Thursday, May 2, 2013

Israel: Conflict over recognition, not territory

JERUSALEM (AP) ? Israel's prime minister gave a cool reception Wednesday to a new Arab Mideast peace initiative, saying the conflict with the Palestinians isn't about territory, but rather the Palestinians' refusal to recognize Israel as the Jewish homeland.

The remarks signaled trouble for U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's new push for Mideast peace and risked reinforcing Benjamin Netanyahu's image as a hard-liner unwilling to make the tough concessions required for peace.

Netanyahu has not commented directly on the Arab League's latest initiative, but his words questioned its central tenet ? the exchange of captured land for peace ? and appeared to counter a modified peace proposal from the Arab world that Washington and Netanyahu's own chief negotiator have welcomed.

The original 2002 Arab initiative offered a comprehensive peace between Israel and the Muslim world in exchange for a withdrawal from all territories Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war. Sweetening the offer this week, the Arab sponsor said final borders could be drawn through mutually agreed land swaps.

Netanyahu questioned the premise that borders are the key.

"The root of the conflict isn't territorial. It began way before 1967," he told Israeli diplomats. "The Palestinians' failure to accept the state of Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people is the root of the conflict. If we reach a peace agreement, I want to know that the conflict won't continue ? that the Palestinians won't come later with more demands."

The Palestinians have rejected Netanyahu's demand to recognize Israel as a Jewish state, saying that would undermine the rights of Israel's Arab minority as well as millions of refugees whose families lost properties during the war surrounding Israel's establishment in 1948. The fate of the refugees is a core issue that would need to be resolved in a final peace deal.

After meeting U.S. congressmen Wednesday, Netanyahu said he appreciated the efforts of President Barack Obama and Kerry to restart negotiations but said that for talks to succeed, the Palestinians must also guarantee solid security arrangements. "We're prepared to discuss many things, but I will never compromise on Israel's security," he said.

Qatari Prime Minister Sheik Hamad Bin Jassem Al Thani tried to allay some of the Israeli concerns as he presented the offer on Monday.

Speaking on behalf of an Arab League delegation, he reiterated the need to base an agreement between Israel and a future Palestine on the 1967 lines, but for the first time, he cited the possibility of "comparable," mutually agreed and "minor" land swaps between the Israelis and the Palestinians.

The sides were reportedly close to an agreement based on these guidelines during the last serious round of talks in 2008 but the talks failed. Swaps of territory were also a basis for a failed summit in the U.S. in 2000.

Negotiations have largely been frozen since 2008, and the new U.S. administration has been trying to get the peace talks back on track.

As part of his effort, Kerry has been pushing Arab leaders to embrace a modified version of the Arab peace plan. The changes are meant to win Israeli support by allowing it to keep parts of the West Bank and east Jerusalem as part of an agreement.

Though Netanyahu's office has remained silent on the modified Arab proposal, his chief peace negotiator, Justice Minister Tzipi Livni, has welcomed it, as have Israel's president and the main opposition parties. However, Netanyahu's own political base and one of his main government coalition partners are either opposed to giving up land or suspicious of the Arabs' motivations.

Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, a rival of Netanyahu, said the initiative disproves the belief held by many in Israel that "there is no one to speak to."

"We cannot, under any circumstances, again be the ones that express doubts about a process that can lead to negotiations," Olmert told Israel's Channel 10 TV, urging Netanyahu to capitalize on "a historic opportunity."

Opposition Israeli lawmakers also urged Netanyahu to embrace the new Arab outreach.

"It was bad enough that we ignored it once. Ignoring it now ... after everything that is happening in the Arab world, I think it would be a very, very big mistake," said Merav Michaeli, a lawmaker from the centrist Labor Party. She said if Netanyahu does not respond, it would show that he does not want a peace accord.

Kerry called the new peace plan a "very big step forward," though Palestinian officials have been cool to the concept, insisting that negotiations still need start with the 1967 lines.

The original 2002 Arab peace initiative offered Israel peace with the entire Muslim world in exchange for a "complete withdrawal" from territories captured in the 1967 Mideast war. The Palestinians claim the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, all seized by Israel in 1967, for their future state. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005.

Though the latest proposal appears aimed at the Palestinians, the original formula refers to other territories as well. Israel also captured the Sinai from Egypt and Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 war, withdrawing from Sinai in 1982. Peace talks between Israel and Syria over the fate of the Golan failed more than a decade ago.

___

Associated Press writer Daniel Estrin contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-conflict-over-recognition-not-territory-140408627.html

Scary Movie 5 MTV Movie Awards 2013 masters masters leaderboard Psy Gentleman Candice Glover Angel Cabrera

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

6 Surprising facts about Chinese aid to Africa

It?s undeniable. China has a huge presence in Africa. Many Africans can point out Chinese-funded buildings, roads and mines, and it?s not uncommon to see more than a few Chinese faces around construction projects and efforts across the development sector. As the country moves toward the up and up both economically and as a world superpower, so will its aid to the continent.

Chinese and Senegalese workers

Senegalese and Chinese workers at a construction site in Dakar. Photo credit: Seyllou/AFP/Getty Images

At this critical juncture, the world wants to know:?How much aid does China give Africa? Does it help or hurt aid from the United States and other Western donors? It?s been hard to tell, since China releases little information, outside estimates vary widely, and their aid doesn?t come in the form of traditional OECD-type assistance. Plus, there aren?t any mechanisms to accurately measure aid from non-DAC countries. Perhaps until now.

To help answer these questions, an organization called AidData?compiled a database of thousands of media reports on Chinese-backed projects?in Africa from 2000 to 2011. The database includes information on 1,673 projects in 51 African countries and on $75 billion in commitments of official finance.

Here?s what they discovered: official development finance to Africa seems to be roughly similar in size to the finance provided by the US.?And that ? a pretty significant amount ? is just from the official numbers. According to Brad Parks, the co-executive director of AidData, it?s kind of impossible to give an exact number, since so much aid comes in the form of labor, expertise and other kinds of non-official aid like in-kind donations, making it really hard to measure.

But before you make your assumptions about Chinese aid,?here?s some surprising facts on Chinese aid?from the Center for Global Development?s new report on the findings from AidData, ?China?s Development Finance to Africa: A Media-Based Approach to Data Collection,? which you can access here.

1. Chinese aid to Africa is not new?
Although this may be the first time you are hearing about Chinese aid to Africa, it?s not new. China has been giving aid to Africa since 1956.

2. The majority of Chinese aid from the past decade, among other things, go toward transport and storage, energy generation and supply and communications.
Some Africans say that the Chinese, unlike donors in the West, have a knack for knowing what Africans really need ? including vital infrastructure projects like these. According to economist Yan Wang from Peking University, China accounts for more than 30 percent of total value of infrastructure projects in Africa, higher than other donors.?And African governments, businesses, and citizens are all clamoring for infrastructure investment.

3. Women, food aid and education rank as some of the lowest priorities for Chinese donors
No explanation needed here, but experts at AidData suggest that it may be due to the fact that these are major focus areas for Western donors.

4. Ghana, Nigeria and Sudan are the biggest recipients of Chinese aid
Those countries received about a quarter of a trillion dollars in the past 10 years. Most of the projects are going toward ? surprise, surprise ? infrastructure, like oil pipelines.

?5. Chinese aid takes a very different ?form? than traditional Western aid?
Not necessarily a bad thing, just different. These forms (or ?unofficial finance?, as the report calls it) include foreign direct investment without state involvement and NGO aid. This makes it hard for experts, both in the West and in China, to track.

6. There?s a lot of assumptions about Chinese aid ? it?s hard to say whether they?re true.
Many people are saying that China is giving to Africa just because they want access to their natural resources, don?t care about environmental or labor standards, and funding projects that have a weak link to growth. But the Center for Global Development encourages people to do their research when making these claims. Why? Because there?s no robust evidence to prove these points. Read up on it in Section 3 in the report.

AidData?s database?is the first step in increasing transparency on Chinese aid to Africa ? but it is by no means a completed project. Hopefully, thanks to the help of crowdsourcing, it will help measure aid from other emerging G20 countries like India, South Korea and South Africa, which like China, do not give aid through traditional DAC standards.

Kudos to AidData for creating this database, and we?re excited to learn more insights on aid from new donors. And don?t forget to read CGD?s report here.

Did any of these facts surprise you? Tell us in a comment below.?

?

Source: http://www.one.org/us/2013/04/30/6-surprising-facts-about-chinese-aid-to-africa/

my morning jacket roger goodell psychosis dianna agron million hoodie march tebow trade mike the situation

Steven Soderbergh's State of the Cinema Address : The New Yorker

It?s a familiar critical theme that Steven Soderbergh?s movies are obsessed with process, with the realization of an idea, and that theme isn?t just in his movies, it?s the way he thinks, as seen in a speech he gave last Saturday at the San Francisco International Film Festival?its annual State of Cinema Address?that none of us were meant to see. But the speech was tweeted, recorded, video-captured, posted, and, now (at Deadline.com) transcribed, and it?s a fascinating read, as much for what it says (and doesn?t) about the state of cinema as about Soderbergh?s own state of mind and place in the art of cinema and in the movie business.

That distinction, by the way, is his own:

The simplest way that I can describe it is that a movie is something you see, and cinema is something that?s made?. Cinema is a specificity of vision. It?s an approach in which everything matters. It?s the polar opposite of generic or arbitrary and the result is as unique as a signature or a fingerprint. It isn?t made by a committee, and it isn?t made by a company, and it isn?t made by the audience. It means that if this filmmaker didn?t do it, it either wouldn?t exist at all, or it wouldn?t exist in anything like this form.

This distinction is the core of Soderbergh?s speech?the inhibition and stultification of the art of cinema by the movie business, and, in particular, by the studios. He says that the cinema is ?not about money, it?s about good ideas followed up by a well-developed aesthetic,? whereas, of course, the studios are about the money, which is why he thinks that ?cinema ? is under assault by the studios and, from what I can tell, with the full support of the audience.? He blames executives who don?t ?love movies? and don?t ?know movies,? he blames the trend toward producing big-budget films for the foreign market, because

things that travel best are going to be action-adventure, science fiction, fantasy, spectacle, some animation thrown in there. Obviously the bigger the budget, the more people this thing is going to have to appeal to, the more homogenized it?s got to be, the more simplified it?s got to be. So things like cultural specificity and narrative complexity, and, god forbid, ambiguity, those become real obstacles to the success of the film here and abroad.

He blames the high cost of marketing, explaining that this, not his production budget, is the reason why his forthcoming film about Liberace, ?Behind the Candelabra,? ended up at HBO rather than a movie studio. He blames the studio?s excessive reliance on market-testing, on focus groups, and even, ingeniously, on the aftermath of 9/11:

I still think the country is in some form of P.T.S.D. about that event, and that we haven?t really healed in any sort of complete way, and that people are, as a result, looking more toward escapist entertainment?. There?s a very good argument to be made that only somebody who has it really good would want to make a movie that makes you feel really bad. People are working longer hours for less money these days, and maybe when they get in a movie, they want a break.

But, above all, he blames ?the business and the money, because this is the force that is pushing cinema out of mainstream movies.? And that?s where Soderbergh?s argument goes off the rails. The word ?mainstream? simply doesn?t mean anything anymore. There are many audiences; sometimes it happens that a nine-figure movie, such as ?Hugo? or ?The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,? will be, to use Soderbergh?s term, cinema, but there?s no reason to think that such movies should be any likelier to enter the artistic pantheon than movies made on smaller budgets for ostensibly more self-selectingly sophisticated audiences. It?s hard to accuse studios of pusillanimity in a year?s span that has seen such distinctive, personal, and radical movies as ?Moonrise Kingdom,? ?The Master,? ?To the Wonder,? and, yes, Soderbergh?s own ?Magic Mike? and ?Haywire,? come out for general viewing.

On the other hand, Soderbergh has a very specific proposal in mind, a practical recommendation for the studios to foster the cinema; it?s a brilliant idea, though one that, I think, is better suited to an independent producer who has less corporate structure and less overhead to contend with than do studios:

In my view, in this business which is totally talent-driven, it?s about horses, not races. I think if I were going to run a studio I?d just be gathering the best filmmakers I could find and sort of let them do their thing within certain economic parameters. So I would call Shane Carruth or Barry Jenkins or Amy Seimetz and I?d bring them in and go, ok, what do you want to do? What are the things you?re interested in doing? What do we have here that you might be interested in doing? If there was some sort of point of intersection I?d go: O.K., look, I?m going to let you make three movies over five years, I?m going to give you this much money in production costs, I?m going to dedicate this much money on marketing. You can sort of proportion it how you want, you can spend it all on one and none on the other two, but go make something.

Of course, the three filmmakers he mentions are independent filmmakers, working on shoestring budgets and sometimes self-financing, whose films have been released (Seimetz?s, as recently as last Friday) to great acclaim and whose work is personal and distinctive. (I was less a fan of Jenkins?s first feature, but it had some terrific elements and I?m impatient to see what he?ll do next, too.) Soderbergh, who has been involved with Hollywood for more than twenty years, has made his living as a director?something that many independents aren?t doing, and making a living is another of his recurring subjects.

There are, right now, three tiers of filmmaking?the highest financial level, filmmakers who make big-budget internationally marketed productions; off-Hollywood auteurs, such as Wes Anderson, Paul Thomas Anderson, and Sofia Coppola, who work with Hollywood actors at far lower budget levels, often with money from independent producers; and independent filmmakers who usually work with actors from their own circles (and sometimes turn them into stars) and who struggle to get their films released?and even then have trouble making a living.

Soderbergh is right that outside work makes it harder to make movies (or to do any sort of artistic work). Though teaching is a well-established way for poets and writers to support themselves, filmmaking is both collective and site-specific; ?by hook or by crook,? or by any means necessary, is as good a rule of thumb for making movies as for any endeavor, but what Soderbergh envisions for filmmakers who get, in effect, a studio grant?freedom of time as well as a wider range of practical resources?might well liberate great creative energies and result in a spate of original and inventive new movies. I hope that some producer takes him up on the notion. Yet, given the number of good and distinctive movies that are being made, at all three levels (though mainly the latter two), I don?t see any reason to despair. The world of independent filmmaking, for all the practical difficulties that its artists face (and perhaps as a result of those difficulties, which often filter into the substance of their films), is a uniquely powerful engine of artistic invention?and it will continue to be so with or without the benefit of studio support. The most important thing for a filmmaker is to be the master of a process of production, not to be controlled by it, and for all the appeal of a five-year plan of financing, I wonder whether the administrative burden of its management wouldn?t be an extra bureaucratic layer that would weigh down the very creativity it?s meant to foster?and I?d be interested to hear from independent filmmakers on this very subject.

But it?s worth looking at another recent interview with Soderbergh?one by the journalist Sebastian Handke which appeared last week in the German newspaper Die Zeit. Soderbergh brings up (as he doesn?t in San Francisco) his personal situation, as a retired director:

Oh, I?m happy not to have to adjust a camera on a damn car anymore. Since I was twelve, I?ve been up to my neck in film. That?s a long time when one is obsessed every day.

Handke asks Soderbergh whether the way he feels now is akin to ?the creative crisis after ?King of the Hill?? and Soderbergh answers,

At that time, I had gone off-course. But I also knew why that was: I was working too slowly. This time, I don?t know how the problem can be solved. I only know everything depends on whether I succeed in becoming an amateur again.

It?s a great line, and a great aspiration; but given Soderbergh?s experience and station, it reminds me of another great line, this one from Picasso: ?I?d like to live as a poor man with lots of money.? The amateur or ultra-low-budget filmmaker who struggles to make a living, who puts her own money into a production or sweats to find small sums from private producers or Kickstarter, often makes that the subject of her films. Amy Seimetz?s ?Sun Don?t Shine? is a brilliant low-budget film about low-rent lives; Shane Carruth?s ?Primer? is a startup film about a startup, and ?Upstream Color? is about a startup that blows up and goes into the big time. It may not be obvious from these directors? great powers of cinematic invention, but the convergence of their mode of production with their stories and their aesthetic is itself a part of their art. I suspect that they?ll succeed in doing the same thing at a higher budget level, and when their films achieve a well-deserved level of commercial success and the circumstances of their lives change commensurately. One of the great joys of Soderbergh?s work is his immediate pleasure in the physical side of filmmaking?the camerawork, the editing?which he does himself. Even in a studio production such as his latest film, ?Side Effects,? that pleasure comes through strongly. But indulging those pleasures amateur-style also entails a risk. For Soderbergh to scale back his filmmaking to some elemental level while living a life of Hollywood-funded leisure sounds like a recipe for grotesque slumming; I?m reminded of ?Sullivan?s Travels.?

But if he?s tempted to return to directing, he says that it would be for a television series: ?It?s the pendant to the Russian novel: so many details are possible, so much depth. Television is the place where what distinguishes one director from another is still sought out and encouraged.? Again: theoretically. Europe has had good experience encouraging directors to make idiosyncratic works in the serial format?whether it?s Maurice Pialat?s ?La Maison des Bois,? from 1971, or Rainer Werner Fassbinder?s ?Berlin Alexanderplatz,? from 1980. What remains to be seen is whether American television channels are likely to grant movie directors the sort of freedom that Pialat and Fassbinder enjoyed. New series tend to be the work of directors who are often reduced (and I do mean reduced) to the role of writers and show runners, who convey much of the directorial work of their series to others, to noticeable and regrettable effect. Soderbergh may be the filmmaker who breaks through?whose great career persuades one channel or another to give him the kind of non-formatted, non-delegated control of a series that would render it his own multi-hour, multi-part, yet all the more personal work. In other words, he wants to use the financing and the infrastructure of a television series to make a connected set of movies.

In the meantime, we?ll have half a year to fuel another controversy: if ?Behind the Candelabra,? which will be screened soon at the Cannes Film Festival, is as good as I hope it is?if it?s as good as Soderbergh?s other recent films have been?then it will be a strong contender for year-end honors, even though, as a movie first released here on television, it won?t be eligible for the Oscars.

llustration by Thomas Ehretsmann.

Source: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/movies/2013/05/steven-soderbergh-speech-on-hollywood.html

dwyane wade the night they drove old dixie down levon robbie robertson the curious case of benjamin button secret service prostitute rich ross

Google Glass Is Already This Broken

As the shine wears off the first sparkling new Google Glass headsets out in the wild, the earliest of adopters have started to discover myriad problems with the wearable computers. Beyond aesthetics, professional Glass reviewers and amateur experimenters alike have reported some issues ? bad battery life, a bad fit, vulnerability to hackers, and beyond ? that might make future buyers reconsider the $1,500 investment when the glasses are available to the masses. Luckily, Google has said it will take "a while" before the headset is on sale for real, giving the company plenty of time to get the kinks out of these beta versions. Until then, though, Google has released?a video teaching us the basics. That can only distract us from the following reported flaws for so long.

RELATED: Reports That Google Glass Will Be American-Made Complete Viral Marketing Campaign

Terrible Battery Life

The company line is that the set will last a full day without a charge. But, with normal face-computer use, such as checking emails, taking some pictures, and recording short video, the "poor" battery life lasted five hours, before it "unceremoniously shut itself down," says Engadget's Tim Stevens. Not that a lot of people are going to want to walk around for more than five hours with a computer on their heads, but still: Google promised a full day of wearability, and with heavier use, other users saw way worse results. One six-minute video drained 20 percent of the battery for Glass enthusiast (and nudist) Robert Scoble. Another Glass reviewer?said that a 30-minute video will suck the entire set dry.?

RELATED: Fake Google Glass eBay Auction Pulled After Bids Soar Past $15,000

Huge Security Flaws

One hacker has discovered an exploit that would allow anyone to take over Google Glass, which is about as scary as it sounds: It's like someone gaining access to your phone or computer, but even worse because they can see everything you do. The hacker, Jay Freeman (who goes by the name saurik), has a long technical explanation on his blog, but basically the upshot is as follows: "This means that if you leave your device in someone else's hands, and it has an unlocked bootloader, with just a minute alone they can access anything you have stored on it."

RELATED: This Is Google's Vision of the Future

In addition, Google Glass doesn't have any PIN lock, like smartphones, which as Engadget's Stevens points out, makes the new gadget particularly vulnerable. "There's no way of setting any kind of protection on the thing itself, meaning if you should set it on your desk and walk away, anybody can pick it up, put it on and start sending uncouth emails and pictures to your contacts," Stevens writes.

RELATED: The Plan to Make Google Glass Seem Totally Normal Is Backfiring

Awkward Fit

Stevens said it took him a while to get Google's high-tech frames to sit well on his face.?Shana Lynch, the managing editor of Silicon Valley Business Journal, said her pair only felt comfortable after Google specially fixed it to her face. Of course, not everyone will have that luxury ? never mind the people who have to fit them over prescription glasses. Google has said that it will have a real-glasses compatible version of Glass, but for now the gadget will awkwardly sit itself over prescription glasses, taking that awkward 3D movie experience out in the open. "Depending on the size and shape of those glasses, the eyepiece may be partially blocked by the frame," Stevens writes. "After letting dozens of people briefly try these on, a few with eyesight difficulties were simply unable to focus on the display at all."

RELATED: Google Hopes Google Glass Won't Get You Beat Up

There is another design feature that Google may not have thought all the way through. The titanium band doesn't fold up, so Google Glass is more or less impossible to store. You can't fold it into your shirt, like a pair of sunglasses, or comfortably slip it in your purse.?

So-So Display

From Stevens: "Colors, too, aren't exactly consistent and the whole thing similarly lacks the accuracy of a modern LCD or OLED panel. It almost has the look of an old-school, passive-matrix LCD, with its occasionally murky hues." But he is?the only reviewer?we could find on an extensive search these past few days who had this gripe.?

Messaging Mishaps

Google Glass chimes whenever your face gets a new message, but users can only read the first few lines of text on the screen in front of their eyes. After that, the act of browsing texts involves a bunch of tapping. You can't compose full emails, and all message responses have to be performed with voices, meaning you might not want to say something too private to someone. The speech-to-text doesn't work that well so far, either, so you'd probably only want to dictate a short reply. In addition, none of this works with an iOS device. But, hey, it's still early. This is what beta's for ? for now.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/google-glass-already-broken-150710527.html

carlos santana dodgers triple play baa samoyed kenny powers kenny powers carl hagelin

Humor styles and bullying in schools: Not a laughing matter

May 1, 2013 ? There is a clear link between children's use of humour and their susceptibility to being bullied by their peers, according to a major new study released today by Keele University.

Funded by the Economic and Social Research Council and supported by academics at the University of Strathclyde and Oxford Brookes University, the research examined the links between how 11-13 year olds use different styles of humour and the problem of bullying in schools.

The findings reveal that children who use self-defeating forms of humour -- eg. self-disparaging language / putting themselves down to make other people laugh -- are more likely to be bullied than those who use more positive forms of humour.* The study also found that peer victimisation led to an increase in the use of self-defeating humour over time, showing that victims of bullying are often trapped in a vicious cycle, where being bullied deprives them of the opportunities to practice positive humour with peers and leads them to rely on self-defeating humour, perhaps as a way to get others to like them.

Dr Claire Fox, lead researcher from Keele University, said, "What our study shows is that humour clearly plays an important role in how children interact with one another and that children who use humour to make fun of themselves are at more risk of being bullied. We know that this negative use of humour is a nurtured behavior, influenced by a child's social environment rather than genetics. This makes the behaviour easier to change, so we hope the next step for this study is to see whether it is possible to 'teach' children how to use humour to enhance their resilience and encourage them to not use negative forms of humour."

The two year study involved 1,234 children who were questioned at the beginning and end of each school year. Researchers measured three types of bullying and victimisation: verbal, physical and relational/indirect (e.g. social exclusion, spreading nasty rumours) and used self-reports and peer nominations to draw their conclusions. Each child was also assessed in relation to their number of friends, humour styles, symptoms of depression and loneliness and self-esteem.

*Four types of humour

Positive humour

? Self-enhancing humour, e.g. 'If I am feeling scared I find that it helps to laugh'.

? Affiliative, e.g. 'I often make other people laugh by telling jokes and funny stories'.

Negative humour

? Self-defeating, e.g. 'I often try to get other people to like me more by saying something funny about things that are wrong with me or mistakes that I make'.

? Aggressive, e.g. 'If someone makes a mistake I will often tease them about it'.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Keele University, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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

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/~3/9uaw6eqvyNk/130501090657.htm

ufc 143 what time does the super bowl start super bowl 2012 josephine baker ben gazzara nfl hall of fame 2012 ufc diaz vs condit

Dancing With the Stars Recap: Who's Already Safe?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/dancing-with-the-stars-recap-whos-already-safe/

Avery Johnson iTunes Alfred Morris weight watchers fandango google play Christmas Story

Photos: Anthony Bourdain in Canada

By CNN Staff

updated 10:20 PM EDT, Tue April 30, 2013

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

Anthony Bourdain in Canada

World-renowned chef, best-selling author and Emmy winning television personality Anthony Bourdain is the host of CNN's new showcase for coverage of food and travel. "Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown" is shot entirely on location. On Sunday, April 21, at 9 p.m. ET Bourdain travels to Koreatown in Los Angeles. Follow the show on Twitter and Facebook.

(CNN) -- Related photos: Things not to miss in Quebec

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/rss/cnn_latest/~3/iN7cTU0QXAA/index.html

forrest gump bernard hopkins devils la riots rachel maddow gia utah jazz