its?treatment of political prisoners, whose numbers have been estimated by some to be as high as 30,000. Qahtani was particularly bold in questioning the legitimacy of the government, and even called for the Interior Minister, the crown prince, to be dismissed from his job.

He and Hamid were charged with ?breaking allegiance to the ruler and his successor? and ?trying to impede the country?s developments.? They have 30 days to launch an appeal.

Determined dissidents

Qahtani knew he was walking on thin ice, but when this reporter interviewed him in May 2012, he insisted the imperative for reform outweighed the threat of prison.?

"I take it as a moral responsibility," said Qahtani at the time. "It's a very difficult time?. But believe me, we can weather it.

"Maybe in 10, 20 years we can look in the eyes of our kids and say, look, we tried," he added.

Hamid has also remained determined, even optimistic.

?To my brothers who are pessimist and pitiful about the ACPRA trial: If we get imprisoned, it?s a huge victory for the project and from prisons candles are lit,? tweeted Hamid the night before he was sentenced.

While Qahtani is well-known internationally, Hamid, who has been jailed previously, is perhaps better known in Saudi. But neither of them have the same level of influence as some Islamists in Saudi, and thus they don't pose a major threat to the government, says Gause.

"In both these cases, it?s interesting that the regime has chosen to make a symbol of these guys because they aren?t a big threat, they don?t have a huge following," he says. "The blowback is more international."

But some influential Islamists appear to be siding with the two sentenced dissidents. Salman al-Oudah, a salafi sheikh with more than 1 million followers on Twitter who has spent some time in jail himself, responded to the sentencing by tweeting that ?imprisonments and sacrifices only ingrain ideas, draw people together,? according to a translation by prominent Saudi blogger Eman Al Nafjan (@Saudiwoman).

Islam and democracy

According to Global Voices, which has been running an in-depth report on the trial of Qahtani and Hamid, the judge said Saturday that Al Qaeda and ACPRA are ?two sides of the same coin.? The report?quoted a tweet from Mohammad al-Abdualkreem that gets to the ideological tension behind the case: ?The judge concluded that the social contract theory is invalid and contradicts with the Muslim faith, and that coercive ruling, hereditary monarchy and appointment are fundamental to Islamic practice.?

But that view is increasingly being challenged. Sheikh al-Oudah, for example, has firmly stated that Islam and democracy are indeed compatible.

?To debate and consult the citizen in decisions and policies ... [and] elections, I think Islam gave us that sort of democracy ? all caliphs were elected by their people,? he told a small group of journalists ? including this reporter ? with the International Reporting Project during an interview at his Jeddah home last year.

While loath to allow someone like Qahtani to continue his criticism unchecked, Saudi appears at least somewhat responsive to the changes afoot. For example, Qahtani and Hamid?s trials were supposed to be held in secret, but their lobbying resulted in a public trial. On Saturday, more than 130 supporters were in attendance, as well as major news outlets such as Al Jazeera, according to the Global Voices report.

To be sure though, Saudi Arabia remains one of the world's wealthiest and and most powerful monarchies ? and it is still strongly backed by the United States, despite its poor human rights record. It is highly unlikely that it will come tumbling down as a result of this case or anything else in the next week, month, or even year.

"To me the big issue here is ? can you get an issue where you get these more 'liberal' technocratic types and long-bearded people and Shia all together on something in Saudi area," says Gause. "The thing that brought down regimes in Tunisia and Egypt is that islamists, secularists, liberalists, and leftists could all get behind, 'We want this regime to fall,' and I don?t see that in Saudi."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/wzQMLahPrjk/Saudi-dissidents-jailed-a-post-Arab-Spring-crackdown

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Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Syria's war affects generation of children

In this Friday, March. 8, 2013 photo, Justin Forsyth, chief executive of Save the Children, speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the group's offices in Beirut, Lebanon. Save the Children, which has been providing humanitarian and relief in Syria and neighboring countries, called on all groups taking part in the conflict to allow unfettered, safe access to populations in need and to "ensure that everything is done to bring the fighting to an end." (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

In this Friday, March. 8, 2013 photo, Justin Forsyth, chief executive of Save the Children, speaks during an interview with The Associated Press at the group's offices in Beirut, Lebanon. Save the Children, which has been providing humanitarian and relief in Syria and neighboring countries, called on all groups taking part in the conflict to allow unfettered, safe access to populations in need and to "ensure that everything is done to bring the fighting to an end." (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

(AP) ? Mohammed works at a Beirut supermarket where he waits on clients and carries their groceries home for a small tip that the 14-year-old saves to send later to his family in a village in northeastern Syria.

He is among thousands of Syrian children who have dropped out of school and fled two years of conflict that have claimed the lives of more than 70,000 people, including thousands of children.

He is also one of countless young Syrians now frequently seen wandering the streets of Beirut, pumping gas at stations and sometimes begging for money.

Aid groups warn that some two million children in Syria are facing, among other things, malnutrition, disease, early marriage and severe trauma as a result of the civil war.

To mark the second anniversary of the uprising against President Bashar Assad, the Britain-based charity Save the Children released a report Wednesday entitled "Childhood Under Fire." It says the conflict has left many children traumatized, unable to go to schools and struggling to find enough to eat.

"I have to say I have been shocked and horrified by the stories that I've heard from the children here in Lebanon who fled from Syria," Justin Forsyth, chief executive of Save the Children, told The Associated Press at the group's offices in Beirut.

"You never want to hear a child talk about watching their friend killed or their father tortured in front of them or their brother shot through the leg," added Forsyth, who spent several days in Lebanon last week meeting children among the estimated 320,000 Syrian refugees who have fled to the neighboring country.

Syria's children will need decades to heal from the trauma, he warned.

Similarly, a report issued by UNICEF Tuesday said unrelenting violence, massive population displacement, and damage to infrastructure and essential services caused by the Syrian conflict risk leaving an entire generation of children scarred for life.

"As millions of children inside Syria and across the region witness their past and their futures disappear amidst the rubble and destruction of this prolonged conflict, the risk of them becoming a lost generation grows every day," said UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake.

The report, marking the 2-year anniversary of the crisis, said that in areas where the fighting is most intense, few people have access to fresh water. Also, one in five schools have been destroyed, damaged, or is being used to shelter displaced families.

In Aleppo, the center of months of fighting, only 6 per cent of children are attending school, the report said.

At the same time, children are suffering the trauma of seeing family members and friends killed, while being terrified by the sounds and scenes of conflict.

While the reports did not give a number of children killed or wounded in the civil war, the Violations Documentation center in Syria, a key activist group that keeps tracks of Syria's dead, wounded and missing persons, says that some 5,500 children, including 3,800 boys and nearly 1,700 girls, have been killed in the past two years.

VDC also says 901 boys and 28 girls are in detention while about 100 children are missing.

Forsyth said the 5,500 figure "is very conservative. A lot of children have been killed and injured."

Children in Syria were targeted early on in the uprising, and right groups routinely report on teenagers imprisoned and sometimes beaten and tortured.

One of the most shocking cases involving children was that of Hamza al-Khatib, 13, who was from the southern village of Jiza in Daraa province, where the uprising first broke out after security forces arrested high school students who scrawled anti-regime graffiti on a wall.

Al-Khatib was arrested at an anti-government demonstration on April 29, 2011 and not seen again until his mutilated body, with his penis severed, was delivered to his family weeks later. Al-Khatib became a symbol of the revolt, driving thousands of protesters into the streets.

Countless other amateur videos have been posted by activists showing children who were killed by shooting, shelling or air raids. Some were only weeks-old.

Save the Children, which provides humanitarian relief in Syria and neighboring countries, called on all groups taking part in the conflict to allow unfettered, safe access to populations in need and to "ensure that everything is done to bring the fighting to an end."

In the report, it said that young boys are being used by armed groups as porters and human shields at the front lines. It added that some girls are being married off early to protect them from a widely-perceived threat of sexual violence. Both sides of the conflict in Syria have accused each other of using children to protect themselves.

"The majority of people who are raped in war are usually children and that probably is the case in Syria," said Forsyth. He added that they don't have exact numbers but "I have interviewed children who were sexually harassed."

The report says that combined with the breakdown of society in parts of the country, and more than 3 million people internally displaced, the conflict has led to "the collapse of childhood for millions of youngsters."

Mohammed, the Beirut supermarket employee, stopped going to school after it closed because of the fighting. As the eldest of three siblings, he was sent by his family to Beirut to stay with his maternal uncle, hoping he could find work to help sustain the family.

"I make about 15,000 pounds ($10) a day," said the portly boy from the northeastern village of Shadadeh in Hassakeh province, which witnessed heavy clashes last month forcing thousands of its residents to flee.

"If I don't send money to my family, they won't be able to buy anything," he said. Mohammed gave only his first name, fearing for his security.

At a Beirut gas station, Suleiman, a teenager wearing a T-shirt and a blue baseball cap, spends his day washing cars.

"The fighting and shelling were terrifying in my city," said the boy from the oil-rich eastern city of Deir el-Zour near the border with Iraq ? an area that sees almost daily fighting between troops and rebels.

Forsyth said even though children are by nature resilient, the trauma they have been through will have a long-term impact on their lives.

"For millions of Syrian children, the innocence of childhood has been replaced by the cruel realities of trying to survive this vicious war."

____

Bassem Mroue can be reached at www.twitter.com/bmroue

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-13-Syria-Lost%20Childhood/id-fe2fc1b6ac55410688ad04ef1fb67a6f

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