Saturday, May 11, 2013

Rose Hill Bank confident in Union Station plans, developers

John Stearns / WBJ

Occidental Management's Chad Stafford and Gary Oborny are behind the redevelopment of Wichita's Union Station.

Rose Hill Bank, which financed Occidental Management Inc.?s acquisition of Union Station earlier this year, is a big believer in Occidental?s ability to pull off the large renovation project and added one of its bank signs out front of the building today to show its support and send a message that it?s capable of lending for big commercial projects.

The sign went up ahead of this afternoon?s press conference at Union Station, where rail service supporters will release ?an important joint mayoral letter of support? for the extension of the Heartland Flyer Amtrak service, says an invitation to the news conference from Occidental Management CEO Gary Oborny.

Rose Hill President and CEO Roger Kepley speaks highly of Oborny and Occidental President Chad Stafford and their ability to pull of the project converting the station and related buildings into office, retail and restaurant space ? and possibly more.

?As a citizen of Wichita, I?m really exited about having that multiuse? feature of Union Station, he says.

?With Gary and Chad, I?m very confident it will be executed flawlessly and will be ... high quality,? Kepley says, adding that Rose Hill would like to finance improvements, too.

?I think the project is tremendous for the city,? Kepley says. ?It?s the final linchpin, in my view, that connects Old Town to the arena.?

Amtrak train service would be ?icing on the cake? for Union Station and Wichita, he says.

Rose Hill is the lead lender in another Occidental Management project as well, The Offices at Cranbrook, the first phase of which opened last month.

John Stearns covers real estate, development and banking.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_53/~3/8v4gWB14-cE/rose-hill-bank-confident-in-union.html

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Sexual harassment linked to 'purging' -- in men

May 9, 2013 ? Men who experience high levels of sexual harassment are much more likely than women to induce vomiting and take laxatives and diuretics in an attempt to control their weight, according to a surprising finding by Michigan State University researchers.

Their study is one of the first to examine the effects of sexual harassment on body image and eating behaviors in both women and men. As expected, women reported more sexual harassment and greater overall weight and shape concerns and disordered eating behavior (such as binge eating) in response to that harassment, said lead author NiCole Buchanan.

But Buchanan said she was stunned to learn that men are significantly more likely to engage in purging "compensatory" behaviors at high levels of sexual harassment. The study is the first to make that connection.

"Traditionally, there has been a misperception that men are not sexually harassed," said Buchanan, associate professor of psychology. "And while women do experience much higher rates of sexual harassment, when men experience these kinds of behaviors and find them distressing, then you see the same types of responses you see in women -- and in the case of compensatory behaviors, even more so."

Buchanan and colleagues surveyed 2,446 college-aged participants -- including 731 men -- on their experiences with sexual harassment, body image and eating behaviors. The study, online now, will appear in an upcoming print issue of the research journal Body Image.

Sexual harassment comes in many different forms, including peer-on-peer harassment, and can lead to symptoms of anxiety and depression, concerns about body image and dysfunctional eating.

Buchanan said there may be certain features of sexual harassment that are particularly powerful in triggering purging behaviors in males and that further research is needed to examine this possibility.

Eating disorders are increasing among men in the United States, particularly younger men, yet the vast majority of prevention programs are designed for girls and women, the study noted.

"Although boys and men have lower rates of weight/shape concerns and eating disturbances, these issues are still significant and warrant intervention," Buchanan said.

Buchanan's co-authors are doctoral students Brooke Bluestein and Krystle Woods and former undergraduate students Alexa Nappa and Melissa Depatie.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/qASW5-Ykqyk/130509104356.htm

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Small helicopter crashes in downtown Honolulu

HONOLULU (AP) ? A small helicopter lost power and came crashing down on a busy downtown Honolulu street Wednesday afternoon, but no one was seriously injured, authorities said.

"It's a pretty miraculous situation that no one was badly hurt by this," said Capt. Terry Seelig, a spokesman for the Honolulu Fire Department. "This is a pretty busy area."

The helicopter was on a photography flight when it lost power, forcing a crash landing on Fort Street, which is home to a large apartment complex and Hawaii Pacific University. The area is usually full of university students and downtown office workers, and has a lot of vehicle and pedestrian traffic.

The chopper ended up along a curb, badly damaging a parked car, Seelig said. A fire station is also on that street, so firefighters who heard the crash ran out to help.

The pilot, Julia Link, told KITV everything seemed normal until all of the sudden it got quiet and the engine quit. Repeatedly training for this type of scenario helped her bring the helicopter to the ground, she said.

"First I thought it was a joke and then, I was like 'Oh my God, this is for real," said the 30-year-old.

She was grateful the problems developed when the aircraft ? which she said was brand new ? was 3,000 feet above ground as that gave her a lot of time to plan their descent.

Link said she's glad everyone walked away alive and no one was seriously hurt.

The 71-year-old male passenger was treated at the scene for minor injuries to his head, Honolulu Emergency Services spokeswoman Shayne Enright said.

Seelig said the chopper belongs to Mauna Loa Helicopters. Representatives of the company couldn't immediately be reached for comment.

Preliminary information indicates the Robinson R22 Beta had an engine failure, said Allen Kenitzer, spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/small-helicopter-crashes-downtown-honolulu-020945901.html

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Google Translate Android app gets Phrasebook syncing, additional language support for visual translation

Google Translate app for Android gets Phrasebook syncing and additional picture  makes it easer to remain monolingual

Google Translate's truly a wonder of modern technology, with the ability to translate 64 70 languages, whether they are written, spoken or even photographed. Today Google's made it easier than ever to remain mono-lingual when traveling abroad by updating the Translate app for Android with Phrasebook syncing. This new feature lets users save translations of often used phrases and have access to them on any and all of their devices. Additionally, support for 16 new languages for its camera translation feature comes with the new code as well. This means that tourists traveling to Barcelona, Croatia, Slovenia and thirteen other places in Scandinavia and eastern Europe need not pester the locals for help reading street signs to get around. They can be good guests and offer to buy them a beer in their native tongue instead.

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Source: Google Translate blog

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/08/google-translate-android-app-update-phrasebook/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Restless legs syndrome, insomnia and brain chemistry: A tangled mystery solved?

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Johns Hopkins researchers believe they may have discovered an explanation for the sleepless nights associated with restless legs syndrome (RLS), a symptom that persists even when the disruptive, overwhelming nocturnal urge to move the legs is treated successfully with medication.

Neurologists have long believed RLS is related to a dysfunction in the way the brain uses the neurotransmitter dopamine, a chemical used by brain cells to communicate and produce smooth, purposeful muscle activity and movement. Disruption of these neurochemical signals, characteristic of Parkinson's disease, frequently results in involuntary movements. Drugs that increase dopamine levels are mainstay treatments for RLS, but studies have shown they don't significantly improve sleep. An estimated 5 percent of the U.S. population has RLS.

The small new study, headed by Richard P. Allen, Ph.D., an associate professor of neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, used MRI to image the brain and found glutamate ? a neurotransmitter involved in arousal ? in abnormally high levels in people with RLS. The more glutamate the researchers found in the brains of those with RLS, the worse their sleep.

The findings are published in the May issue of the journal Neurology.

"We may have solved the mystery of why getting rid of patients' urge to move their legs doesn't improve their sleep," Allen says. "We may have been looking at the wrong thing all along, or we may find that both dopamine and glutamate pathways play a role in RLS."

For the study, Allen and his colleagues examined MRI images and recorded glutamate activity in the thalamus, the part of the brain involved with the regulation of consciousness, sleep and alertness. They looked at images of 28 people with RLS and 20 people without. The RLS patients included in the study had symptoms six to seven nights a week persisting for at least six months, with an average of 20 involuntary movements a night or more.

The researchers then conducted two-day sleep studies in the same individuals to measure how much rest each person was getting. In those with RLS, they found that the higher the glutamate level in the thalamus, the less sleep the subject got. They found no such association in the control group without RLS.

Previous studies have shown that even though RLS patients average less than 5.5 hours of sleep per night, they rarely report problems with excessive daytime sleepiness. Allen says the lack of daytime sleepiness is likely related to the role of glutamate, too much of which can put the brain in a state of hyperarousal ? day or night.

If confirmed, the study's results may change the way RLS is treated, Allen says, potentially erasing the sleepless nights that are the worst side effect of the condition. Dopamine-related drugs currently used in RLS do work, but many patients eventually lose the drug benefit and require ever higher doses. When the doses get too high, the medication actually can make the symptoms much worse than before treatment. Scientists don't fully understand why drugs that increase the amount of dopamine in the brain would work to calm the uncontrollable leg movement of RLS.

Allen says there are already drugs on the market, such as the anticonvulsive gabapentin enacarbil, that can reduce glutamate levels in the brain, but they have not been given as a first-line treatment for RLS patients.

RLS wreaks havoc on sleep because lying down and trying to relax activates the symptoms. Most people with RLS have difficulty falling asleep and staying asleep. Only getting up and moving around typically relieves the discomfort. The sensations range in severity from uncomfortable to irritating to painful.

"It's exciting to see something totally new in the field ? something that really makes sense for the biology of arousal and sleep," Allen says.

As more is understood about this neurobiology, the findings may not only apply to RLS, he says, but also to some forms of insomnia.

###

Johns Hopkins Medicine: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org

Thanks to Johns Hopkins Medicine for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/128178/Restless_legs_syndrome__insomnia_and_brain_chemistry__A_tangled_mystery_solved_

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Tamerlan Tsarnaev Buried; "Compassionate Individual" Agrees to Take Boston Suspect's Body

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/05/tamerlan-tsarnaev-buried-after-worcester-agrees-to-take-boston-b/

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Manny Pacquiao plans ring return vs. Rios in Macau

Manny Pacquiao will return to the ring Nov. 24 to meet Brandon Rios in a welterweight bout in Macau, the eight-division world champion's promoter said Monday.

Bob Arum told The Associated Press that Pacquiao (54-5-2, 38 KOs) has been focused exclusively on his political career in the Philippines since the congressman's stunning sixth-round knockout loss to Juan Manuel Marquez last December. Pacquiao has lost two straight fights after a 15-bout winning streak, also dropping a much-disputed decision to Timothy Bradley last summer.

"We want to get the people a really good, exciting action fight," Arum said. "(Rios) is an exciting fighter, so it's a good matchup."

Although Marquez left him face-down on the canvas in his last bout, the 34-year-old Pacquiao chose Rios (31-1-1, 23 KOs) to be his next opponent because of the former lightweight champion's hard-hitting, crowd-pleasing style. Pacquiao's camp has also claimed Marquez and Bradley both turned down potential rematches with Pacquiao to fight each other Sept. 14 in Las Vegas.

Pacquiao's choice for his fight's location is just as intriguing as his choice of opponent. Pacquiao, who hasn't fought outside the United States since July 2006, will fight in the CotaiArena at Macau's Venetian Resort Hotel in an attempt to appeal to the nascent Chinese pay-per-view market.

"We think it opens a tremendous market in China because it enables us to do pay-per-view there in ways that we haven't done before," Arum said.

Arum said Pacquiao hopes to improve the overall popularity of boxing in Asia ? while also reaping the significant tax benefits of fighting outside the U.S. His fight will be held on a Sunday morning in Macau to keep the Saturday night pay-per-view audience in North America.

Arum and the Venetian are planning regular shows at the venue after the success of a card starring Chinese two-time Olympic champion Zou Shiming in April. Zou is expected to headline another show in Macau in July.

The Texas-born, Kansas-raised Rios lives and trains in Oxnard, Calif. His unbeaten record was blemished March 30 when he lost a unanimous decision in his rematch with fellow brawler Mike Alvarado, but his popularity only increased in a compelling bout filled with wild exchanges and headfirst fighting.

Rios also is promoted by Arum's Top Rank, putting him in prime position to land the biggest fight of his career when Marquez and Bradley didn't bite.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-05-07-BOX-Pacquiao-Rios/id-cd5cb1d583a8424bb62cb255c1e5fa61

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China reports four more bird flu deaths, toll rises to 31

BEIJING (Reuters) - Four more people in China have died from a new strain of bird flu, bringing to 31 the number of deaths from the mysterious H7N9 virus, with the number of infections rising by two to 129, according to Chinese health authorities.

Among the deaths, two occurred in the eastern province of Jiangsu; one was from eastern Zhejiang; while another was from central Anhui, based on a Reuters analysis of the data provided by Chinese health authorities on Monday.

The government did not provide more details of the victims.

Chinese health authorities said two new infections were reported in the eastern coastal province of Fujian. The virus, which was mostly concentrated in the region around the commercial capital of Shanghai, spread to Fujian in late April.

The Geneva-based World Health Organization (WHO) has said it has no evidence that the new strain of bird flu, which was first detected in patients in China in March, is easily transmissible between humans.

Chinese scientists have confirmed that the H7N9 strain has been transmitted to humans from chickens. But the WHO has said 40 percent of people infected with H7N9 appear to have had no contact with poultry.

The head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the current strain of bird flu cannot spark a pandemic in its current form - but he added that there is no guarantee it will not mutate and cause a serious pandemic.

(Reporting by Sui-Lee Wee; Editing by Michael Perry)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/china-reports-four-more-bird-flu-deaths-toll-030132142.html

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Wednesday, May 8, 2013

East about to be overrun by billions of cicadas

This photo provided by the University of Connecticut shows a cicada in Pipestem State Park in West Virginia on May 27, 2003. Any day now, cicadas with bulging red eyes will creep out of the ground after 17 years and overrun the East Coast with the awesome power of numbers. Big numbers. Billions. Maybe even a trillion. For a few buggy weeks, residents from North Carolina to Connecticut will be outnumbered by 600 to 1. Maybe more. And the invaders will be loud. A chorus of buzzing male cicadas can rival a jet engine. (AP Photo/University of Connecticut, Chirs Simon)

This photo provided by the University of Connecticut shows a cicada in Pipestem State Park in West Virginia on May 27, 2003. Any day now, cicadas with bulging red eyes will creep out of the ground after 17 years and overrun the East Coast with the awesome power of numbers. Big numbers. Billions. Maybe even a trillion. For a few buggy weeks, residents from North Carolina to Connecticut will be outnumbered by 600 to 1. Maybe more. And the invaders will be loud. A chorus of buzzing male cicadas can rival a jet engine. (AP Photo/University of Connecticut, Chirs Simon)

Graphic highlight the hatching of the 17-year cicadas

A box of preserved cicadas, including emerging insects and molted exoskeletons, in storage at the Smithsonian Institution's Museum Support Center in Camp Springs, Md. on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. A brood of cicadas are expected to emerge this spring in the Washington area. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

This photo provided by the University of Connecticut, shows a cicada in Pipestem State Park in West Virginia on May 27, 2003. Any day now, cicadas with bulging red eyes will creep out of the ground after 17 years and overrun the East Coast with the awesome power of numbers. Big numbers. Billions. Maybe even a trillion. For a few buggy weeks, residents from North Carolina to Connecticut will be outnumbered by 600 to 1. Maybe more. And the invaders will be loud. A chorus of buzzing male cicadas can rival a jet engine.(AP Photo/University of Connecticut, Chirs Simon)

Gary Hevel, a research collaborator with the Dept. of Entomology at the National Museum of Natural History, holds up a preserved cicadas, a brood of which are expected to emerge this spring in the Washington area, at the Smithsonian Institution's Museum Support Center in Camp Springs, Md. on Tuesday, April 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) ? Any day now, billions of cicadas with bulging red eyes will crawl out of the earth after 17 years underground and overrun the East Coast. The insects will arrive in such numbers that people from North Carolina to Connecticut will be outnumbered roughly 600-to-1. Maybe more.

Scientists even have a horror-movie name for the infestation: Brood II. But as ominous as that sounds, the insects are harmless. They won't hurt you or other animals. At worst, they might damage a few saplings or young shrubs. Mostly they will blanket certain pockets of the region, though lots of people won't ever see them.

"It's not like these hordes of cicadas suck blood or zombify people," says May Berenbaum, a University of Illinois entomologist.

They're looking for just one thing: sex. And they've been waiting quite a long time.

Since 1996, this group of 1-inch bugs, in wingless nymph form, has been a few feet underground, sucking on tree roots and biding their time. They will emerge only when the ground temperature reaches precisely 64 degrees. After a few weeks up in the trees, they will die and their offspring will go underground, not to return until 2030.

"It's just an amazing accomplishment," Berenbaum says. "How can anyone not be impressed?"

And they will make a big racket, too. The noise all the male cicadas make when they sing for sex can drown out your own thoughts, and maybe even rival a rock concert. In 2004, Gene Kritsky, an entomologist at the College of Mount St. Joseph in Cincinnati, measured cicadas at 94 decibels, saying it was so loud "you don't hear planes flying overhead."

There are ordinary cicadas that come out every year around the world, but these are different. They're called magicicadas ? as in magic ? and are red-eyed. And these magicicadas are seen only in the eastern half of the United States, nowhere else in the world.

There are 15 U.S. broods that emerge every 13 or 17 years, so that nearly every year, some place is overrun. Last year it was a small area, mostly around the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, West Virginia and Tennessee. Next year, two places get hit: Iowa into Illinois and Missouri; and Louisiana and Mississippi. And it's possible to live in these locations and actually never see them.

This year's invasion, Brood II, is one of the bigger ones. Several experts say that they really don't have a handle on how many cicadas are lurking underground but that 30 billion seems like a good estimate. At the Smithsonian Institution, researcher Gary Hevel thinks it may be more like 1 trillion.

Even if it's merely 30 billion, if they were lined up head to tail, they'd reach the moon and back.

"There will be some places where it's wall-to-wall cicadas," says University of Maryland entomologist Mike Raupp.

Strength in numbers is the key to cicada survival: There are so many of them that the birds can't possibly eat them all, and those that are left over are free to multiply, Raupp says.

But why only every 13 or 17 years? Some scientists think they come out in these odd cycles so that predators can't match the timing and be waiting for them in huge numbers. Another theory is that the unusual cycles ensure that different broods don't compete with each other much.

And there's the mystery of just how these bugs know it's been 17 years and time to come out, not 15 or 16 years.

"These guys have evolved several mathematically clever tricks," Raupp says. "These guys are geniuses with little tiny brains."

Past cicada invasions have seen as many as 1.5 million bugs per acre. Of course, most places along the East Coast won't be so swamped, and some places, especially in cities, may see zero, says Chris Simon of the University of Connecticut. For example, Staten Island gets this brood of cicadas, but the rest of New York City and Long Island don't, she says. The cicadas also live beneath the metro areas of Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington.

Scientists and ordinary people with a bug fetish travel to see them. Thomas Jefferson once wrote about an invasion of this very brood at Monticello, his home in Virginia.

While they stay underground, the bugs aren't asleep. As some of the world's longest-lived insects, they go through different growth stages and molt four times before ever getting to the surface. They feed on a tree fluid called xylem. Then they go aboveground, where they molt, leaving behind a crusty brown shell, and grow a half-inch bigger.

The timing of when they first come out depends purely on ground temperature. That means early May for southern areas and late May or even June for northern areas.

The males come out first ? think of it as getting to the singles bar early, Raupp says. They come out first as nymphs, which are essentially wingless and silent juveniles, climb on to tree branches and molt one last time, becoming adult winged cicadas. They perch on tree branches and sing, individually or in a chorus. Then when a female comes close, the males change their song, they do a dance and mate, he explained.

The males keep mating ("That's what puts the 'cad' in 'cicada,'" Raupp jokes) and eventually the female lays 600 or so eggs on the tip of a branch. The offspring then dive-bomb out of the trees, bounce off the ground and eventually burrow into the earth, he says.

"It's a treacherous, precarious life," Raupp says. "But somehow they make it work."

___

Seth Borenstein can be followed at http://twitter.com/borenbears

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-05-07-Cicada%20Invasion/id-89fba9e70a974fdc9c72c7a24e1670e2

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6 Signs Small Businesses Have Big Plans for B2B Content Marketing

b2b content marketingOver the last several months, we have been looking at how content marketing usage varies across vertical markets, geographies, and company sizes, based on original CMI research. Today, we focus on the demographic of B2B small business marketers (i.e., companies with 10 to 99 employees) that operate in North America.

What I love about the data from our latest study, B2B Small Business Content Marketing: 2013 Benchmarks, Budget, and Trends ? North America, sponsored by Outbrain, is that we can see some striking differences in how small businesses use content marketing compared with their enterprise marketing peers (i.e., companies with 1,000+ employees). Take a look at a few of the highlights:

Small business marketers spend more of their budgets on content marketing

B2B small business marketers allocate 31 percent of their budgets to content marketing, and 57 percent say they are planning to increase this amount. Their B2B enterprise peers, on the other hand, allocate 24 percent, with 46 percent of respondents saying they plan to increase their spends.

small business plan increased spending

Small business marketers use fewer content marketing tactics

B2B small business marketers reportedly use an average of 12 content marketing tactics, whereas their enterprise peers use 16. And even though small business marketers say that in-person events top their list of most effective content marketing tactics, events are not among those they use most often, instead favoring social media ? other than blogs (86 percent); articles on their website (82 percent); and eNewsletters (81 percent).

The study also found that B2B small business marketers use videos less often than their enterprise peers do (73 percent vs. 87 percent), but use blogs more often (76 percent vs. 70 percent). Also, in terms of effectiveness, B2B small businesses have more confidence in books (55 percent vs. 35 percent) and blogs (60 percent vs. 46 percent) than their enterprise peers do.

They use more social media platforms to distribute content

B2B small business marketers use an average of five social media platforms, whereas their enterprise peers use four. As for which platforms they prefer, small business marketers use LinkedIn (83 percent) most often, with Twitter (81 percent) and Facebook (80 percent) following closely behind. Their enterprise peers, on the other hand, use Facebook most often (80 percent), followed by Twitter (76 percent) and YouTube (74 percent).

social media platform use

More than half create their own content in-house

Just 39 percent of B2B small business marketers outsource content creation, compared with 65 percent of their enterprise peers who rely on outsourcing.

content creation insourcing vs. outsourcing

They are challenged with keeping up with the high demand for content

Producing enough content is the greatest content challenge B2B small business marketers say they face, whereas their enterprise peers cite producing the kind of content that engages as their top content concern.

Just 34 percent believe they are effective at content marketing

Like their enterprise peers (32 percent), B2B small business marketers struggle with their effectiveness at content marketing. However, small business marketers appear to believe that continued investment in content marketing will ultimately pay off: Forty-six percent of those who rate their organizations as least effective at content marketing are nevertheless planning to increase their content marketing budgets over the next 12 months.

rating effectiveness

Want to learn more? Download the full report for additional insight and answers to questions like:

  • What goals do B2B small business marketers have for content marketing?
  • How do they measure content marketing success?
  • How are they tailoring their content?
  • What are the notable characteristics of a best-in-class B2B small business content marketer?

What do you think about these results? Are our findings consistent with your content marketing experiences? Let us know in the comments!

To learn more about how small businesses approach content marketing, register for the Small Biz Summit being held at Content Marketing World on September 12, 2013 in Cleveland.

Source: http://contentmarketinginstitute.com/2013/05/small-business-2013-content-marketing-research/

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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Escaping captors after 10 years, Amanda Berry ?real hero? in kidnapping case, police say

Three women missing as long as 12 years are free today, and police are crediting the bravery of one of them?Amanda Berry, now 27?for escaping the captors and seeking help.

?The real hero here is Amanda,? assistant Cleveland police chief Ed Tomba told reporters at a news conference Wednesday morning. ?She got this rolling.?

Shortly before 6 p.m. ET Monday, Berry was able to break out of the home in Cleveland's west side neighborhood where she apparently had been held for the past 10 years. She was reported missing on April 21, 2003, Tomba said.

After she called 911, police responded to the home at 5:52 p.m. Two other women, Gina DeJesus, who had been missing since 2004, when she was 14, and Michelle Knight, who had been missing since 2002 when she was 20, were found inside.

When Berry escaped the house, she brought with her a 6-year-old daughter. Police would not say who the father of the child was, but confirmed the girl is Berry?s daughter.

Police have arrested three brothers in connection to the case: Ariel Castro, 52, the owner of the home, and brothers Pedro, 54, and Onil, 50. They have not been charged. Tomba said the men were taken into custody about 6:30 p.m. and will be charged within 36 hours.

The stories of Berry and DeJesus have captivated the city of Cleveland for a decade. They have been the subject of numerous vigils and city searches. Police have followed leads over the years, including digging up two backyards seeking their remains. On Monday, crowds gathered in the neighborhood where they were found and at the hospital where they were taken later.

?Our prayers have finally been answered?this nightmare is over,? said Stephen Anthony, special agent in charge of the Cleveland office of the FBI.

While much has been written about Berry and DeJesus, and the efforts to find them, not much has been written about Michelle Knight. "She has been the focus of very few tips," Tomba said. Knight was last seen on Aug. 22, 2002. She was 20 years old at the time, and went missing from the same neighborhood as Berry and DeJesus.

Police said all three women appeared healthy, other than needing a good meal. They were taken to a Cleveland hospital, where they were reunited with their families.

Police said that officers were called to the home of the alleged captor Ariel Castro twice, but nothing came of the calls.

In March 2000, Ariel Castro reported a fight in the street, and in January 2004, officials from Children and Family Services were went to the home to investigate an incident related to his employment as a bus driver. Castro, a former bus driver for the Cleveland schools, had gone to lunch after running his route, despite having one more child still on the bus.

Police say they investigated that incident, but felt there was no criminal wrong-doing and the matter was dropped.

?He was interviewed extensively due to that investigation,?Tomba said of the school bus incident.

Mayor Frank Jackson said housing and building records also have been reviewed and found no reports of violations.

Police declined to provide specific details about the home where the women were kept or its condition upon their arrival on Monday. They said the home is an active crime scene and detectives were processing it through the night.

Asked if they believe the kidnappings were part of a larger operation, police officials said they were looking into every possible angle. It appears that only Berry, DeJesus, and Knight were the only victims. Officials declined to say if they were sexually abused.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/escaped-cleveland-woman-amanda-berry-real-hero-kidnapping-141444873.html

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CSN: Verlander takes no-no to 7th, Astros swept

BOX SCORE

Carlos Pena broke up Justin Verlander?s no-hitter with a single to right field in the seventh inning.

But Astros starter Philip Humber gave up six runs in the first two frames as Houston was shut out by Detroit, 9-0, on Sunday. The Tigers swept the four-game series at Minute Maid Park.

Starters: RHP Philip Humber struggled early, giving up two runs in the first and four more in the second, including a two-run home run in each inning. He faced 10 batters in the second and lasted just four innings. His ERA jumped from 7.58 to 8.82.

Humber?s line: 4 IP, 8 H, 8 R, 3 BB, 1 K, 3 HR; 91 pitches (55 strikes)

Despite his control being slightly off, Tigers RHP Justin Verlander had a no-hitter going through six (98 pitches), but he finally gave up back-to-back singles with one out in the seventh.

Verlander?s line: 7 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 9 K; 116 pitches (80 strikes)

Bullpen: LHP Erik Bedard, who was moved to the bullpen for what manager Bo Porter says is an indefinite amount of time, relieved Humber in the fifth and retired all three batters he faced.

The only run he gave up in 3 1/3 innings was a solo home run to Omar Infante in the eighth. He allowed two hits while walking two and striking out three.

Travis Blackley came on with one out, one on in the eighth and immediate gave up a single but then induced a double play to end the inning. Wesley Wright pitched the ninth inning, allowing hits to the first two batters he faced but then got three straight outs to end the inning.

Darin Downs pitched two scoreless innings to close out the game for the Tigers.

At the plate: After Pena broke up Verlander?s no-hitter in the seventh, Carlos Corporan followed with a single to left for back-to-back hits off Verlander. Pinch-hitter Brandon Barnes was hit by a pitch to lead off the eighth and then Ronny Cedeno and Robbie Grossman each had singles but were left stranded.

The Astros added to their league-leading strikeout total with 13 more on Saturday.

The Tigers belted out 13 hits, including four home runs, three of those off Humber.

In the field: In the first, Grossman made a running catch of a deeply hit Cabrera ball on the warning track ? just in front of the 404 foot sign. Rick Ankiel made a running, diving catch of a Victor Martinez line drive in the second. The Astros entered the game with a league-leading 41 double plays turned and 3B Brandon Laird and 2B Marwin Gonzalez added another in the top of the eighth.

Miguel Cabrera had another gem at third base for the Tigers when he made a diving stop of a sharply hit Brandon Laird grounder ? as he rolled and tumbled, nailed a throw from his back to first base for the out.

Fielder bobbled a hit by Gonzalez to lead off the sixth but doubled him off at first when he caught a Grossman line drive. ?
Tigers OF Austin Jackson had a nice running catch in center field to end the game.

Injury update: OF J.D. Martinez continues his rehab assignment with Double A Corpus Christi. In four games, he is hitting .200 (3-for-15). He has been on the 15-day disabled list since April 20 with a sprained right knee.

Up Next: The Astros will have a day off on Monday before continuing their longest homestand of the season. First up is a three-game series with the Angels beginning on Tuesday. RHP Jordan Lyles (0-0, 3.60) will start for Houston while LHP C.J. Wilson (3-0, 4.04) takes the mound for Los Angeles.?

Source: http://www.csnhouston.com/blog/astros-talk/astros-avoid-no-no-swept-tigers

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Heritage study sets off immigration bill squabble

(AP) ? A bipartisan Senate immigration bill would cost the government a net $6.3 trillion over the next 50 years to provide benefits for millions of people now living in the U.S. illegally, the Heritage Foundation said in a report Monday, setting off a fierce dispute with fellow conservatives who attacked the study as flawed and political.

The Heritage study said immigrants granted new legal status under the bill would eat up more than $9 trillion in health, education, retirement and other benefits over their lifetime, while contributing only around $3 trillion in taxes. Republicans and conservative groups who support the bill quickly countered that the study failed to measure broader economic benefits from an immigration overhaul, including a more robust workforce that would boost the gross domestic product.

"The Heritage Foundation document is a political document; it's not a very serious analysis," said former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, a Republican who's part of a task force with the nonprofit Bipartisan Policy Center that supports the bill. "This study is designed to try to scare conservative Republicans into thinking the cost here is goin1g to be so gigantic that you can't possibly be for it."

Former Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., the Heritage Foundation's new president, dismissed such criticism.

"It's clear a number of people in Washington who might benefit from an amnesty, as well as a number of people in Congress, do not want to consider the costs," DeMint said. "No sensible thinking person could read this study and conclude that over 50 years that it could possibly have a positive economic impact."

The brouhaha developed as both sides prepare for the landmark bill to undergo its first tests later this week in the Senate Judiciary Committee, which will begin voting on amendments Thursday. It underscored the high political stakes for both supporters and opponents, as each jockeyed to define the legislation. And it laid bare splits within the Republican Party, where business-oriented leaders such as Barbour and anti-tax activist Grover Norquist are pushing for immigration reform, while more ideologically focused lawmakers and groups are voicing increasingly loud opposition.

The Heritage report was a reprisal of a study the group released at the height of the last congressional debate on immigration, in 2007, which said the bill being considered then would have cost $2.6 trillion. That figure, too, was disputed, but it carried weight with Republicans and helped lead to the legislation's eventual defeat in the Senate.

This time, supporters of the bill are determined not to let opponents wrest control of the debate. Anticipating Heritage's release of its new report, bill supporters responded quickly with conference calls and talking points criticizing its methodology and the foundation's agenda.

The Heritage authors acknowledged their report does not attempt to offer a comprehensive analysis of the entire 844-page immigration bill, which would boost border security, change legal immigration and worker programs, require all employers to check their workers' legal status and offer eventual citizenship to the estimated 11 million immigrants already living in the country illegally.

Instead, the Heritage study focused almost exclusively on the added costs the government would incur in providing benefits to immigrants here illegally once they gain legal status. These include Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, health care, welfare, public education, services like police and fire protection, highways and parks. The study said an average adult now living in the U.S. illegally would receive $592,000 more in government benefits over her lifetime than she would pay in taxes.

"It becomes extraordinarily expensive," the lead author, Robert Rector, said at a press conference near the Capitol for unveiling the report.

Costs are higher for this bill than the last one in 2007, Rector said, partly because government spending itself has grown more generous.

Other groups criticized several the Heritage report's assertions, including an assumption that most newly legalized immigrants would remain in households that consume more government benefits than they pay in taxes, discounting the possibility that many of them would become upwardly mobile, move into higher tax brackets, pay more in taxes and use fewer services.

"It doesn't match what has happened in America," Barbour said.

Barbour was joined on a conference call by economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office and chief economic adviser to Republican Sen. John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign who now heads the American Action Forum, a conservative public policy institute.

Holtz-Eakin dismissed the Heritage study, saying it failed to measure broader economic benefits from the legalization of a large new workforce and that 50 years is too long a time frame for an accurate assessment of the impact. Holtz-Eakin has conducted an analysis concluding that because of low U.S. birth rates, the economy and population will decline without immigration. An immigration overhaul, he said, would boost annual GDP growth by nearly a percentage point and reduce federal deficits by a total of $2.5 trillion over 10 years.

"All that is absolutely absent from this study, which as a result is a narrow, incomplete look at the immigration reform issue and focuses, in what should be a benefit-cost analysis, almost exclusively on costs," Holtz-Eakin said.

The Libertarian-leaning Cato Institute also made experts available to criticize the study, which it derided ahead of time as "fatally flawed." House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., who's taking an increasingly visible role backing immigration legislation, weighed in with a statement saying, "The Congressional Budget Office has found that fixing our broken immigration system could help our economy grow. A proper accounting of immigration reform should take into account these dynamic effects."

Authors of the immigration bill, which was introduced last month by a group of four Republican and four Democratic senators, are waiting to get an official cost estimate of the costs of the bill from the Congressional Budget Office. They have pledged it will not cost the government money, partly because the bill puts immigrants who have been in the country illegally in a provisional legal status for 10 years during which they can't get government benefits. The CBO typically measures costs of bills over a 10-year period.

___

Follow Erica Werner on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ericawerner

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-05-06-Immigration-Opponents/id-2818cbc1cf6549c494b7ee044914c7ca

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Doctors to older, heavy smokers: Get CT screening for lung cancer

By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stepping into the debate over who should be screened for lung cancer, a leading medical specialty group issued new guidelines on Tuesday recommending that doctors offer annual low-dose CT (computed tomography) scanning to people whose age and smoking history puts them at significant risk of lung cancer.

That means current smokers aged 55 to 74 with more than 30 pack-years of smoking, or former smokers with that profile who have quit within the last 15 years, said the American College of Chest Physicians.

That was the population in whom the largest-ever lung-cancer-screening study, the National Lung Screening Test, found CT screening cuts deaths from lung cancer.

A pack-year is a measure defined as smoking 20 cigarettes a day for a year or any equivalent, such as two packs a day for six months.

That describes an estimated 7 million people, says chest physician David Midthun of the Mayo Clinic.

The NLST, which studied 53,000 current or former heavy smokers, concluded in 2011 that CT scanning reduced mortality from lung cancer in this high-risk group by 20 percent compared to no screening or to X-rays. CT finds small cancers, which can be cured with surgery, that X-rays cannot.

But other medical groups that have weighed in on annual CT screening for lung cancers cast a wider net. Last year, for instance, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) recommended that people 50 (not 55) or older who have at least 20 (not 30) pack years of smoking plus one additional risk factor, such as having chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder or a close relative with lung cancer, also be screened.

Experts are divided on how primary care physicians will implement the recommendations. One concern is that CT screening for lung cancer will proliferate like PSA tests for prostate cancer, which are often given for free in such non-medical settings as sports events.

Marketing for such mass screenings encourage men to get a test that, experts from the American Cancer Society to the American Urological Association now agree, should not be routinely offered to most men, since it leads to biopsies and surgeries that can cause impotence and incontinence but prevents few deaths from prostate cancer.

"Where we have to be wary," said Dr Frank Detterbeck, chief of thoracic surgery at Yale University School of Medicine, who helped develop the screening guidelines for the College of Chest Physicians, "is with entrepreneurs who decide to offer CT screening for free," as some medical centers are already doing.

That may seem like a generous public service, but Detterbeck says there is an "inherent conflict" in taking a loss up front and planning "to make up for it with profits from tests and procedures on things that you find. The problem is that you find a lot of things with screening," but about 97 percent "are nothing. So (free screening) creates pressure to intervene more frequently, whereas doing the right thing dictates that you only intervene when it is really suspicious for cancer."

LEADING KILLER

Lung cancer kills more people in the United States than any other cancer, claiming just under 160,0000 lives each year, more than breast, colon, prostate and pancreatic cancer combined. Only 16 percent of patients live five years after their diagnosis, an indication of how ineffective treatments are.

By the time most patients are diagnosed, the cancer has spread to such organs as the bones and brain. In contrast, early-stage lung cancers "have not metastasized, so surgery is more likely to bring a complete elimination of disease," said Mayo's Midthun.

CT screening is not without risks, however, which is why some experts are concerned about mission creep. Physicians expect worried smokers who fall just outside the new guideline - a 54-year-old with 30 pack-years, for instance - to press their physicians for CT screening, which costs several hundred dollars.

"Requests for CT screening from smokers slightly outside the (chest physicians') new guidelines is an issue we'll face," said Dr Peter Mazzone, a lung specialist at the Cleveland Clinic. "All you can do as a physician is try your very best to stick to the parameters."

Doing otherwise, by offering CT screening to people at lower risk for lung cancer, will find many more suspicious nodules but prevent many fewer lung cancer deaths, tipping the balance toward greater risk than benefit.

"You find a lot of things and most of them are nothing," said Detterbeck.

Nevertheless these can cause worry, additional testing and an invasive biopsy, which is often done via a long needle inserted through the chest wall. Another risk is that CT itself can itself cause lung or breast cancer.

On the benefit side, the NLST found that the number of high-risk smokers who had to be screened with CT to save one person from dying of lung cancer was 320. This compares to 780 women who need to get a screening mammogram for one to be saved from dying of breast cancer.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/doctors-older-heavy-smokers-ct-screening-lung-cancer-041242999.html

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Monday, May 6, 2013

More than a good eye: Robot uses arms, location and more to discover objects

May 6, 2013 ? A robot can struggle to discover objects in its surroundings when it relies on computer vision alone. But by taking advantage of all of the information available to it -- an object's location, size, shape and even whether it can be lifted -- a robot can continually discover and refine its understanding of objects, say researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute.

The Lifelong Robotic Object Discovery (LROD) process developed by the research team enabled a two-armed, mobile robot to use color video, a Kinect depth camera and non-visual information to discover more than 100 objects in a home-like laboratory, including items such as computer monitors, plants and food items.

Normally, the CMU researchers build digital models and images of objects and load them into the memory of HERB -- the Home-Exploring Robot Butler -- so the robot can recognize objects that it needs to manipulate. Virtually all roboticists do something similar to help their robots recognize objects. With the team's implementation of LROD, called HerbDisc, the robot now can discover these objects on its own.

With more time and experience, HerbDisc gradually refines its models of the objects and begins to focus its attention on those that are most relevant to its goal -- helping people accomplish tasks of daily living.

Findings from the research study will be presented May 8 at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation in Karlsruhe, Germany.

The robot's ability to discover objects on its own sometimes takes even the researchers by surprise, said Siddhartha Srinivasa, associate professor of robotics and head of the Personal Robotics Lab, where HERB is being developed. In one case, some students left the remains of lunch -- a pineapple and a bag of bagels -- in the lab when they went home for the evening. The next morning, they returned to find that HERB had built digital models of both the pineapple and the bag and had figured out how it could pick up each one.

"We didn't even know that these objects existed, but HERB did," said Srinivasa, who jointly supervised the research with Martial Hebert, professor of robotics. "That was pretty fascinating."

Discovering and understanding objects in places filled with hundreds or thousands of things will be a crucial capability once robots begin working in the home and expanding their role in the workplace. Manually loading digital models of every object of possible relevance simply isn't feasible, Srinivasa said. "You can't expect Grandma to do all this," he added.

Object recognition has long been a challenging area of inquiry for computer vision researchers. Recognizing objects based on vision alone quickly becomes an intractable computational problem in a cluttered environment, Srinivasa said. But humans don't rely on sight alone to understand objects; babies will squeeze a rubber ducky, beat it against the tub, dunk it -- even stick it in their mouth. Robots, too, have a lot of "domain knowledge" about their environment that they can use to discover objects.

Taking advantage of all of HERB's senses required a research team with complementary expertise -- Srinivasa's insights on robotic manipulation and Hebert's in-depth knowledge of computer vision. Alvaro Collet, a robotics Ph.D. student they co-advised, led the development of HerbDisc. Collet is now a scientist at Microsoft.

Depth measurements from HERB's Kinect sensors proved to be particularly important, Hebert said, providing three-dimensional shape data that is highly discriminative for household items.

Other domain knowledge available to HERB includes location -- whether something is on a table, on the floor or in a cupboard. The robot can see whether a potential object moves on its own, or is moveable at all. It can note whether something is in a particular place at a particular time. And it can use its arms to see if it can lift the object -- the ultimate test of its "objectness."

"The first time HERB looks at the video, everything 'lights up' as a possible object," Srinivasa said. But as the robot uses its domain knowledge, it becomes clearer what is and isn't an object. The team found that adding domain knowledge to the video input almost tripled the number of objects HERB could discover and reduced computer processing time by a factor of 190. A HERB's-eye view of objects is available on YouTube.

HERB's definition of an object -- something it can lift -- is oriented toward its function as an assistive device for people, doing things such as fetching items or microwaving meals. "It's a very natural, robot-driven process," Srinivasa said. "As capabilities and situations change, different things become important." For instance, HERB can't yet pick up a sheet of paper, so it ignores paper. But once HERB has hands capable of manipulating paper, it will learn to recognize sheets of paper as objects.

Though not yet implemented, HERB and other robots could use the Internet to create an even richer understanding of objects. Earlier work by Srinivasa showed that robots can use crowdsourcing via Amazon Mechanical Turk to help understand objects. Likewise, a robot might access image sites, such as RoboEarth, ImageNet or 3D Warehouse, to find the name of an object, or to get images of parts of the object it can't see.

Bo Xiong, a student at Connecticut College, and Corina Gurau, a student at Jacobs University in Bremen, Germany, also contributed to this study.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/TuAePjIEyf0/130506114003.htm

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Sunday, May 5, 2013

Moldovan parliament moves to sack judges as crisis deepens

By Alexander Tanas

CHISINAU (Reuters) - Moldova's parliament gave itself powers to sack constitutional judges and change election rules, moves Brussels said would harm the country's bid for closer ties with the European Union.

Politicians passed the new laws late on Friday in the latest round of maneuvering in a political crisis that has paralyzed legislation in the impoverished former Soviet republic for months.

Moldova's last government, led by Prime Minister Vlad Filat, resigned in March after losing a confidence vote amid feuding among leaders of a dominant pro-European coalition.

Filat set out to get his job back, but Moldova's Constitutional Court wrecked his plans last month by barring him from running for prime minister or even heading a caretaker government.

On Friday, Filat's Liberal Democratic party and the country's opposition communists joined forces to pass a law giving parliament the power to sack the previously untouchable Constitutional Court judges.

Another new bill said political parties had to get at least six percent of the vote to get into parliament - up from the previous four percent - a change that could hurt the smaller Liberal party in the next election, scheduled for 2014.

Parliament also voted to boost the powers of the interim government and its head, Filat's former deputy Iurie Leanca, allowing him to sack ministers and other senior officials, some of whom were appointed by Filat's erstwhile allies, the Liberal and Democratic parties.

EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Stefan Fuele, EU Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy, issued a joint statement late on Friday saying the new legislation was undemocratic.

"This law (on Constitutional Court judges), as well as a number of other important laws, touching upon fundamental issues for the functioning of Moldova's democracy, have been adopted with extreme haste, and without proper consultation with Moldovan society, or appropriate regard to European standards on constitutional reform," they said.

The laws were part of "a worrying new pattern of decision-making in Moldova ... where the institutions of the state have been used in the interest of a few", Ashton and Fuele said.

The decisions could have a long-term impact on "Moldova's aspirations", they added.

Until its breakdown this year, Moldova's ruling coalition had focused on securing agreements on free trade and political association with the EU, tentatively scheduled for November this year.

But with the crisis likely to trigger an early election the fate of the deals has become unclear.

President Nicolae Timofti has yet to sign the laws passed by parliament - which some deputies said were illegitimate because of the absence of the chamber's speaker Marian Lupu, sacked in a round of political wrangling last week.

Moldova is one of Europe's poorest countries with an average monthly salary of about $230. Heavily reliant on Russian energy supplies, its economy is kept afloat by remittances from several hundred thousand Moldovans working in Russia and EU countries.

(Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/moldovan-parliaments-powers-hurt-eu-chances-brussels-113627782.html

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Iran calls for stand against Israel after Syria attack

DUBAI (Reuters) - Iran called on the region to unite against Israel after a reported attack on Syria and said it was ready to train the Damascus government's army.

Israel carried out its second air strike in days on Syria early on Sunday, targeting Iranian-supplied missiles headed for Lebanon's Hezbollah, a Western intelligence source said.

Tehran on Sunday denied the attack was aimed at "its missiles destined for Hezbollah resistance fighters in Lebanon," according to the Islamic state's English-language Press TV.

Iran has supported its ally Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in his efforts to suppress a rebellion that has raged for more than two years and which Tehran and Damascus say is being waged by Western-backed "terrorists".

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast urged countries in the region to stand against the "assault", the Fars news agency reported on Sunday.

Iranian army ground forces commander Ahmad Reza Pourdastan said on Sunday Iran was ready to support its ally.

"Syria has a powerful army and with the structure and experience it has against the Zionist regime (Israel) it can definitely defend itself and there is no need for intervention by other countries," Pourdastan said, according to Fars.

"But if they need training we can help them," he added.

Iran has denied supporting Assad militarily, although Western diplomats have said Iranian weapons pour into Syria via Iraq, Turkey, and Lebanon.

Ali Akbar Velayati, an adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said in January Tehran would consider an attack on Syria an attack on itself.

(Reporting By Yeganeh Torbati; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-condemns-israeli-attack-syria-081045833.html

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Solar Impulse airplane begins fuel-free odyssey across America

A Swiss-made, solar-powered airplane called Solar Impulse took off Friday on the first leg of an aerial odyssey across America, beginning what's expected to be the slowest flight from San Francisco to Phoenix with nary a drop of fuel.

Adventurer Bertrand Piccard piloted the craft, which has the wingspan of a jumbo jet but the weight of a typical passenger car, from Moffett Field into the Bay Area's skies at 6:12 a.m. ET (9:12 a.m. ET) and headed south toward Arizona.

"Everything looking fine down here," Mission Control told Piccard after takeoff.

The trip is due to take about 19 hours. You could drive that distance in two-thirds that time ? but that's not the point.

"A flying laboratory for clean technologies, this prototype is the result of seven years of intense work in the fields of materials science, energy management and man-machine interface," Andre Borschberg, Solar Impulse's co-founder and CEO, said before the flight.

Borschberg and Piccard will be taking turns in the pilot's seat for a months-long series of flights that should end up in New York around the Fourth of July. Each leg of the odyssey will be covered with streaming video, and the project plans to collect thousands of names that will be added to a "Clean Generation" list of supporters carried in the cockpit.

All of Solar Impulse's power comes from its solar cells, which soak up sunlight and store the electrical energy in batteries for when the sun isn't shining. The plane generates as much power as a motor scooter for its four 10-horsepower motors. That's why the carbon-fiber craft has to be so big and light.

The "Across America" mission builds upon Piccard's experience as a record-setting, round-the-world balloonist, and draws upon financial backing from Swiss business concerns. In 2010, Solar Impulse took on on the world's first solar-powered night flight, a 26-hour affair in Switzerland. The next year, it made the first international solar flight, from Switzerland to Belgium to France. And in 2012, it took on the first solar-powered intercontinental flight, from Europe to North Africa.

Over the next couple of months, Solar Impulse is due to fly from Phoenix to Dallas-Fort Worth, then to St. Louis, then Washington, then New York. As ambitious as this odyssey is, it's just a warm-up for the venture's ultimate goal: circumnavigating the world with solar power.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2b79a780/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cfutureoftech0Csolar0Eimpulse0Eairplane0Ebegins0Efuel0Efree0Eodyssey0Eacross0Eamerica0E6C9761186/story01.htm

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