Friday, March 29, 2013

Michigan official wants progress in Detroit before funds released

By Dawson Bell

LANSING, Michigan (Reuters) - The newly appointed emergency manager for the City of Detroit has an impressive resume, sweeping powers and at least a temporary reservoir of good will as he seeks a financial turnaround of Michigan's biggest and nearly bankrupt city.

But a powerful state legislative leader told Reuters that before any funds come from Lansing, bankruptcy lawyer Kevyn Orr is going to have to show progress with realistic financial estimates and measures to help the city's finances.

Republican Governor Rick Snyder, who selected the 54-year-old Democrat to serve as Detroit's manager, has spoken in general about the likelihood a turnaround plan will require new financial resources. But Snyder has carefully avoided making any specific pledges or proposals.

State House Speaker Jase Bolger, also a Republican, said he wants to see results before committing major new resources to Detroit. "We're not the slightest bit interested in providing more money for business as usual," he said.

Snyder and other Republican leaders in the state capital have spoken repeatedly about the need for Detroit to overhaul its financial practices. Orr has said he intends to seek improved city services such as street lighting, law enforcement and firefighting, but has not said whether the improvements will cost the city more money.

Orr's March 14 appointment was a watershed moment for Detroit, a city in a long economic decline. Once the fifth largest American city at 1.8 million people, it now ranks 18th with just over 700,000.

In addition to the population decline - the city's population stood at 713,777 after the 2010 census, a 100-year low - Detroit suffers from high unemployment, high crime rates, a flood of home foreclosures and a cut in state funding.

The state might provide one-time assistance to help Orr launch his reform efforts, Bolger said. Orr's appointment could provide an opening for the state to help him launch an effort to right-size city government and provide services, but additional support would depend on the scope of Orr's plans.

"Right now, the question is premature because we don't have a proposal," Bolger said.

The reluctance of state officials to step in with additional help comes after years of city over-spending. Detroit's accumulated annual operating deficits approach $1 billion, and its long term liabilities top $14 billion.

Although State of Michigan finances are on sounder footing today than they were five years ago, there are no obvious sources of state revenue to fill Detroit's needs.

Former State House Fiscal Agency Director Mitch Bean said this week that Michigan's financial condition remains tenuous, and a looming sequester of federal government funding adds to uncertainty about the state's fiscal outlook.

"It's very difficult for me to see (the governor and Legislature) coming up with a bunch of money," Bean said. "There's just not a lot of surplus money out there."

Detroit has found itself on the verge of losing special status that helps boost its revenues because of its population loss. An elevated income tax and a city utility tax both are contingent on the city maintaining its population above a threshold level. But the legislature was forced to reduce the minimum last year as the population dropped below the then-mandated threshold of 750,000 people. The new floor was set at 600,000.

The governor's office noted Detroit is already the recipient of multiple special state programs and tax provisions that generate an extra $164 million in revenues annually.

The state also is picking up the tab for a significant portion of the costs stemming from city turnaround efforts. The state is covering 50 percent of consulting contracts totaling nearly $5 million, and is covering all of Orr's $275,000 salary, Treasury Department spokesman Terry Stanton said.

Speaker Bolger said he sees reasons to be hopeful for progress, even if no significant state funding becomes available.

"I don't think there will be a direct (state) appropriation" to facilitate a Detroit turnaround, he said. "But if there's a partnership, that's good for everybody."

(Reporting by Dawson Bell; Editing by Greg McCune, David Greinsing and Leslie Gevirtz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/michigan-official-wants-progress-detroit-funds-released-110906749.html

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Risk and reward at the dawn of civilian drone age

(AP) ? The dawn of the age of aerial civilian drones is rich with possibilities for people far from the war zones where they made their devastating mark as a weapon of choice against terrorists.

The unmanned, generally small aircraft can steer water and pesticides to crops with precision, saving farmers money while reducing environmental risk. They can inspect distant bridges, pipelines and power lines, and find hurricane victims stranded on rooftops.

Drones ? some as tiny as a hummingbird ? promise everyday benefits as broad as the sky is wide. But the drone industry and those eager to tap its potential are running headlong into fears the peeping-eye, go-anywhere technology will be misused.

Since January, drone-related legislation has been introduced in more than 30 states, largely in response to privacy concerns. Many of the bills would prevent police from using drones for broad public surveillance or to watch individuals without sufficient grounds to believe they were involved in crimes.

Stephen Ingley, executive director of the Airborne Law Enforcement Association, says resistance to the technology is frustrating. Drones "clearly have so much potential for saving lives, and it's a darn shame we're having to go through this right now," he said.

But privacy advocates say now is the time to debate the proper use of civilian drones and set rules, before they become ubiquitous. Sentiment for curbing domestic drone use has brought the left and right together perhaps more than any other recent issue.

"The thought of government drones buzzing overhead and constantly monitoring the activities of law-abiding citizens runs contrary to the notion of what it means to live in a free society," Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said at a recent hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

With military budgets shrinking, drone makers have been counting on the civilian market to spur the industry's growth. Some companies that make drones or supply support equipment and services say the uncertainty has caused them to put U.S. expansion plans on hold, and they are looking overseas for new markets.

"Our lack of success in educating the public about unmanned aircraft is coming back to bite us," said Robert Fitzgerald, CEO of the BOSH Group of Newport News, Va., which provides support services to drone users.

"The U.S. has been at the lead of this technology a long time," he said. "If our government holds back this technology, there's the freedom to move elsewhere ... and all of a sudden these things will be flying everywhere else and competing with us."

Law enforcement is expected to be one of the bigger initial markets for civilian drones. Last month, the FBI used drones to maintain continuous surveillance of a bunker in Alabama where a 5-year-old boy was being held hostage.

In Virginia, the state General Assembly passed a bill that would place a two-year moratorium on the use of drones by state and local law enforcement. The measure is supported by groups as varied as the American Civil Liberties Union on the left and the Virginia Tea Party Patriots Federation on the right.

Gov. Bob McDonnell is proposing amendments that would retain the broad ban on spy drones but allow specific exemptions when lives are in danger, such as for search-and rescue operations. The legislature reconvenes on April 3 to consider the matter.

Seattle abandoned its drone program after community protests in February. The city's police department had purchased two drones through a federal grant without consulting the city council.

In Congress, Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., co-chairman of the House's privacy caucus, has introduced a bill that prohibits the Federal Aviation Administration from issuing drone licenses unless the applicant provides a statement explaining who will operate the drone, where it will be flown, what kind of data will be collected, how the data will be used, whether the information will be sold to third parties and the period for which the information will be retained.

Privacy advocates acknowledge the many benign uses of drones. In Mesa County, Colo., for example, an annual landfill survey using manned aircraft cost about $10,000. The county recently performed the same survey using a drone for about $200.

Drones can help police departments find missing people, reconstruct traffic accidents and act as lookouts for SWAT teams. Real estate agents can have them film videos of properties and surrounding neighborhoods, offering clients a better-than-bird's-eye view though one that neighbors may not wish to have shared.

"Any legislation that restricts the use of this kind of capability to serve the public is putting the public at risk," said Steve Gitlin, vice president of AeroVironment, a leading maker of smaller drones.

Yet the virtues of drones can also make them dangerous, privacy advocates say. The low cost and ease of use may encourage police and others to conduct the kind of continuous or intrusive surveillance that might otherwise be impractical.

Drones can be equipped with high-powered cameras and listening devices, and infrared cameras that can see people in the dark.

"High-rise buildings, security fences or even the walls of a building are not barriers to increasingly common drone technology," Amie Stepanovich, director of the Electronic Privacy Information Council's surveillance project, told the Senate panel.

Civilian drone use is limited to government agencies and public universities that have received a few hundred permits from the FAA. A law passed by Congress last year requires the FAA to open U.S. skies to widespread drone flights by 2015, but the agency is behind schedule and it's doubtful it will meet that deadline. Lawmakers and industry officials have complained for years about the FAA's slow progress.

The FAA estimates that within five years of gaining broader access about 7,500 civilian drones will be in use.

Although the Supreme Court has not dealt directly with drones, it has OK'd aerial surveillance without warrants in drug cases in which officers in a plane or helicopter spotted marijuana plants growing on a suspect's property.

But in a case involving the use of ground-based equipment, the court said police generally need a warrant before using a thermal imaging device to detect hot spots in a home that might indicate that marijuana plants are being grown there.

In some states economic concerns have trumped public unease. In Oklahoma, an anti-drone bill was shelved at the request of Republican Gov. Mary Fallin, who was concerned it might hinder growth of the state's drone industry. The North Dakota state Senate killed a drone bill in part because it might impede the state's chances of being selected by the Federal Aviation Administration as one of six national drone test sites, which could generate local jobs.

A bill that would have limited the ability of state and local governments to use drones died in the Washington legislature. The measure was opposed by the Boeing Co., which employs more than 80,000 workers in the state and which has a subsidiary, Insitu, that's a leading military drone manufacturer.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., recently drew attention to the domestic use of drones when he staged a Senate filibuster, demanding to know whether the president has authority to use weaponized drones to kill Americans on American soil. The White House said no, if the person isn't engaged in combat. Industry officials worry that the episode could temporarily set back civilian drone use.

"The opposition has become very loud," said Gitlin of AeroVironment, "but we are confident that over time the benefits of these solutions are going to far outweigh the concerns, and they'll become part of normal life in the future."

___

Associated Press writer Michael Felberbaum in Richmond, Va., contributed to this report.

___

Follow Joan Lowy on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/AP_Joan_Lowy

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-29-Everyday%20Drones/id-2898ef918ddb4166839776f7d86a1295

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88% Django Unchained

All Critics (234) | Top Critics (43) | Fresh (207) | Rotten (27)

A film bursting with pleasures great and small ...

Django Unchained is Tarantino's most complete movie yet. It is also his most vital. His storytelling talents match the heft of the tale.

Django Unchained has mislaid its melancholy, and its bitter wit, and become a raucous romp. It is a tribute to the spaghetti Western, cooked al dente, then cooked a while more, and finally sauced to death.

Genre-movie-mad writer-director Quentin Tarantino's foray into Western World is a pretty grave disappointment.

Wildly extravagant, ferociously violent, ludicrously lurid and outrageously entertaining, yet also, remarkably, very much about the pernicious lunacy of racism and, yes, slavery's singular horrors.

Quentin Tarantino no longer makes movies; he makes trailers.

Countless great scenes in the Tarantino universe

It's exactly what you expect from Tarantino, so if this movie finds itself challenged in any way, it's in being expected.

...the time always flies, and Tarantino gives us a lot of movie for our money.

Tarantino's take on slavery is wildly creative, funny and frightening, true to form yet never predictable.

Different setting, same old Tarantino

Slavery is to "Django" what the Holocaust was to Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds" -- a colossal wrong to be righted by a film geek's best weapons: artistry, imagination and wicked humor.

Tarantino is, in essence, a classicist who invests the bulk of his drama and tension in lengthy dialogue exchanges that are infinitely more compelling that his elongated sequences of cathartic violence.

Still wonderfully witty and violent sequences that only Tarantino could manage or dare.

This bloody, hilarious, shocking, and righteously angry film is the kind of great art and great trash [Tarantino] aspires to make.

...compulsively watchable for the majority of its (admittedly overlong) running time...

I had a good enough time to wish that it had been better.

Part-blaxploitation film, part-spaghetti Western and all-Tarantino, 'Django Unchained' comes charging at its audiences with guns a-blazin'. It's not quite up to par with 'Reservoir Dogs' or 'Pulp Fiction,' but it's still Tarantino - enough said.

Overlong, overblown and overly self-indulgent. But excess is what Tarantino does. And just as he won't put one word in his characters' mouths when he can have them utter 10; he won't dispatch a bad guy with one bullet when he can discharge a dozen.

It would seem that this film's irreverence isn't a case of didn't-try-can't-fail dismissiveness, but rather something more innocuous: it's simply the world interpreted through Tarantino's boisterous perspective.

The funniest western since Blazing Saddles, the bloodiest since The Wild Bunch and the most visually stylish since The Good, The Bad & The Ugly.

Guilty of almost every indulgence [Tarantino] has ever been accused of...but it's hard to hold it against him, when the results are this bloody good

Ultimately enjoyable, if a little underwhelming, if nothing else we can be grateful to Django Unchained for allowing the phrase "that's the worst thing since Quentin Tarantino's Australian accent".

Impolitic though it might be to suggest it, there's something extremely satisfying about the violence here-though, for my money, it resides less in seeing these racist thugs get their comeuppance, than in the director's staging of it.

it's fitting that one of the greatest American filmmakers of all time is using the western and blaxploitation genres to connect the enduring blemish on the American psyche - only to set loose a bad motherf*cker to set it right.

Thrilling, stylish, funny, brutal, superbly-acted, sharply written and wonderfully offensive.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/django_unchained_2012/

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

What's needed for preschool to pay off? Two studies offer insights

President Obama and members of Congress aim to make preschool more widely available. Two new studies on preschool programs evaluate academic gains ? and offer clues about what it takes to boost student progress.

By Stacy Teicher Khadaroo,?Staff writer / March 28, 2013

In this March 1 photo, Bill Fulton, dressed as Ready Freddy, visits with prekindergarten students at a public school in Buffalo, N.Y.

David Duprey/AP

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President Obama?s plan to expand high-quality preschool is expected to emerge in greater detail with his budget proposal in early April. While it?s unclear if it will go anywhere given the austere mood in Washington, members of Congress have already introduced (or reintroduced) no fewer than half a dozen pre-K bills.

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As Washington and the public debate how much and how best to invest in preschool, two new studies of large-scale programs ? one in multiple districts in New Jersey and one in Boston ? have shown significant gains for students, compared with similar peers who were not enrolled.

Backers of these programs have identified factors they believe contribute to success. The following were found to be the case in both settings:?

  • Teachers? educational backgrounds, pay, and support (such as coaching) are all higher than is typical at the preschool level.
  • They are full-day programs open to all students of a certain age group, regardless of family income.
  • They offer curricula linked to system-wide educational standards.
  • School districts monitor preschool teacher and student improvement on an ongoing basis.

The studies themselves weren?t designed to isolate any of those factors to measure their direct impact ? and more research doing just that is needed to give policymakers a clear roadmap to success, says Grover Whitehurst, director of the Brown Center on Education Policy at The Brookings Institution in Washington.

?Everyone should applaud programs that are generating big gains for children who desperately need to be ready for school,? Mr. Whitehurst says. But it would be too soon for the federal government to attach certain strings to dollars, such as requiring preschool teachers to have a bachelor?s degree, he says. The one exception: asking states applying for grants to ?describe how they are going to learn what works,? he says.

The Boston study of just over 2,000 students in the public school district?s universal program for 4- to 5-year-olds found greater gains in vocabulary and math for participating students compared with nonparticipants, after one year, than seen in any other study of other large-scale pre-K programs around the US. It was released Thursday by the peer-reviewed journal Child Development.

The academic effects of being in the public preschool ranged from .45 to .62 of a standard deviation ? a way of measuring effects across different types of studies. Some researchers roughly equate that size to 45 to 62 percent of the typical achievement gap between minority and white students.

The Boston study also found the preschool education to have positive impacts on an important area of childhood development known as ?executive function? ? things such as working memory and attention to a task. Students of all racial and income backgrounds made gains, though the gains were particularly large for Hispanic students.

?Our results are a case study for what high-quality preschool can do ? when you are really supporting the teachers,? says Christina Weiland, an incoming assistant professor at the University of Michigan who led the study while at Harvard.

The preschool program uses curricula in language and math that have research evidence behind them. Boston public school teachers may have been particularly well suited to implement the curriculum because of the coaching and because they must have bachelor?s degrees and earn a master?s degree within five years ? and they?re paid at the same scale as other teachers, Ms. Weiland says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/eOXfISmTJf8/What-s-needed-for-preschool-to-pay-off-Two-studies-offer-insights

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Berlin Wall falls for condos in pre-dawn operation

BERLIN (AP) ? Work crews backed by about 250 police removed parts of the Berlin Wall known as the East Side Gallery before dawn Wednesday to make way for an upscale building project, despite demands by protesters that the site be preserved.

Residents of the area expressed shock at the move, which followed several protests including one attended by American celebrity David Hasselhoff.

Police spokesman Alexander Toennies said there were no incidents as work began about 5 a.m. to remove four sections of the wall, each about 1.5 yards (1.2 meters) wide. That will make way for an access route to the planned high-rise luxury apartments along the nearby Spree River.

The East Side Gallery is the longest remaining stretch of the Berlin Wall. Construction workers removed a first piece earlier this month as part of a plan to make a road to a new luxury apartment complex . The public outcry brought a halt while local politicians and the investor said they were looking for a solution to keep the rest of the wall untouched.

The investor, Maik Uwe Hinkel, decided to remove four more 1.5-yard (1.2-meter) wide parts of the wall, according to Toennies.

"The constructor had the right to do this and he informed us a few days ago about his plans. Last night we were told that he wanted to remove the wall pieces early this morning," Toennies said.

Plans to remove part of the 1.3-kilometer (3/4-mile) stretch of wall sparked protests whose main message was that developers were sacrificing history for profit.

At least 136 people died trying to scale the wall that divided communist-run East Berlin from West Berlin. Over the years, the stretch has become a tourist attraction with colorful paintings decorating the old concrete tiles.

"I can't believe they came here in the dark in such a sneaky manner," said Kani Alavi, the head of the East Side Gallery's artists' group. "All they see is their money, they have no understanding for the historic relevance and art of this place."

By mid-morning the six-yard (meter) gap was covered by a wooden fence and protected by scores of police. Passers-by and a handful of protesters stared in disbelief.

Police officers guard a construction site and sections of the East Side Gallery, while parts of the former Berlin Wall are removed in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday March 27, 2013. Work crews backed by ... more? Police officers guard a construction site and sections of the East Side Gallery, while parts of the former Berlin Wall are removed in Berlin, Germany, Wednesday March 27, 2013. Work crews backed by about 250 police have removed portions of the Berlin Wall known as the East Side Gallery to make way for an upscale building project, despite demands by protesters that the site be preserved. Plans to remove part of the 1.3-kilometer (3/4-mile) stretch of wall sparked protests that developers were sacrificing history for profit. (AP Photo/dpa, Britta Pedersen) less? ?

"If you take these parts of the Wall away, you take away the soul of the city," said Ivan McClostney, 32, who moved here a year ago from Ireland. "This way, you make it like every other city. It's so sad."

In an emailed statement, Hinkel said the removal of parts of the wall was a temporary move to enable trucks to access the building site. He said after four weeks of fruitless negotiations with city officials and owners of adjacent property he was no longer willing to wait.

The East Side Gallery was recently restored at a cost of more than 2 million euros ($3 million) to the city. The wall section stood on the eastern side of the elaborate border strip built by communist East Germany after it sealed off West Berlin in 1961. At least 136 people died trying to scale the wall until it was opened on Nov. 9, 1989.

The stretch of wall was transformed into an open-air gallery months after the opening and is now covered in colorful murals painted by about 120 artists. They include the famous image of boxy East German Trabant car that appears to burst through the wall; and a fraternal communist kiss between Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev and East German boss Erich Honecker.

Not originally published in LIFE. A crowd of West Berlin residents watches as an East German policeman patrols the Berlin Wall in August 1961. (Paul Schutzer?Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pre-dawn-operation-removes-part-berlin-wall-120324155.html

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Superstars break record in bench press on SmackDown

Mark Henry and Ryback broke the NFL scouting combine record for the 225-pound bench press with a stunning 53 repetitions each during a?sold-out television taping of SmackDown in Hershey, Pa., Tuesday night.

The World?s Strongest Man crushed the record of 51 reps, set by Justin Ernest at the 1999 NFL combine. His count nearly stood at 54, but WWE referee Scott Armstrong elected not to count the final lift.

View more incredible strongman records?| Watch Henry?s massive feats of strength

?[Henry] hit the 53,? the seasoned official said, explaining why he didn?t count the last attempt, ?but when he was about to hit 54, he couldn?t get it all the way up and then he racked it. So the official mark stands at 53.?

Although Henry?s feat was truly incredible, Ryback looked ready to break the newly established record with 54 reps. After tying The World?s Strongest Man, however, his WrestleMania adversary prevented him from going further by pushing the bar down upon him. See what happened first-hand and the controversial call by the referee this Friday night on SmackDown at 8/7 CT on Syfy.

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Source: http://www.wwe.com/shows/smackdown/2013-03-29/superstars-break-record-in-bench-press-on-smackdown

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Nintendo 3DS update moves your saves from retail games to downloads

Nintendo 3DS update lets gamers move saves from retail games to downloads

Let's say you bought a pair of cartridge-based games to go with your Nintendo 3DS, but you're embracing our all-digital future and want to replace them with downloadable copies. You won't have to toss all your game progress at the same time: a newly available 3DS firmware update includes a tool to move save files from a retail copy to its downloadable version. The transfer is strictly one-way, though, so there's no falling back for gaming Luddites. Nintendo offers a bonus if you're fully in step with the online world, though -- background downloads can now start just by closing the lid while the eShop is running. Both elements of the update are simple on the surface, but they could go a long way in helping us ditch a legacy of plastic game libraries.

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Source: Nintendo

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/26/nintendo-3ds-update-move-saves-from-retail-games-to-downloads/

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Inspirational leaders (Balloon Juice)

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Senate drops assault weapon ban from gun reform bill

Democrats on Tuesday confirmed that a proposed ban on assault weapons will not be included in a package of gun reform legislation yet to be introduced in the Senate, suggesting the measures do not have broad support in Congress.

The bill's sponsor, Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, confirmed to reporters Tuesday that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will remove an assault weapons ban from a package of gun reform legislation, and offer it separately as an amendment.

"I very much regret it," Feinstein said of Reid's decision. "I tried my best."

Reid's decision signals how politically volatile the issue of an assault weapons ban remains and suggests gun reform measures would die in the Senate if it included such a ban?something many political observers had long suggested.

Following the Dec. 14 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Feinstein introduced legislation to reinstate the assault weapons ban, which was first passed in 1994 under President Bill Clinton and expired in 2004.

But despite a burst of energy behind the reduction of gun violence in the wake of the shooting?energy that some believe has already begun to wane?the ban threatens to place Democrats who represent strong gun rights constituencies in a tough electoral position, and continues to be highly unpopular among Republicans.

The Senate Judiciary Committee on March 14 passed Feinstein's bill, which banned assault weapons as well as magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition. The committee has also passed a bill that would expand background checks for gun buyers and close the so-called gun show loophole that allows people to avoid a background check if they buy weapons from private sellers. That bill, which Democrats on the committee hoped could attract Republican support, passed without a single Republican vote, a bad sign for its chances in the Senate.

The assault weapons ban was hailed by Democrats including President Barack Obama, who has advocated for the measure. "These weapons of war, when combined with high-capacity magazines, have one purpose: to inflict maximum damage as quickly as possible. They are designed for the battlefield, and they have no place on our streets, in our schools, or threatening our law enforcement officers," Obama, in a statement, had said at the time.

Liz Goodwin contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/assault-weapons-ban-dropped-senate-bill-193259307--politics.html

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Aviary launches photo-editing SDK for Windows 8 developers

DNP

Thanks to a partnership with AMD and Microsoft, Aviary's Photo Editor SDK will be available to Windows 8 developers starting today. While in the long run this could mean Windows 8 will gain more photo-centric apps, this new SDK will bring the the photo service to apps running on Windows 8 notebooks and tablets immediately, and those devices running AMD processors should benefit from "higher, optimized performance," according to the company.

The Aviary app has been available on iOS and Android since last summer, though its customizable SDK is also used by services such as Flickr and Twitter, which integrate the photo-editing features into their respective apps. To kick off its launch on Microsoft's most current OS, Aviary announced partnerships with Rowi, Memorylage and several other apps available for download in the Windows Store.

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Via: All Things D

Source: Aviary blog

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/18/aviary-photo-editing-sdk-for-windows-8/

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Video: Reporters reflect on covering war in Iraq



>>> ten years ago this week, the united states and its allies launched its shock and awe attack on iraq . the early days of the war saw success with touster of stape buaddam hussein, but violence in iraq continues. we talk with a few of the many journalists embedded with u.s. troops in iraq and kept americans in the know about what was happening there. i want to bring in nbc news correspondent kerry sanders , who was embedded in iraq from kabul, afghanistan. mike taibbi also embedded in iraq and also in kabul for us tonight, former cbs news correspondent kimberly dozier now with the associate press, she was seriously wounded. her camera crew killed while they were covering the war. good to see all of you.

>> good to be here.

>> hello.

>> let me start with you. the neiman foundation back in the summer of 2003 called embedding a success saying in part, embedding allowed far greater access to the battlefield than the press endured in more than two decades and dampened the long hostilitity between the pentagon and the press. highway dp being embedded affect your ability to cover the war?

>> you know, i'd add to that statement that it was also law, and the true new complexion to all of this. we weren't just there able to be exactly with. i was with the 28, with the marines, it wasn't just i was with them as they were working but with them with a live camera and microphone literally crawling in the dirt up on a sand berm, putting my microphone out as a young marine would have his weapon out trained on the enemy here. i kind of like didn't to this -- if you wanted to get a picture of the whole war, you weren't going to get it from me. imagine you wanted a disruption how i looked, all i could give you, a description of the tip of my finger. you wouldn't know what kerry sanders looked like. but if you had all the different reporters weighs in with different parts of it you might be able to piece it together. that's what we doing. little snapshots from locations so people at home could piece it together and get an overall picture how the war was proeging on the battlefield.

>> mike, you spent a good chunk of time with one specific unit'sthe 3rd infantry . what wases that experience like?

>> well, i think that the 3rd infantry , the characterization of them being the tip of the sword was accurate and with other campaigns. i hooked up after our colleague david bloom died away from kuwait. great reporting at that point came to an end when 3rd i.d. settled in, saddam's old palace. i joined them then. one of the things i remember of that notion talking about, being right in the middle of a unit involved in the war, you get to see all the things they go through and all the ways the war impacts them. we did a long story on a critical incidentful stress bebriefing session. 14 guys in one squad, through the horrific aspects. a terrible incident at checkpoint at the end, opened fire on somebody they thought just jumped the checkpoint. a family who panicked. and the father and the daughter were killed and the mother survived, and came out and stars and stripes gave a photograph saying, why? what happened? these guys were so devastated by it. they sue prelsed it to a point, but in this long three-hour session talked how it seared into them and they'd never forget and they'd raised them to figure they came up with a translator making it clear everybody coming through the checkpoint exactly what was happening. to be that close to a unit as they go through that, acknowledge that, confront it, tells you something about the cost of war not being embedded would not allow you to tell.

>> kimberly, protecting, about 140 journalists killed. the iraq war , from 2003 to 2009 , were you badly wounded. colleagues, paul douglas , james brolin killed and, of course, as mike alluded to, we lost david bloom there died traveling in the iraqi desert. how did you deal with the constant danger? with the constant fear?

>> well, you know, i would say one of the ironic things was towards the end of my time there, we were hit, in my particular case in 2006 , we had started going out with the troops occasionally, because early on -- because its would lead to a good story from their point of view, but we tried to balance it spending time with iraqis. we'd drive to mosul up north. weez drive out to fallujah on the highway. but it got more and more dangerous. kidnapping became a threat. insurgents started targeting us. so we started embedding with troops towards the end of my time there because it was the safest way, ironically, to try to see what was going on outside the walls of our hotel rooms . that's how we ended up in our case on memorial day in 2006 with a foot patrol that was doing the kind of patrols that would later lead to some security in baghdad, face to face with the people. they wanted to be out talking to the people on that street, asking them who planted a roadside bomb the day before. unfortunately, someone knew we coming and we walked into an ambush. car bomber waiting until we were close enough and command detonated it through us. you always news that kind of risk was there. the nigh before any shoot, you always talked with your team. you relied on everyone's instincts. we didn't see this one coming. there were other times when we all said, no. we're not going to go there. not tomorrow. somebody feels badly. someone's -- you know, senses going off. not today. but there were times, you talked to troops the same way. they're instincts telling them, don't go out today, but they would have to take that patrol. have to do that mission and walk into it. it's just always with you, and it becomes part of the job .

>> kerry sanders , you were one of the first us that a female u.s. soldier, jessica lynch , had been rescued from an iraqi hospital. take a look, take a listen.

>> inside that saddam hospital, which i need to note is also an iraqi military headquarters, 19-year-old jessica lynch . she was inside and the authorities, the military knew she was in there, because somebody inside the hospital had written a hand. written note say that she here. that she's alive, and they even gave the room number where she was.

>> kerry, tell us how all of that came about.

>> it was really strange. first of all, we were in this area near nasiriyah, and somebody stopped and told me that there was an american woman who was being held, a soldier, held and tortured, they said, inside that hospital. and so not exactly sure why they came up and talked to me as opposed to those who were in uniform around me. maybe i was non-threatening, but they came up to me, told me what was going on. i passed the information on. as it turned out, there she was. we're not sure about the whole torture thing but at the end of the day , her rescue took place. the young woman from west virginia , in the army, took a wrong turn and wound up being wounded and being taken to that hospital, and then eventually the rescue. bought very tense early days of the war, because here we had a woman who was being held at the time, believed to being held prisoner. unclear whether you call somebody who is being treated at hospital a the prisoner, but at that moment, she was a prisoner who was wounded.

>> mike taibbi , how much did the military try to exercise over embeddeds like you?

>> depends how much of a, success you had, or whatever the team has had with the command. with the command center . it they tend to trust you. they're going to tell you more. they're not going to turn down any kwe69 you come to them with but if they trust you, they'll let you know. the briefings, tell you what they're going to do. you have a choice, kim was saying, whether you think, your instincts tell you it's a safe thing to do. harp on two things. i think they're fairly significant. one what kim said about being embedded was the safest way, least dangerous way to cover the wars. that's true because of a reason that has to do whip where we are. this is the internet age . when i cut my teeth in the '70s, go to a checkpoint, american television written ot wind screen and shout american television , all sides needed us to tell their story. now they --

>> a passport.

>> if they want to make a point, get their story told, they have the internet. make a point, they can and have beheaded, executed somebody on camera. they don't need us. our only real value to the insurgents on either side, hostages. increasing the danger on us exponentially and kerry talks be a the fact, potential for live coverage. we saw and heard a lot of that in the beginning of this war. think about it. a terrible loss in iraq , over 4,000 losses's men and women. terrible tragedy . on the third day of gettysburg, pickett's trarg, 6,000 casualties in three hours. imagine if live television , on the spot realtime reporting was available then, what the public would have known about that war, what opportunity to react in the a day of way? it's a whole different ball game.

>> kimberly, i'm --

>> the one thing you have to be --

>> i was going to say, i want to endy were you. you're on the intelligence beat for the a.p. quickly what has the mill -- what has the press, for that matter as well, what have we learned from some of the intelligence failures in the iraq war ?

>> well, you know, the cia reformed thousa ed how it did its whole analytic process. the things that led to the conclusion than saddam hussein had weapons of mass destruction , created the whole system of red teaming, where you'd question yourself and question yourself and kquestion yourself and it's through that process that we were led to the raid that got osama bin laden . they questioned that information over and over and over again until they were sure, because they didn't want to make another mistake like iraq . one of the positive things that came out of that whole process in iraq , the hunt for the al qaeda leader apew abu czar ca -- zicari. have-o some would say, had the invasion not taken place we wouldn't have had that. that's for another segment.

>> thank you all for your work then and thanks for your work now as well. be safe, guys.

>>> we should note here as well that during the eight years of the war in iraq , as we mentioned in our conversation, more than 4,400 americans were killed. some 32,000 were wounded. that does not, of course, include the more than 100,000 civilian deaths as well. the financial costs of the war, it reached somewhere north of $800 billion. but most non-partisan experts suggest that by the time we're finished paying all the bills it will be closer to $2 trillion or $3 trillion.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/msnbc/51217439/

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Severe storms, large hail pummel parts of South

Millions are under a winter weather advisory as severe storms charge through the South and bring snow to parts of the Great Plains and into the Northeast. Weather Channel meteorologist Eric Fisher reports.

By Holbrook Mohr, The Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. ? Severe thunderstorms Monday raked across a wide area of the South, packing strong winds, rain and some baseball-size hail.

In Mississippi, authorities reported two people were hit on the head by large hail as the enormous storm front crossed the region. Fire official Tim Shanks said baseball-sized hail smashed windows in several vehicles in Clinton, where the two people were hit. He had no immediate word on their condition.

National Weather Service meteorologist Anna Weber said there were reports of hail the size of softballs in some areas around Jackson.

"This is the time of year that we get hail storms, but hail this size is pretty rare," Weber said.

Emergency officials said there were reports of downed trees or other damage in 14 Mississippi counties.

Roads throughout the Jackson area were littered with broken limbs and pine needles, from the hail driving through trees. Cars could be seen driving along the interstate with broken windows and cracked windshields.

"What I found interesting is that hail is the threat that we don't talk about that much," said Mississippi Emergency Management Agency spokesman Jeff Rent. "But you can see how destructive it can be in a short amount of time. We got a tough lesson today."

Glenn Ezell and his son were putting tarps on the metal roof of their mobile home in Brandon after the storm swept through the area.

"It started hailing big enough that it come through the roof and broke the sheetrock. It was as big as your fist," he said.

Meteorologists issued tornado warnings for parts of northwest Georgia and severe thunderstorm warnings around the state.

Flights were delayed by more than an hour Monday afternoon at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport after officials there ordered a ground stop, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Downed trees and high winds were also reported in parts of Alabama and Georgia.

Georgia Power officials said 73,000 customers were without power Monday night, and of that number, 31,000 were in northwest Georgia.

Elsewhere, Alabama Power officials said 198,000 customers were without power as of 5 p.m.

In Tennessee, heavy rain helped firefighters contain a wildfire that burned nearly 60 rental cabins in a resort area outside the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

The fire forced up to 200 people who had been staying in cabins in the area to evacuate.

Fire officials had worried earlier that wind-whipped flames might jump a ridgeline and threaten Pigeon Forge, a popular tourism destination that's home to country star Dolly Parton's amusement park, Dollywood.

Meanwhile snow was moving across much of the Northeast late Monday messing up traffic as it caught many commuters off guard. And Boston announced all public schools would be closed on Tuesday because of the wintry weather ? just the day before the official start of spring.

Associated Press writer Phillip Lucas contributed to this report from Atlanta.

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

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/18/17363353-severe-storms-large-hail-pummel-parts-of-south?lite

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Monday, March 18, 2013

Small schools come up big in NCAA tourney field

Boise State coach Leon Rice was hoping for the best and secretly dreading the worst when he gathered his team to watch the NCAA tournament selection show.

The Broncos went 21-10 in the regular season, but lost in the first round of the Mountain West Conference tournament. For a team that doesn't play in one of the so-called power conferences, that usually means curtains on any NCAA tournament hopes.

"You almost feel like a parent," Rice said in a phone interview on Sunday night. "You don't want the kids to get their hearts broken. When our name popped up, it was just the greatest feeling."

Boise State earned its first at-large bid in school history on Sunday and will play fellow at-large small fry La Salle in the first round on Wednesday.

After years of getting pushed aside by the higher profile schools in the six conferences that make up the core of football's BCS, the little guys are starting to get some big respect in the NCAA tournament. For the second straight year, the selection committee chose 11 teams from outside the big six conferences, the highest number since 12 were chosen in 2004.

Some worried when the tournament expanded to 68 teams in 2011 that it would just mean a few more mediocre teams from the power leagues would get chosen over smaller schools that did not win their conference tournaments.

Those fears have been unfounded the last two years.

"It's a reflection on how the landscape of college basketball has changed so much," Rice said. "We're breaking down the old stereotypes that you have to be in a BCS league to have a great basketball program. That's just not the case."

The budding trend was most noticeable with the last four teams chosen for the field on Sunday. The committee chose La Salle, Boise State, St. Mary's and Middle Tennessee State over the likes of Tennessee, Kentucky and Iowa, all 20-win teams from bigger conferences.

"For us to have our commitment at La Salle rewarded and to be in this tournament is a big deal," La Salle coach John Giannini said. "Think about some of the names that are not in this tournament and it shows just how hard it is to get there."

Let's face it, they've earned it. Butler, which is a No. 6 seed in the East this year, played in two straight championship games. VCU and George Mason have made the Final Four and Gonzaga has been anything but a mid-major come tournament time with 15 straight tourney appearances and five Sweet 16s since 1999.

The respect was also shown in the seeding of teams big and small. Virginia Commonwealth lost in the Atlantic-10 tournament championship to St. Louis, but still earned a No. 5 seed, probably thanks in large part to its performance in the tournament in recent years under Shaka Smart.

Middle Tennessee will play St. Mary's in the first round on Tuesday, with the winner being seeded 11th in the Midwest region.

"Having that much respect to get an 11 seed at-large, it kind of shows where our program has gotten to," Blue Raiders coach Kermit Davis said.

St. Louis parlayed that win over VCU into a No. 4 seed in the Midwest, while bigger schools from bigger conferences saw their seeding plummet. Oregon won the Pac-12 tournament, yet only received a No. 12 seed in the Midwest. Mississippi ran the table to win the SEC tournament but is seeded 12th in the West and Miami settled for a No. 2 seed, making the Hurricanes the first ACC team to miss out on a top seed after winning the regular season and tournament titles.

Finally a little guy ? albeit the biggest of them ? got the top slot. Miami was denied because Gonzaga got the ultimate sign of respect ? a No. 1 seed in the West region.

"You've got to savor this being a No. 1 seed, being No. 1 in the nation," Zags forward Mike Hart said. "You have to realize how special that is. To do it here at Gonzaga, a storied program that has done a lot of things, but those are two things it hasn't done, you definitely savor it and cherish it but at the same time you have to have that forward mentality looking forward to that next game and understand that you're only in this position because of how you've played in games."

___

AP Sports Writer Tim Booth in Seattle and freelancer Dave Zeitlin in Philadelphia contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/small-schools-come-big-ncaa-tourney-field-004912626--spt.html

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Environmental Film Festival: John Huston in Africa

IMAX, Planetarium, & Theater

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IMAX is the ultimate film experience. Specially designed screens that are several stories high produce some of the most stunning visual images recorded.


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For the first time, you'll feel the sensation of zooming through the cosmos, enveloped in color saturated moving images and spine-tingling sound.


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The best in live performing arts, this venue provides a variety of educational and cultural programs for both kids and adults.


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The Jazz Masterworks Orchestra performs

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Most museums offer free highlights tours and regularly scheduled exhibition tours.

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The Smithsonian has a variety of special programs for kids and families?storytelling, performances, craft workshops, and more.

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Find Smithsonian events happening in your community.

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Source: http://www.si.edu/events/?trumbaEmbed=view=event&eventid=104301024

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Maggie Rizer Welcomes Son Quinnlann Clancy

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

5 US troops die in helicopter crash in Afghanistan

Map locates Kandahar city in Kandahar province, a where a helicopter crashed killed five U.S. troops

Map locates Kandahar city in Kandahar province, a where a helicopter crashed killed five U.S. troops

(AP) ? A helicopter crash in southern Afghanistan has killed five American service members, officials said Tuesday.

Monday night's crash brought the total number of U.S. troops killed that day to seven, making it the deadliest day for U.S. forces so far this year. Two U.S. special operations forces were gunned down hours earlier in an insider attack by an Afghan policeman in eastern Afghanistan.

The NATO military coalition said in a statement that "initial reports" showed no enemy activity in the area at the time. The cause of the crash is under investigation, the statement said.

A U.S. official said all five of the dead were American. The official said the helicopter went down outside Kandahar city, the capital of Kandahar province. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the information had not been formally released.

The five dead included everyone aboard the UH-60 Black Hawk, said Maj. Adam Wojack, a spokesman for the international military coalition in Afghanistan.

Their deaths make 12 U.S. troops killed so far this year in Afghanistan. There were 297 U.S. service members killed in Afghanistan in 2012, according to an Associated Press tally.

It was the deadliest crash since August, when a U.S. military helicopter crashed during a firefight with insurgents in a remote area of Kandahar. Seven Americans and four Afghans died in that crash.

In March 2012, a helicopter crashed near the Afghan capital, Kabul, killing 12 Turkish soldiers on board and four Afghan civilians on the ground, officials said. And in August 2011, insurgents shot down a Chinook helicopter, killing 30 American troops, mostly elite Navy SEALs, in Wardak province in central Afghanistan.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-12-Afghanistan/id-6c3b5b9b965f43b1bde47256affdaa20

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Gunmen kill eight in attacks on Nigerian bank, police station

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) - Gunmen killed eight people in an attack on a police station and a bank in northeastern Nigeria, a witness and a security official said on Tuesday, in an area frequently targeted by Islamist militants.

The attackers stormed the town of Gwoza late on Monday, close to the Cameroon border in Borno state, where Islamist sect Boko Haram has killed hundreds in an insurgency.

It was not clear if the gunmen were Boko Haram members or one of several criminal gangs that have flourished amid worsening security in the north.

"The divisional police officer and two other policemen were killed when the station was attacked and the manager of a local bank and four others also lost their lives," local resident Umar Yahuza told Reuters.

A security official in Gwoza who asked not to be named confirmed eight people had been killed.

Western governments fear Boko Haram, or factions of it, have linked up with other groups in the region, including al Qaeda's North African franchise.

The Nigerian group is seeking to carve out an Islamic state in a country split roughly equally between Christians and Muslims.

Attacks in northern Nigeria are increasingly targeting foreign interests, especially since a French-led operation last month against Islamists in northern Mali. Nigeria has sent hundreds of troops there to join the operation.

A French family of seven were kidnapped last month just over the Cameroon border, close to Gwoza, by a group claiming to be Boko Haram who said it would kill the hostages if authorities did not release Muslim militants held in prison.

On Sunday, the Nigerian military said it killed 20 militants when it repelled an attack a barracks in Borno state.

Gunmen killed a security guard and abducted a Briton, an Italian, a Greek and four Lebanese workers after storming the compound of Lebanese construction firm Setraco in Bauchi state on February 16.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gunmen-kill-eight-attacks-nigerian-bank-police-station-051238619.html

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Friday, March 1, 2013

Iran nuclear talks show progress, Western diplomat says

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Nuclear talks between Iran and world powers this week were more constructive and positive than in the past, but Iran's willingness to negotiate seriously will not become clear until an April meeting, a senior Western diplomat said on Thursday.

The diplomat was more upbeat about the talks in Kazakhstan than other Western officials have been, suggesting there could be a chance of diplomatic progress in the long standoff over Iran's nuclear activities.

"This was more constructive and more positive than previous meetings because they were really focusing on the proposal on the table," said the diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Iran's Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi struck an upbeat note about the talks, saying they had reached "a turning point" this week and suggesting a breakthrough was within reach.

"I call it a milestone. It is a turning point in the negotiations," Salehi told Austrian broadcaster ORF during a visit to Vienna for a United Nations conference.

"We are heading for goals that will be satisfactory for both sides. I am very optimistic and hopeful," he said, according to a German translation of remarks he made in English.

Years of on-off talks between Iran and the six powers have produced no breakthrough in the dispute over the nuclear program, which Iran says is peaceful but that Western powers suspect is aimed at developing a nuclear bomb capability.

Iran has faced tightening international sanctions over its nuclear program and Israel has strongly hinted it might attack Iran if diplomacy and sanctions fail.

At the latest talks, the six powers offered modest sanctions relief in return for Iran curbing its most sensitive nuclear work.

"We show a way into the easing of sanctions. We don't give away the crown jewels in the first step," the diplomat said.

The two sides agreed to hold expert-level talks in Istanbul on March 18 to discuss the powers' proposals, and to return to Almaty for political discussions on April 5-6.

STEP-BY-STEP

The March meeting will be a chance for experts to explain in detail what the six powers' offer means, the senior Western diplomat said, adding that the April meeting would be key.

"This will be the important meeting. We'll see if they are willing to engage seriously on the package," the diplomat said.

Western officials said the six powers' offer included easing a ban on trade in gold and other precious metals and relaxation of an import embargo on Iranian petrochemical products.

In exchange, a senior U.S. official said, Iran would among other things have to suspend uranium enrichment to a fissile concentration of 20 percent at its Fordow underground facility and "constrain the ability to quickly resume operations there".

The U.S. official did not term what was being asked of Iran as a "shutdown" of the plant, as Western diplomats had said in previous meetings with Iran last year.

The senior Western diplomat denied the six powers had softened their position on Fordow, but conceded: "We may have softened our terminology."

The diplomat sketched out a step-by-step approach, saying the six powers' proposals offered Iran the prospect of further steps in return for Iranian actions beyond a first confidence-building step. "There has to be a clear sequencing," the diplomat said, without giving details.

Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili said on Wednesday the six powers had tried to "get closer to our viewpoint", which he said was positive.

(Editing by Roger Atwood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-nuclear-talks-constructive-western-diplomat-says-212829672.html

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