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With Panasonic's new Viera E60 family of connected LED-backlit HDTVs you get many of the features found on high-end models at a price that won't strain your budget. The TC-L58E60 reviewed here carries a list price of $1,499.99 and features a large 58-inch screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, wired and wireless networking, a good selection of Web services, and a streamlined cabinet design. But it's not without flaws; greens and blues are oversaturated and there are traces of blooming when the background is dark.
Design and Features
As with the Editors' Choice Panasonic TC-L55ET60, the TC-L58E60's cabinet is stylishly thin (1.4 inches) and is ably supported by a rigid rectangular stand. The 1,920-by-1,080-pixel panel is framed by razor-thin black bezels on all sides, and there's a strip of clear plastic beneath the bottom bezel that holds an ambient light sensor, a remote sensor, and a power indicator.
The TC-L58E60 only has three HDMI ports, whereas most big-screen TVs offer at least four, and sometimes five. They are mounted at the rear of the cabinet facing outward along with a set of shared component and composite AV jacks, an Ethernet port, a digital audio output, and a cable/antenna jack. Two USB ports are close by, facing left.?A set of basic controls sit on the right edge of the screen.
In addition to wired Ethernet the E60 offers built-in Wi-Fi. Web services are plentiful and include streaming apps from Netflix, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu Plus, YouTube, and CinemaNow. Social networking apps, including Skype, Facebook, and Twitter, are also part of the package, as are a handful of Playjam games and Panasonic's own Viera Connect Market shopping service.
The E60 uses the same remote as the ET60 with one exception; a sleep button takes the place of a 3D button (this set is not 3D-capable). The matte black wand is 8.5 inches long and has 43 buttons, four arrow keys, an Apps button, and a dedicated Netflix button. The Home button brings you to the My Home screen where you can create customized menus for each member of the family by populating it with their favorite apps and photo, video, and music selections.
The basic picture settings menu offers the usual brightness, contrast, color temperature, tint, and backlight adjustments as well as Vivid Color (enhanced greens and blues), A.I. Picture (enhances dark areas without changing black level or brightness), and five picture presets (Vivid, Standard, Home Theater, Cinema, and Custom). The Pro settings menu lets you adjust black level gradation, fine tune white point levels in reds, greens, and blues, tweak RGB hue, saturation, and luminance levels, and adjust gamma settings. Advanced settings include an optimized game mode, 3:2 pulldown (reduces judder in film-based content), light and dark black levels, and HDMI range settings.
The TC-L58E60 comes with a standard one-year warranty that can be extended to three years for an additional $129.99, or to four years for an additional $169.99.
Performance
The TC-L58E60 performed well on some tests and not so well on others. It produced a nice peak brightness of 353.50 cd/m2 and a solid black level reading of 0.0137 cd/m2 as measured with a Klein K10-A colorimeter and patterns from the DisplayMate HDTV diagnostic suite. The resulting 25,802:1 contrast ratio is very good for a budget HDTV and rivals some of the more expensive models, including the Sunbrite 5560 HD (32,881:1). The lofty contrast ratio provided excellent shadow detail in the Ocean Deep episode of the BBC's Planet Earth on Blu-ray, particularly in the darker underwater sequences. ?
However, color accuracy wasn't quite up to par. As shown in the CIE color chart above, reds were pretty close to perfect but greens and blues were oversaturated (the closer each dot is to its corresponding box the more accurate the color). The heavy colors didn't present a serious tinting issue but the picture ran a little cool.
I observed minor backlight blooming from time to time but not to the point of distraction and only against a very dark background. The panel's 120Hz refresh rate provided smooth motion handling while I watched NBA basketball and PGA golf on ESPN. Off-axis viewing was good for a budget-class HDTV; the screen remained bright from any angle and image detail stayed sharp.
The E60 consumed 126 watts of power during testing while set to standard mode. In cinema mode that number dropped to 76 watts. Better yet, enabling Eco mode reduced power usage to just 57 watts without causing the picture to appear too dim. That's more energy efficient than the slightly smaller LG 55LM6700 (67 watts).
Conclusion
The Panasonic TC-LE60 series has a lot going for it. For just under $1,500, you get a bright 58-inch LED backlit screen that delivers a high contrast ratio and wide viewing angles. It also offers a solid feature set including wired and wireless Ethernet, numerous Web services, and a 120Hz refresh rate. It does exhibit a touch of backlight bloom, however, and its out of the box color accuracy is not ideal; calibrating the panel would likely resolve the latter. This set is a good option for 2D, but if you're a fan of 3D content, consider our Editors' Choice for midrange HDTVs, the 55-inch Panasonic TC-L55ET60. It'll cost you a couple of hundred dollars more and is a bit smaller than the TC-L58E60, but it comes with two sets of 3D glasses and is a solid performer.
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BEIRUT (AP) ? Russia on Tuesday harshly criticized Europe's decision to allow the arming of Syrian rebels, saying it undercuts international efforts to negotiate an end to the civil war, and a rebel general said he's "very disappointed" weapons won't come fast enough to help opposition fighters defend a strategic Syrian town.
The European Union decision, coupled with a Russia's renewed pledge to supply Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime with advanced missiles, could transform an already brutal civil war into an East-West proxy fight. Israel, meanwhile, threatened to strike such air defense missiles systems if delivered to Syria, portraying them as a threat to the Jewish state and raising the risk of regional conflagration.
The possibility of an arms race in Syria overshadowed attempts by the U.S. and Russia to bring representatives of the Assad regime and Syria's political opposition to peace talks at an international conference in Geneva, possibly next month.
The talks, though seen as a long shot, constitute the international community's only plan for ending the conflict that began more than two years ago and has killed more than 70,000 people.
In Syria, the commander of the main Western-backed umbrella group of rebel brigades told The Associated Press he urgently needs Western anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles to prevent further regime gains on the battlefield. The rebels' weapons are no match for the Syrian regime's modern tanks and warplanes, he said.
"We are very disappointed," Gen. Salim Idris, military chief of the Free Syrian Army, said of the European Union's apparent decision not to send weapons, if at all, until after the Geneva conference. "We don't have any patience (any) more."
In any case, Europe might think twice about sending such weapons into a chaotic war zone where they could quickly be seized by Islamic militant rebels, some of whom have pledged allegiance to the al-Qaida terror network.
Britain, which along with France had pushed for ending the EU arms embargo, wants to use the threat of arming the rebels as leverage to ensure that Assad negotiates in good faith.
Syria's fractured opposition, which has not yet committed to the Geneva talks, could also be lured to the table if attendance is linked to receiving weapons in the event that talks fail. Opposition leaders have said they will only participate in talks if Assad's departure from power tops the agenda, a demand Assad and his Russian backers have rejected.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said peace talks are a priority and that "as we work for the Geneva conference, we are not taking any decision to send arms to anyone."
However, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov warned that recent actions by the West "willingly or unwillingly are undermining the idea of the conference." He denounced the lifting of the EU arms embargo as an "illegitimate decision," saying that supplying weapons to non-governmental groups "goes against all norms of international law."
At the same time, Lavrov's deputy affirmed Tuesday that Russia won't abandon plans to send long-range S-300 air defense missile systems to Syria, despite strong Western and Israeli criticism. It is not clear if Russia has already sent some of the missiles, which would be a major boost for Syria's air defense capabilities, including against neighboring countries that oppose Assad's regime.
Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said that "to the extent those systems, if deployed in Syria, can deter foreign military intervention, I think it will help focus minds on a political settlement."
Churkin, speaking to CNN, said Assad has assured Russia that a government delegation will attend the peace conference that Russia and the U.S. have called. The most difficult problem, he said, "is organizing the opposition."
"We think that there is a chance with our concerted effort that the conference might start and might produce eventually results to end the conflict," Churkin said.
U.S. State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said Washington welcomes the EU decision as a show of support for the Syrian opposition and as a message to the Assad regime that such support will only grow. He said the Obama administration will continue to provide non-lethal assistance to the rebels and hasn't made a decision on whether to arm them.
Ventrell condemned Moscow's decision not to drop plans to sell S-300 missiles to Syria. "We're talking about a regime that's willing to go to enormous lengths to use massive force against civilians, including Scud missiles and other types," he said. "We condemn all support of arms to the regime."
Further raising the risk of a regional war, Israel warned that it would be prepared to attack any such missile shipments. Israeli Defense Moshe Yaalon said Israel believes the Russian missiles have not yet been shipped, but that the Israeli military "will know what to do" if they are delivered.
Earlier this month, Israeli airstrikes hit suspected shipments of advanced Iranian missiles near the Syrian capital of Damascus that were purportedly intended for Assad ally Hezbollah, the Lebanese militia that is fighting alongside Syrian regime forces.
Israel has said it would not hesitate to attack again to disrupt the flow of game-changing weapons threatening its security.
France and Britain so far have not specified what weapons they might send. But the strategy of threatening to arm the rebels as a way of bolstering diplomacy could easily fail.
Assad's regime has provided no sign of any intent to cede power in Syria, a key opposition demand before entering any talks. Meanwhile, the opposition could try to make a public show of willingness to attend the talks, only to demand that weapons deliveries from Europe start right away if the hoped-for Geneva process breaks down.
The regime and the opposition are both still trying to win militarily. The two sides remain largely deadlocked, but in recent weeks the regime has scored a number of battlefield successes that might make it less inclined to negotiate.
Syria's Foreign Ministry said the EU decision exposes the "mockery" of European claims to be supporting a political solution to the crisis based on national dialogue, while "encouraging terrorists and extending them arms."
On the other hand, Idris, the rebel commander, said his fighters could lose control of a strategic town in western Syrian in the coming days unless he gets weapons quickly.
He said thousands of Hezbollah fighters are participating in an offensive against Qusair that began May 19, and that his fighters are outnumbered by more than 3-to-1.
"Time is a very important factor now in the battle in Qusair," he said. "When they wait for a week (to send weapons), maybe Qusair will be under the control of Hezbollah. Then we don't need their (the West's) help, we don't need their support."
If Assad retakes the town, he would shore up his hold on the land corridor linking his stronghold in Damascus with loyalist areas along the Mediterranean coast. For the rebels, losing Qusair would mean losing a supply line to nearby Lebanon.
On Monday, Idris accompanied U.S. Sen. John McCain into a rebel-held area in northern Syria for a meeting with about a dozen local commanders. In a comment on Twitter, the Arizona Republican on Tuesday praised the "brave fighters" battling Assad and renewed his call for the Obama administration to move aggressively militarily to aid the opposition.
Michael Clarke, director of London's Royal United Services Institute think tank, said the EU decision will mean little on the ground for now. He said it is a message to Assad that "the Geneva process is the last good chance you're ever going to have of getting out of this situation without the civil war getting considerably worse ? and in one piece."
He said it's also telling the Russians that "we are not going to be intimidated by a lot of Russian huffing and puffing at the moment."
___
Keaten reported from Brussels. Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-diplomacy-priority-despite-eu-arms-vote-185702751.html
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ROSEDALE, Md. (AP) ? A CSX freight train crashed into a trash truck, derailed and caught fire Tuesday in a Baltimore suburb, setting off an explosion that rattled homes at least a half-mile away and sent a plume of smoke into the air that could be seen for miles.
In the third serious derailment this month, the dozen or so rail cars, at least one carrying hazardous materials, went off the tracks at about 2 p.m. in Rosedale, a suburb east of Baltimore. A hazardous materials team responded, but Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz said at a news conference that no toxic inhalants were being released. Officials did not order an evacuation.
By nightfall, the hazmat team had left, meaning there was no more danger posed from the chemicals in the rail car, said Baltimore County police Capt. Bruce Schultz.
The truck driver, 50-year-old John J. Alban Jr., was in serious condition Tuesday night, a hospital spokeswoman said. Two CSX workers aboard weren't hurt.
Dale Walston said he lives about a half-mile away and that he thought he could smell chemicals.
"It shook my house pretty violently and knocked things off the shelves," he said in an email to The Associated Press.
The face of one warehouse near the train tracks was blown off.
Even hours after the blast, the thick plume of black smoke could be seen for miles and had drifted and covered the eastern part of Baltimore. Later, the smoke that was left had lightened considerably, changing from black to gray, though the fire wasn't yet extinguished as of 9 p.m.
CSX spokesman Gary Sease said in an email that one of the cars was carrying sodium chlorate, which the Department of Transportation classifies as a hazardous material. However, Baltimore County Fire Chief John Hohman said the chemical was not in any of the cars that were still burning into the evening. The bleaching agent is used in making paper.
Nick Materer, an Oklahoma State University chemist, said sodium chlorate, when combined with fuel, makes a more volatile mixture. "When you mix them together and add fire, they go boom," he said in a phone interview.
Materer said the chemical is usually shipped as a white powder but it can also be in a liquid solution. Either way, he said, the fumes can irritate the lungs if inhaled.
Exactly what triggered the explosion was being investigated, and Hohman said firefighters told residents of about 70 nearby homes that they could leave if they wanted to and shelter would be provided.
Two warehouses were heavily damaged by the explosion and other buildings were harmed, but none collapsed, as was thought earlier, Hohman said.
An Amtrak spokeswoman said its Northeast Corridor passenger service was not affected.
Kevin Lindemann, 29, a salesman for industrial pipe supplier Baltimore Windustrial near the tracks, said he and about 10 co-workers felt the ground shake, ran to a window and saw several cars on their sides and flames he estimated at 50 feet high.
"You could feel the heat as soon as you walked out the door," Lindemann said.
"We kind of panicked pretty quick," he said. "We didn't wait around to see what was happening. So as soon as we saw the flames I took a quick picture and got in my truck and drove away."
Everyone left the building and drove several blocks away. Then they heard the explosion, five to 10 minutes after the derailment, he said.
"Even like three blocks away, it was loud. I mean, it just about took you to your knees," Lindemann said.
Derailments have done great damage before in Baltimore, a city with countless train tracks. Twelve years ago was the derailment and chemical fire in Baltimore's Howard Street tunnel. Rail cars burned for five days underground in July 2001. Portions of downtown were closed and rail traffic across the U.S. was affected for days.
The National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Railroad Administration were sending teams to investigate Tuesday's crash of the 45-car train en route from Selkirk, N.Y., to Waycross, Ga. It contained a variety of products from lumber to printing paper.
Police also planned to investigate the circumstances that led to the track collision, but it was not clear what, if any, charges the truck driver or anyone would face, said Baltimore County spokeswoman Elise Armacost. Police and fire officials said they were not sure how the truck got on the tracks or even whether it was at a crossing when it was hit.
Late Tuesday evening, Robert Sumwalt of the National Transportation Safety Board said the accident occurred at a private crossing where the only marking was a stop sign. He said it wasn't clear why the truck was crossing the tracks or whether it was authorized to be there.
Sumwalt said a team of 15 NTSB investigators was on the scene and would likely remain there for up to a week.
Photos showed at least a dozen rail cars off the tracks, including at least one tanker car. Sease said four of the cars believed derailed carried terephthalic acid, which is used in the production of plastics and polyester, among other things. He said it is not listed as a hazardous material.
Sumwalt said it was the chemical that exploded as a result of the derailment.
One of the cars still burning was carrying that acid, and another was carrying fluoroacetic acid, Hohman said.
Although county officials played down the health risks of the two acids, the National Institutes of Health website describes fluoroacetic acid as an "extremely toxic" constituent of many poisonous plants that is used to make products that kill rodents. It produces poisonous gases when burned, according to the NIH.
Materer said the gases contain chlorinated organics. He was less familiar with terephthalic acid but said it, too, contains chlorine.
"It just doesn't sound good," he said.
Hazardous materials moving through Baltimore and elsewhere in Maryland was the subject of an agreement a few years ago between the state and CSX. After a freight train with hazardous materials derailed in November 2007 near Camden Yards, CSX agreed to give officials real-time information about potential harmful cargo moving through the state. Railroads had previously guarded such details as proprietary information.
Also hit by a serious derailment this month was Bridgeport, Conn. On May 17, more than 70 people were injured when a commuter train went off the tracks. The eastbound train from New York City derailed during evening rush hour, came to a stop and was struck about 20 seconds later by a westbound train. In Rockview, Mo., on Saturday, a cargo train crash injured seven people and destroyed a highway overpass, which could take a year to repair.
Despite the high-profile railroad accidents, the overall number of such crashes has been declining industry wide and for CSX over the past decade.
Last year was the safest year on record for the railroad industry, according to the railroad administration. All train accidents are down 43 percent since 2003, and derailments have fallen 40 percent over the same period, according to data provided by the administration. Freight train derailments specifically are also down 40 percent.
In each of the past five years, CSX has reported more than 100 deaths in accidents and incidents involving the railroad.
CSX, based in Jacksonville, Fla., operates over 21,000 miles of track in 23 eastern states and two Canadian provinces.
Its shares traded higher Tuesday before the derailment was reported. The shares closed down 20 cents at $25.30.
Bertha Pressley and her husband Tom Brown said their townhome in Middle River, about 3 miles away, shook and they initially feared a bomb or natural disaster.
"I thought it was terrorism," Pressley said.
___
Associated Press writers Kasey Jones in Baltimore, David Dishneau in Hagerstown, Josh Funk in Omaha, Neb., and Joan Lowy in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/derailment-blast-near-baltimore-rattles-homes-220109868.html
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Specifications:
- CPU: 3rd Generation Intel Core i7/i5 Processor
- Chipset: Intel HM76
- Memory: DDR3 1333/1600MHz, 2 slots, Max. 16GB
- LCD Size: 17.3" Full HD (1920x1080) LED backlight, Anti-glare / 17.3" HD+ (1600x900) LED backlight, Anti-glare
- Graphics: NVIDIA Geforce GTX660M
- Graphics VRAM: 2GB GDDR5
- HDD (GB): 750GB SATA 7200/5400 rpm / 500GB SATA 7200/5400 rpm
- Optical Drive: Super-Multi / Blu-Ray (option)
- Audio: Audio Boost, 4(2Wx4)HD Speakers, THX True Studio Pro
- Webcam: HD Webcam (30fps@720p)
- Card Reader: SD(XC/HC)/MMC/MS(PRO)/xD
- LAN: Killer Gaming Networking for priority online gaming
- Wireless LAN: 802.11 b/g/ n
- Bluetooth: v4.0
- D-Sub (VGA): 1
- HDMI: 1
- USB 2.0 port: 2
- USB 3.0 port: 2
- Mic-in/Headphone-out: 1/1
- Keyboard: Keyboard by Steel Series 102 keys
It is highly recommended to always use the most recent driver version available.
Do not forget to check with our site as often as possible in order to stay updated on the latest drivers, software and games.
Try to set a system restore point before installing a device driver. This will help if you installed a wrong driver. Problems can arise when your hardware device is too old or not supported any longer.
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Edgar Yepez takes a photo among 7,000 American flags on display outside the Long Center in Austin, Texas, on Memorial Day, Monday, May 27, 2013. The flags are in honor of the fallen veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The display was organized by Operation Honor Our Heroes, an organization that was founded by Nancy Glass after her friend MSG Robert M. Horrigan was killed in Iraq in 2005. "I feel very honored to be part of this celebration," said Yepez, 28, who was born in Mexico to a Mexican mother and Pakistani father. (AP Photo/Austin American-Statesman, Jay Janner)
Edgar Yepez takes a photo among 7,000 American flags on display outside the Long Center in Austin, Texas, on Memorial Day, Monday, May 27, 2013. The flags are in honor of the fallen veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The display was organized by Operation Honor Our Heroes, an organization that was founded by Nancy Glass after her friend MSG Robert M. Horrigan was killed in Iraq in 2005. "I feel very honored to be part of this celebration," said Yepez, 28, who was born in Mexico to a Mexican mother and Pakistani father. (AP Photo/Austin American-Statesman, Jay Janner)
The fire-damaged exterior of Royal Caribbean's Grandeur of the Seas cruise ship is seen while docked in Freeport, Grand Bahama island, Monday, May 27, 2013. Royal Caribbean said the fire occurred early Monday while on route from Baltimore to the Bahamas on the mooring area of deck 3 and was quickly extinguished. All 2,224 guests and 796 crew were safe and accounted for. (AP Photo/The Freeport News, Jenneva Russell)
FILE - In this Saturday, May 18, 2013 file photo, Paul McCartney performs during the first U.S concert of his "Out There" tour, in Orlando, Fla. McCartney made his first visit to the one-time home of the King of Rock 'N' Roll and left a gift behind. According to the official Twitter account of the former Beatle, McCartney dropped a personal guitar pick on Elvis Presley's grave, Sunday, May 26, 2013, and said it was ?so Elvis can play in heaven." (AP Photo/John Raoux, File)
Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:
1. PRESSURE FOR PEACE IN SYRIA
Top U.S. and Russian diplomats meet in Europe to try and bring Assad and Syria's fractured opposition to talks in Geneva and the EU ends its arms embargo to the rebels.
2. QUESTIONS ABOUT MCCAIN'S UNANNOUNCED TRIP
The State Department was aware the Arizona Republican, a proponent of arming Syrian rebels, slipped into the country for the meeting with anti-government fighters.
3. CRUISE CANCELED AFTER ANOTHER SHIP FIRE
More than 2,200 passengers were being flown home after the blaze aboard the Royal Caribbean ship blaze, months after a Carnival ship was disabled by a fire.
4. OBAMA GOING BACK TO JERSEY SHORE
With Christie at his side again, the president will take a post-Hurricane Sandy tour of the coastline.
5. EMBATTLED RUTGERS STANDS BY NEW ATHLETIC DIRECTOR
President Robert Barchi says Julie Hermann will start next month, despite charges she humiliated and verbally abused her Tennessee volleyball team.
6. PRESIDENT MAKES MEMORIAL DAY APPEAL
"Even as we turn the page on a decade of conflict, our nation is still at war," Obama says at Arlington as combat in Afghanistan approaches 12 years.
7. CHARGES EXPECTED IN LIBERTY RESERVE PROBE
The founder of the Costa Rican digital currency business was arrested in Spain on money laundering charges and a Russian citizen will also be extradited to the
8. NEWBORN RESCUED FROM TOILET PIPE
Chinese firefighters sawed open the sewer pipe after a tenant in a residential building heard the baby's cries. The baby was reported safe in a nearby hospital.
9. WHY OBESE WOMEN ARE CHOOSING SURGERY
A study suggests that mothers who undergo weight-loss operations give birth to slimmer offspring.
10. WHAT MCCARTNEY LEFT FOR ELVIS
The former Beatle dropped a personal guitar pick on Presley's grave in his first trip to Graceland, "so Elvis can play in heaven."
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SEATTLE (AP) ? The collapse of an interstate highway bridge in northern Washington state should be a wake-up call that prompts an expansive safety review, according to the chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board.
Investigators need to establish a full account of what happened at the span over Interstate 5 about 60 miles north of Seattle and whether the same thing could happen elsewhere, Debbie Hersman said.
"At the end of the day, it's about preventing an accident like this," she said Saturday after examining the collapsed structure in the Skagit River.
The bridge came down last week after a truck bumped against the steel framework, prompting a collapse that sent two vehicles into the river. Three people involved escaped with non-life threatening injuries.
An investigation by The Associated Press suggests similar accidents could indeed happen elsewhere. Thousands of bridges around the U.S. are kept standing by engineering design, rather than sheer size or redundant protections. Such spans may be one freak accident or mistake away from collapse.
Bridge regulators call them "fracture critical" bridges, because if a single, vital component is compromised, they can crumple.
Hersman's team will spend about a week inspecting the I-5 bridge, talking to the truck driver whose vehicle hit it, and examining maintenance documents and previous accident reports.
Other over-height vehicles struck the Skagit River bridge before the collapse on Thursday, she noted. Investigators are using a high tech 3-D video camera to review the scene and attempt to pinpoint where the bridge failure began.
Hersman does not expect the investigation to delay removal of debris from the river or work on temporary replacement or repair plans. State and federal officials will work together on the investigation, she said.
They'll be watching for safety issues that could affect other bridges.
"The results can be very catastrophic," Hersman said. "We're very fortunate in this situation."
Washington state officials said Saturday that it will take time to find both short- and long-term fixes for the I-5 bridge.
While, the National Transportation and Safety Board finishes its inspection, state workers will begin removing debris from the river. Next, a temporary solution will be put in place to return traffic to Washington state's most important north-south roadway.
Inspectors say they are working to find out whether the collapse was a fluke or a sign of bigger problems.
A trucker was hauling a load of drilling equipment Thursday evening when his load bumped against the steel framework over the bridge. He looked in his rearview mirror and saw the span collapse into the water behind him.
Motorists should not expect to drive on I-5 between Mount Vernon and Burlington for many weeks and possibly months, said Washington Transportation Department spokesman Bart Treece.
About 71,000 vehicles use that stretch of highway every day.
Officials were looking for a temporary, pre-fabricated bridge to replace the 160-foot section that failed, Gov. Jay Inslee said Friday. That option could be in place in weeks. Otherwise, it could be months before a replacement can be built, the governor said.
Inslee said it will cost $15 million to repair the bridge. The federal government has promised $1 million in emergency dollars and more money could come later, according to Washington's congressional delegation.
___
Contact Donna Blankinship at https://twitter.com/dgblankinship
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ntsb-says-wash-bridge-collapse-wake-call-081218583.html
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Flying has been conquered by people. This mode of transportation is even considered the primary way of reaching different destinations. Most people turn to these aircraft because of the efficiency and the comfort. And while there are tons of commercial flights, there are also many people who choose to hire jet charter services. It is a little expensive but the benefits make all these reasonable.
Riding the private plane is somewhat a very convenient thing for there is no need to line up like many others. Definitely, people dislike wasting their time over waiting in long lines. They can look forward to reaching their destinations on time and without the hassle they always faced with other flights.
There are also no screening that are usually practiced in the airports. The deal is, since people are hiring these for themselves, they are in liberty to ride with peace in their minds. The pilots are all registered so they are sure of their background. They would also go through check to make sure they do not bring any contraband to their place of destination. Other than that, there are no more embarrassments that one expects from the commercial airports.
Every individual wishes to deal less with strangers. People just want to make sure that they are safe and that is one thing they need to be mindful of. They have to make sure that they have the place to themselves and there will be no people to pose threats to them.
People also need not share the toilet and catering facilities with other passengers. It does not mean that people freak out right away because of some diseases they may catch. The idea is, being with less people poses less health threats to the passengers. This is a prime concern especially that there are diseases that are spread through human contact on airplanes.
They can also be more comfortable in their seats. They have more leg room so they can stretch and move to a comfortable position. The passengers can also convert the seats to become beds if they want to sleep or rest. Such concerns are prime considerations when traveling.
There is no need to be worried about the staff because they are all trained and professionals. They even have to pass certain requirements in order to provide the best services to their clients on board. With that, the passengers are guaranteed of the comfort that is worth the money they spent.
Facilities are way better than the standard commercial planes. The aim is to give the passengers the most comfortable flight they will take. It is important therefore to give them the facilities that would make their flight bearable. They have seats by the window and they can have entertainment gadgets ready to while their time.
Hiring jet charter services surely would mean so much to people. Even if it is a little expensive, they can expect to come to their destination on time and according to their needs. They have the right staff and the most competent pilots to take them to their destinations which make it all worth it.
Read more about Jet Charter Services Are All About Efficiency And Great Service visiting our website.
Source: http://oregonattractions.net/travel-leisure/the-luxury-of-hiring-jet-charter-services/
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US basketball star Dennis Rodman recently hung out with North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un - now he's tweeted a request?that the American sentenced to 15 years' hard labor be released.
By Ryan Lenora Brown,?Correspondent / May 9, 2013
EnlargeWhen Dennis Rodman spent a week touring North Korea in February, he had nothing but glowing words for the country?s leader, Kim Jong-un.
Skip to next paragraph Ryan Lenora BrownCorrespondent
Ryan Brown edits the Africa Monitor blog and contributes to the national and international news desks of the Monitor. She is a former Fulbright fellow to South Africa and holds a degree in history from Duke University.?
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?Guess what? I love him,? he told reporters. ?He?s really awesome.?
But now the basketball diplomat is testing his friendship with the young Kim by asking the leader to release an American sentenced last week to 15 years of hard labor for ?hostile acts? against the North Korean regime.
?I?m calling on the Supreme Leader of North Korea, or as I call him, ?Kim,? to do me a solid and cut Kenneth Bae loose,? Mr. Rodman tweeted Tuesday.?
The missive came in response to a Seattle Times opinion piece last week, in which writer Thanh Tan called on Rodman to put his goodwill with Pyongyang on the line for Mr. Bae, a tour operator arrested in November on murky charges.
Perhaps now is the time for the NBA has-been to practice some real basketball diplomacy and call up his so-called friend for a favor: Grant American detainee Kenneth Bae amnesty and release him to his family?.
Bae is being used as a political pawn by a desperate despot who happened to?gallivant around the country with Rodman?in March. Perhaps now is the retired player?s chance to use his notoriety for something other than to over-inflate his ego.
Rodman apparently got the message.
?In direct response to your article headline, 'Ok.' Read your story @uscthanhtan, and I decided to help,? he tweeted.
And while Twitter is an admittedly feeble platform for diplomacy, it?s not out of the question that Kim will see the tweet. After all, the North Korean government has an active ? if bizarre ? Twitter presence itself, putting out an erratic blast of messages about American imperialism and the ?victory and glory? of the Kim regime.
But even if Kim gets Rodman?s message, will he understand it? After all, ?do me a solid? isn?t exactly a phrase that translates easily.
Washington Post blogger Max Fisher writes that the closest Korean equivalent of the colloquialism would be the somewhat menacing (at least to American ears) phrase, ?Look at my face and release Kenneth Bae.?
?Look at my face,? he writes, ?is a Korean expression that?s like a special, for-friends-only version of ?do me a favor.??
Whether Kim will look at Rodman?s face ? double nose ring and all ? remains to be seen, but Americans favored by North Korea have helped coax the regime to release American prisoners in the past.
In 2009, for instance, former President Bill Clinton visited Pyongyang and shortly after the visit then-Dear Leader Kim Jong-il pardoned two American journalists who were being held in the country. In total, six Americans ? including Bae ? have been held by the North Korean government since 2009, the Monitor reported. The other five were all released.
Rodman?s February visit to North Korea ? along with the friendship tour of Google Chairman Eric Schmidt in January ? was initially hailed by some Western observers as a sign that the young Kim might be more interested in opening his country to the rest of the world than his father and grandfather had been.
However, analysts say there have been no fundamental changes to the regime?s posture since then. If anything, interaction with Western celebrities puts the regime in a more powerful position because it can claim new geopolitical cache.?
?Ultimately, they [North Korea] come out ahead because they can portray it as the world coming to pay tribute, or at least to be there,? Aidan Foster-Carter, a Korean expert, told the Monitor in March.
Indeed, as the state-run Korean Central News Agency (as well as Western outlets) reported during Rodman?s trip, the basketball player was an enthusiastic tourist, visiting a greatest hits list of Kim-related sites.?
Rodman and his cohort "paid high tribute to Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il before their statues. They entered the halls where Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il lie in state and paid homage to them,? a press release announced. ?They made an entry in the visitor's book.?
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By Mark Felsenthal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Friday will seek to turn the spotlight from controversies threatening to swamp his agenda to the economic issues by announcing he will make it easier to get federal building projects off the ground.
The president travels to Baltimore, where he is due to say that he has signed a presidential memorandum streamlining the review and permitting of federal infrastructure projects.
In making the announcement while posing in front of heavy dredging equipment at a factory, Obama will have a chance to remind the public that he wants to spend $50 billion on repairing the nation's aging roads, bridges and ports. Later, he will visit an elementary school where he will stump for his goal of providing universal pre-schooling for the nation's children, which he views as a vital stepping stone to a better-educated, better-trained U.S. work force.
The president hopes his focus on jobs and education will change the subject from a trio of storms that have beleaguered his administration in recent days and that some believe could overrun his second term agenda.
In the past week, he has been forced to go on the defensive about his administration's handling of the attack on the U.S. facility in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans, the Internal Revenue Service's targeting of conservative groups for special scrutiny, and the Justice Department's seizure of phone logs of reporters and editors of the Associated Press in connection with an investigation of leaks of classified information.
After responding tentatively at first, the president took more active steps beginning Wednesday with the ouster of the acting IRS commissioner and announcement of support for legislation making it easier for reporters to protect their sources. He has called the IRS' actions inexcusable and pledged to find out who was responsible and hold them accountable.
On Thursday, the president and his staff stepped up efforts to get ahead of critics. The chief executive called for stepped up spending on embassy security, while saying he had no apologies about efforts to protect classified material. He and his surrogates belittled the furor over Benghazi as nothing more than a politically motivated campaign orchestrated by congressional Republicans to discredit him.
Obama's trip to Baltimore to talk about his agenda is a good idea and a productive change of scene for him, said Chris Lehane, a Democratic strategist who specialized in damage control for the Clinton White House.
"It gets you out of the bunker," Lehane said.
Shining a light on issues of jobs and growth also lets Obama note positive economic developments such as improving housing and labor markets and a fast-declining budget deficit - pocketbook issues that may have more resonance with the public than inside-the-Beltway political battles.
Still, congressional Republicans will seek to keep the focus on what they say are unanswered questions about all three controversies. IRS Commissioner Steven Miller, who was pushed out on Wednesday, testifies before the House tax-writing committee on Friday.
(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal and Roberta Rampton; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-shifts-focus-jobs-eases-building-permit-process-101033758.html
Jodi Arias looks at the family of Travis Alexander as the jury arrives on Wednesday, May 15, 2013, during the sentencing phase of her trial at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix. If the jury finds aggravating factors in her crime, Arias could be sentenced to death. Jodi Arias was convicted of first-degree murder in the stabbing and shooting death of Travis Alexander, 30, in his suburban Phoenix home in June 2008. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Rob Schumacher, Pool)
Jodi Arias looks at the family of Travis Alexander as the jury arrives on Wednesday, May 15, 2013, during the sentencing phase of her trial at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix. If the jury finds aggravating factors in her crime, Arias could be sentenced to death. Jodi Arias was convicted of first-degree murder in the stabbing and shooting death of Travis Alexander, 30, in his suburban Phoenix home in June 2008. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Rob Schumacher, Pool)
Jodi Arias appears for the sentencing phase of her trial at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. The same jury that convicted Arias of murder one week ago took about three hours Wednesday to determine that the former waitress is eligible for the death penalty in the stabbing and shooting death of her one-time lover in his bathroom five years ago. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Rob Schumacher, Pool)
Jodi Arias appears for the sentencing phase of her trial at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix, Wednesday, May 15, 2013. The same jury that convicted Arias of murder one week ago took about three hours Wednesday to determine that the former waitress is eligible for the death penalty in the stabbing and shooting death of her one-time lover in his bathroom five years ago. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Rob Schumacher, Pool)
Prosecutor Juan Martinez addresses the jury on Wednesday, May 15, 2013, during the sentencing phase of the Jodi Arias murder trial at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix. If the jury finds aggravating factors in her crime, Arias could be sentenced to death. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Rob Schumacher, Pool)
Defense attorney Kirk Nurmi addresses the jury on Wednesday, May 15, 2013 during the sentencing phase of the Jodi Arias murder trial at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix. If the jury finds aggravating factors in her crime, Arias could be sentenced to death. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Rob Schumacher, Pool)
PHOENIX (AP) ? Attorneys for Jodi Arias asked to step down from the case after their client was convicted of first-degree murder, but a judge denied the request.
Arias returns to court Thursday for the final phase of her trial as the same jury that convicted her last week now weighs whether the former waitress should be sentenced to life in prison or death.
Her attorneys must convince jurors she shouldn't be executed. But just Tuesday, Kirk Nurmi and Jennifer Willmott asked a judge for permission to withdraw from the case. The detail was contained in court minutes and provides no information about why the two defense lawyers asked to withdraw.
Legal experts have said that Arias complicated efforts for her defense when she gave an interview to Fox affiliate KSAZ minutes after her conviction Wednesday, saying that she preferred death over life in prison.
"I believe death is the ultimate freedom, and I'd rather have my freedom as soon as I can get it," Arias said.
However, Arias cannot choose the death penalty. It's up to the jury to recommend a sentence.
On Wednesday, the panel took less than three hours to determine that Arias should be eligible for the death penalty in the killing of her one-time lover after prosecutors proved the murder was especially cruel and heinous.
Arias, 32, acknowledged killing Travis Alexander on June 4, 2008, at his suburban Phoenix home after a day of sex. She initially denied any involvement then later blamed the attack on masked intruders. Two years after her arrest, she settled on self-defense.
On Thursday, the penalty phase of her trial begins during which prosecutors will call Alexander's family and other witnesses in an effort to convince the panel Arias should face the ultimate punishment. Arias' defense lawyers will have her family members testify, and likely others who have known her over the years, in an attempt to gain sympathy from jurors to save her life. It's not yet known if Arias will testify.
Arias showed no emotion Wednesday after the jury returned a decision that was widely expected given the violent nature of the killing. She slashed Alexander's throat, stabbed him in the heart and shot him in the forehead. The victim suffered a total of nearly 30 knife wounds in what prosecutors described as an attack fueled by jealous rage after Alexander wanted to end his affair with Arias and prepared to take a trip to Mexico with another woman.
The jury simply had to determine the killing was committed in an especially cruel and heinous manner to complete the "aggravation phase" of the trial and move on to the penalty portion.
Alexander's family members sobbed in the front row as prosecutor Juan Martinez took the jury through the killing one more time earlier in the day. He described how blood gushed from Alexander's chest, hands and neck as the 30-year-old motivational speaker and businessman stood at the sink in his master bathroom and looked into the mirror with Arias behind him, a knife in her hand.
"The last thing he saw before he lapsed into unconsciousness ... was that blade coming to his throat," Martinez said. "And the last thing he felt before he left this earth was pain."
Wednesday's proceedings played out quickly, with only one prosecution witness and none for the defense. The most dramatic moments occurred when Martinez displayed photos of Alexander's corpse and the bloody crime scene for the jury, then paused in silence for two minutes to describe how long he said it took for Alexander to die at Arias' hands.
Arias, wearing a silky, cream-colored blouse, appeared to fight back tears most of the morning, but didn't seem fazed by the verdict. Afterward she chatted with her attorneys. Arias spent the weekend on suicide watch before being transferred back to an all-female jail where she will remain until sentencing.
Arias' attorneys didn't put on much of a case during the aggravation phase, offering no witnesses and giving brief opening statements and closing arguments. They said Alexander would have had so much adrenaline rushing through his body that he might not have felt much pain.
The only witness was the medical examiner who performed the autopsy and explained to jurors how Alexander did not die calmly and fought for his life as evidenced by the numerous defensive wounds on his body.
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Each week Joshua Fruhlinger contributes This is the Modem World, a column dedicated to exploring the culture of consumer technology.
I'm hanging out in Atlanta right now, getting ready to speak at Digital Summit 2013 about things you're probably not terribly interested in. Most importantly, I'm sitting at a bar and just ordered what looks to be a monster of a burger called the "Hot Mess" at a place called Park Bar near my hotel. Despite my disdain for online review sites, it was either this via Yelp or the hotel bar and, well, I find hotel bars depressing.
It's also pretty clear that the only reason I ordered the Hot Mess is because my wife isn't here to give me a hard time about it. No, I'm not a kept man, but I respect her knowledge of health and try to let her guide me most of the time. But when I'm on the road, I sometimes let all bets fall to the floor so that daddy can dig into a burger uninterrupted.
Filed under: Misc
Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/h6Upay7-NMo/
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CHICAGO (AP) ? Donald Trump took the witness stand Tuesday at a civil trial where the developer-turned-TV personality is accused of wooing investors into buying condos at his namesake Chicago skyscraper by promising profit-sharing, then reneging on that promise after the sales.
The real estate magnate gained famed for scrutinizing contestants and firing ones he deemed incompetent on his "Apprentice" TV show. But Trump himself was the one on the hot seat as a plaintiff's attorney sought to demonstrate to jurors that he and his companies engaged in a bait-and-switch.
Plaintiff's attorney Shelly Kulwin sought to establish that Trump was a hands-on manager, while Trump said he was a big-picture executive.
"The primary thing is to build a great building," Trump told jurors, leaning into a microphone and speaking calmly and steadily. "You can't fool people."
"That's an interesting infomercial," Kulwin responded. The attorney later told the judge that Trump wasn't answering his questions, saying "he's giving a speech."
Both sides have said Trump's testimony is key to the trial's outcome and so he could remain on the stand for days talking about the development of his glitzy Trump International Hotel & Tower.
The trial stems from a lawsuit filed by Jacqueline Goldberg, 87, who in 2006 agreed to buy two condos for around $1 million apiece at the 92-story luxury building. It boasts more than 300 hotel rooms and nearly 500 condominiums in a prime location ? along the Chicago River and just two blocks from Michigan Avenue.
The lawsuit that alleges breach of contract and deceptive practices seeks the return of a $500,000 deposit Goldberg made for the properties and other unspecified damages.
Goldberg's lawyer portrayed the sale of the condos to his client as a bait-and-switch, where Trump and his executives sought to make the properties more attractive investments by telling would-be buyers they would reap a percentage of profits from banquet hall rentals, food sales, laundry, parking and other services.
Trump's stardom and real estate successes were also touted in condo sales pitches.
"'Who better to go into the hotel business with than Donald Trump?' she thought," Kulwin told jurors during opening statements Monday.
One reason Trump summarily canceled the profit-sharing plan, Kulwin said, was because he had failed to entice a corporate tenant to rent several floors of the building ? cutting into the tower's potential profit. The profit he had promised to make condos a more attractive investment he now needed for himself, Kulwin said.
By the time Goldberg went ahead with her purchase in 2006, Kulwin alleged, Trump and other executives already knew the profit-sharing offer would be withdrawn. It was only formally withdrawn in 2009, however, a few months before the tower's grand opening, he said.
"They made a deal and then they said, 'Surprise! No deal,'" he said.
But Trump attorney Stephen Novack said Goldberg was a sophisticated, longtime investor who signed documents explicitly giving Trump executives the power to revoke the profit-sharing offer if they saw fit.
In an apparent bid to deflect any blame from Trump himself, Novack in his opening statement also sought to counter the plaintiff's portrayal of Trump as a hands-on executive.
"Donald Trump delegates most decisions," Novack said, noting he had 2,500 employees. "It would be impossible for him to be in the details of each project."
He insisted the decision to change the profit-sharing provision was someone else's and it was one that Trump only agreed to later.
___
Follow Michael Tarm at http://www.twitter.com/mtarm .
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/donald-trump-stand-chicago-trial-211803141.html
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OTTAWA ? Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is dismissing fears about Canada?s housing market, saying the current slowdown is welcome news and that there is no need for further government intervention.
While some observers are expressing fears that a steep correction is underway that will bring down housing values and possibly affect bank credit ratings, Flaherty said Tuesday that he believes government mortgage tightening last July actually helped avert what could have turned into a housing bubble.
Andrew Coyne: If there is one sure way to turn the household debt problem into a raging crisis, it would be to abandon our inflation targets in pursuit of exchange rate ?stability.? Let?s not, shall we? Read more.
?I?m comfortable about where we are,? he said in a telephone interview from France where he announced new government financing for the construction of a visitor?s centre at the Vimy Ridge war memorial.
?I?m pleased in particular that the condo market in big cities has fallen back. I?m also pleased with some other moderation in new house construction and in demand for mortgages. I think these are healthy developments because I think we were beginning to see some indications of the beginning of a bubble.?
These are healthy developments because I think we were beginning to see some indications of the beginning of a bubble
He called the recent slowdown ?healthy? and at least in part a consequence of his decision to tighten mortgage rules last July.
A new Teranet house price report released Tuesday showed home price increases slipped to two per cent in April from 2.6% in March. Analysts noted that was the weakest performance since the recession for April, traditionally a good month for sales and prices.
While home sales have fallen nationally, and starts are now in the 180,000 a year range, well down from over 200,000 last year, home prices have stubbornly resisted that trend in most markets.
However, analysts note that prices are often the last indicator to kick in when a residential market falls, and some have speculated that prices could plunge by as much as 25%, even further in the overheated Vancouver market.
The Office of Superintendent of Financial Institutions has told banks it is looking at their holdings of non-insured mortgages ? those with at least 20 per cent equity ? to determine the systemic risk should values plunge.
But Flaherty said he has no plans to further tighten government-backed mortgages for homebuyers with as little as a five per cent down payment. After tightening rules four times in the past four years, Flaherty said he has done enough.
?I?m not going to intervene in the mortgage market, I don?t need to,? he said.
Over the weekend, Flaherty participated in a Group of Seven meeting in England, where he warned about waning resolve to reduce deficits and debt among southern European countries.
Flaherty said he had not changed his mind even though austerity is being blamed for depressing growth and in some cases exacerbating governmental deficits, since lower growth usually means lower tax revenues and higher costs.
Northern European countries agree with his position, he said, describing the U.S. stance on fiscal restraint as ?ambiguous.?
?If you don?t get your fiscal situation correct in government, then you can forget about getting education, health-care, research and development and other important initiatives ?. because you won?t have the fiscal means to do it.?
As well, governments risk not having the means to respond to the next economic crisis, he warned.
The minister said that governments can still stimulate economic activity while controlling spending.
?As I said to my G7 colleagues, it isn?t an all or nothing game, it?s about trying to get the right balance,? he explained, pointing out that his March budget retained previously-introduced austerity measures while committing funds to infrastructure projects and job training.
From Canada?s perspective, he says the government remains committed to balancing the budget in 2015.
Going forward, Flaherty said next month?s G8 (including Russia) meeting in Northern Ireland will again seek to tackle the issue of country hopping by multinational corporations seeking the best tax advantage.
?We?re all agreed we have to make sure that large corporations that operate globally pay their fair share of tax and that they don?t try to use one or the other of our jurisdictions not to pay their fair share. We are firmly resolved on that,? he said.
Source: http://business.financialpost.com/2013/05/14/canada-housing-market-correction/
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BANGKOK (AP) ? Japan's stock market jumped Monday after global finance leaders gave a seal of approval to the country's stimulus program and refrained from criticizing its weakening effect on the yen. Stocks were mixed elsewhere in Asia.
The benchmark Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo rose 1.1 percent to 14,765.29. The index has soared nearly 43 percent since the beginning of the year.
Finance leaders from the world's seven leading industrialized economies said at a meeting over the weekend in Britain that Japan's stimulus policies are aimed at boosting the domestic economy, which has been mired in stagnation since the 1990s, and not manipulating the yen.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, elected late last year on promises to revive the world's third-largest economy, has implemented a policy mix of increased public spending and aggressive monetary easing.
One result has been a dramatic fall in the value of the yen, which helps the country's export industries by making products more affordable in overseas markets while increasing the value of repatriated profits. On Thursday, the dollar rose above 100 yen for the first time in more than four years.
Elsewhere, South Korea's Kospi was nearly unchanged at 1,945.52. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 1.1 percent to 23,071.67. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 dropped 0.2 percent to 5,196.10 after banking shares slid. Westpac Banking Corp. fell 3.8 percent and Macquarie Group shed 1.9 percent after both companies went ex-dividend.
Evan Lucas, market strategist at IG in Melbourne, Australia said some investors were sticking to the sidelines ahead of the release later in the day of data on fixed asset investment, including property development, in China. Expectations are for a 21.1 percent year-on-year increase; anything beyond raises the possibility of monetary tightening in the minds of analysts, Lucas said.
"A lot of people are talking about the possibility that China's central government may look to tighten to slow the economy down again," he said. China was also to report on industrial output and retail sales.
Commodities such as gold and oil fell Friday as the U.S. dollar continues to appreciate against the yen and other currencies. When the dollar rises against other currencies, it tends to weaken demand for commodities, hurting resource-related shares.
Hong Kong-listed Zijin Mining Group, China's largest gold miner, fell 2.2 percent. Japanese energy explorer Inpex Corp. tumbled 6.1 percent.
On Wall Street on Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.2 percent to close at 15,118.49. The Standard & Poor's 500 index climbed 0.4 percent to 1,633.70. The Nasdaq composite index rose 0.8 percent to 3,436.58.
Benchmark oil for June delivery was down 90 cents to $95.14 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 35 cents to $96.04 per barrel in Nymex trading on Friday in New York.
In currencies, the euro fell to $1.2975 from $1.2983 late Friday in New York. The dollar rose to 101.66 yen from 101.53 yen.
___
Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nikkei-japan-gets-nod-g7-stimulus-032555033.html
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Contact: Shannon McCormick
shannon@mediasourcetv.com
614-477-2719
American Society of Plastic Surgeons
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill.The American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) today announced its strong support of the "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act" (S. 931). This bipartisan legislation is being introduced today, coinciding with National Women's Health Week, in the U.S. House of Representatives by Reps. Leonard Lance (R-NJ) and Donna Christensen, M.D. (D-VI) and in the United States Senate by Sens. Roy Blunt (R-MO), Sherrod Brown (D-OH) and David Vitter (R-LA).
Since 1998, health plans that offer breast cancer coverage have been required to provide coverage for breast reconstruction and prostheses. Yet published research shows that many women eligible for breast reconstruction following breast cancer, minorities in particular, are not informed of the variety of care options. Approximately 232,340 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in 2013, according to the American Cancer Society's most recent estimates for breast cancer in the United States.
The "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act" requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to plan and implement an education campaign to inform women of the availability and coverage of breast reconstruction, prostheses and other options. The Secretary may develop information for distribution or may identify information prepared by other organizations. The educational materials would inform women that breast reconstruction is possible at the time of breast cancer surgery, it may be delayed until after other treatments, or they may choose not to have reconstruction and be informed of the availability of prostheses or breast forms. Also, educational materials would inform breast cancer patients that federal law mandates coverage of breast reconstruction, even if such reconstruction is delayed until after other treatments.
"There's no reason women should miss out on treatment options because those options were not offered to them," said ASPS President Gregory Evans, MD. "Today's release of Angelina's powerful op/ed piece detailing her personal mastectomy and breast reconstruction journey can only help to raise awareness of the Breast Cancer Patient Education Act."
Several states have enacted laws requiring that women receive information about their breast cancer treatment and reconstructive options. The "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act" seeks to inform and empower women to make health care decisions that best meet their personal needs.
"We thank our congressmen and women for being active and tireless advocates for the Breast Cancer Patient Education Act," said Dr. Evans. "They recognize the education disparity and the importance of ensuring that every woman understands all the available treatment options."
In support of additional education to ensure all breast cancer patients are fully informed of their surgical options, ASPS and The Plastic Surgery Foundation (The PSF) have partnered with renowned singer-songwriter, philanthropist and breast cancer advocate Jewel. For the second year in a row, Jewel will serve as the Breast Reconstruction Awareness Day USA spokesperson. In light of this legislation, Jewel has recorded a new television public service announcement advocating on behalf of those with breast cancer. The new PSA, released this week, encourages the public to contact their member of Congress in support of the "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act".
Breast Reconstruction Awareness Day takes place on October 16, 2013, and this year's theme is the "Team Approach" which encourages all physicians on the breast cancer care team to work together.
Jewel has also written the song "Flower" honoring breast reconstruction patients. All proceeds of the song are donated to the Breast Reconstruction Awareness Fund of The PSF. The song can be purchased from iTunes and Amazon.
###
For referrals to ASPS Member Surgeons certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, visit http://www.plasticsurgery.org where you can also learn more about cosmetic and reconstructive plastic surgery.
Multimedia available - To download HD version of the PSA, b-roll, photos or sound bites from Jewel visit the American Society of Plastic Surgeon's newsroom: http://bit.ly/YHcFYM.
About ASPS
The American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) is the world's largest organization of board certified plastic surgeons. Representing more than 7,000 Member Surgeons, the Society is recognized as a leading authority and information source on aesthetic and reconstructive plastic surgery. ASPS comprises more than 94 percent of all board-certified plastic surgeons in the United States. Founded in 1931, the Society represents physicians certified by The American Board of Plastic Surgery or The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. ASPS advances quality care to plastic surgery patients by encouraging high standards of training, ethics, physician practice and research in plastic surgery. You can learn more and visit the American Society of Plastic Surgeons at PlasticSurgery.org or Facebook.com/PlasticSurgeryASPS and Twitter.com/ASPS_News.
?
AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.
Contact: Shannon McCormick
shannon@mediasourcetv.com
614-477-2719
American Society of Plastic Surgeons
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill.The American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) today announced its strong support of the "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act" (S. 931). This bipartisan legislation is being introduced today, coinciding with National Women's Health Week, in the U.S. House of Representatives by Reps. Leonard Lance (R-NJ) and Donna Christensen, M.D. (D-VI) and in the United States Senate by Sens. Roy Blunt (R-MO), Sherrod Brown (D-OH) and David Vitter (R-LA).
Since 1998, health plans that offer breast cancer coverage have been required to provide coverage for breast reconstruction and prostheses. Yet published research shows that many women eligible for breast reconstruction following breast cancer, minorities in particular, are not informed of the variety of care options. Approximately 232,340 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in 2013, according to the American Cancer Society's most recent estimates for breast cancer in the United States.
The "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act" requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services to plan and implement an education campaign to inform women of the availability and coverage of breast reconstruction, prostheses and other options. The Secretary may develop information for distribution or may identify information prepared by other organizations. The educational materials would inform women that breast reconstruction is possible at the time of breast cancer surgery, it may be delayed until after other treatments, or they may choose not to have reconstruction and be informed of the availability of prostheses or breast forms. Also, educational materials would inform breast cancer patients that federal law mandates coverage of breast reconstruction, even if such reconstruction is delayed until after other treatments.
"There's no reason women should miss out on treatment options because those options were not offered to them," said ASPS President Gregory Evans, MD. "Today's release of Angelina's powerful op/ed piece detailing her personal mastectomy and breast reconstruction journey can only help to raise awareness of the Breast Cancer Patient Education Act."
Several states have enacted laws requiring that women receive information about their breast cancer treatment and reconstructive options. The "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act" seeks to inform and empower women to make health care decisions that best meet their personal needs.
"We thank our congressmen and women for being active and tireless advocates for the Breast Cancer Patient Education Act," said Dr. Evans. "They recognize the education disparity and the importance of ensuring that every woman understands all the available treatment options."
In support of additional education to ensure all breast cancer patients are fully informed of their surgical options, ASPS and The Plastic Surgery Foundation (The PSF) have partnered with renowned singer-songwriter, philanthropist and breast cancer advocate Jewel. For the second year in a row, Jewel will serve as the Breast Reconstruction Awareness Day USA spokesperson. In light of this legislation, Jewel has recorded a new television public service announcement advocating on behalf of those with breast cancer. The new PSA, released this week, encourages the public to contact their member of Congress in support of the "Breast Cancer Patient Education Act".
Breast Reconstruction Awareness Day takes place on October 16, 2013, and this year's theme is the "Team Approach" which encourages all physicians on the breast cancer care team to work together.
Jewel has also written the song "Flower" honoring breast reconstruction patients. All proceeds of the song are donated to the Breast Reconstruction Awareness Fund of The PSF. The song can be purchased from iTunes and Amazon.
###
For referrals to ASPS Member Surgeons certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, visit http://www.plasticsurgery.org where you can also learn more about cosmetic and reconstructive plastic surgery.
Multimedia available - To download HD version of the PSA, b-roll, photos or sound bites from Jewel visit the American Society of Plastic Surgeon's newsroom: http://bit.ly/YHcFYM.
About ASPS
The American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) is the world's largest organization of board certified plastic surgeons. Representing more than 7,000 Member Surgeons, the Society is recognized as a leading authority and information source on aesthetic and reconstructive plastic surgery. ASPS comprises more than 94 percent of all board-certified plastic surgeons in the United States. Founded in 1931, the Society represents physicians certified by The American Board of Plastic Surgery or The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. ASPS advances quality care to plastic surgery patients by encouraging high standards of training, ethics, physician practice and research in plastic surgery. You can learn more and visit the American Society of Plastic Surgeons at PlasticSurgery.org or Facebook.com/PlasticSurgeryASPS and Twitter.com/ASPS_News.
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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/m-asn051413.php
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