রবিবার, ৩০ জুন, ২০১৩

China boosts security in Xinjiang after bloodshed

Last updated at 12:51 pm

Hello, '+data+'

'); //session extend only for non protected pages $(".ldap_iframe").html(""); } else { //get remember cookie var ldap_remember = getCookie("ldap_remember"); if(ldap_remember == "enable") { //check if user logout sucessfully before. if no counter found, proceed var ldap_remember_counter = getCookie("ldap_remember_counter"); if(typeof ldap_remember_counter === "undefined") { //once redirect create counter cookies to prevent for infinite looping createCookie("ldap_remember_counter","enable",24); window.top.location.href = "http://www.straitstimes.com/ldap/regen.php?goto=/breaking-news/asia/story/china-boosts-security-xinjiang-after-bloodshed-20130630"; } else { //logout not clean up eraseCookie("ldap_remember"); eraseCookie("ldap_remember_counter"); $('#header_ajax').html('

Sunday, 30 June 2013Sun, 30 June 2013

Last updated at 12:51 pm

'); } } else { $('#header_ajax').html('

Sunday, 30 June 2013Sun, 30 June 2013

Last updated at 12:51 pm

'); } } }, error:function(xhr, status, error) { var ldap_remember = getCookie("ldap_remember"); if(ldap_remember == "enable") { var ldap_remember_counter = getCookie("ldap_remember_counter"); if(typeof ldap_remember_counter === "undefined") { createCookie("ldap_remember_counter","enable",24); window.top.location.href = "http://www.straitstimes.com/ldap/regen.php?goto=/breaking-news/asia/story/china-boosts-security-xinjiang-after-bloodshed-20130630"; } else { eraseCookie("ldap_remember"); eraseCookie("ldap_remember_counter"); $('#header_ajax').html('

Sunday, 30 June 2013Sun, 30 June 2013

Last updated at 12:51 pm

'); } } else { $('#header_ajax').html('

Sunday, 30 June 2013Sun, 30 June 2013

Last updated at 12:51 pm

'); } } }); }); function eraseCookie(name) { createCookie(name,"",-1); } function createCookie(name,value,days) { if (days) { var date = new Date(); date.setTime(date.getTime()+(days*24*60*60*1000)); var expires = "; expires="+date.toGMTString(); } else var expires = ""; document.cookie = name+"="+value+expires+"; path=/"; } function getCookie(c_name) { var i,x,y,ARRcookies=document.cookie.split(";"); for (i=0;i

Source: http://straitstimes.com.feedsportal.com/c/32792/f/640960/s/2dfbd50b/l/0L0Sstraitstimes0N0Cbreaking0Enews0Casia0Cstory0Cchina0Eboosts0Esecurity0Exinjiang0Eafter0Ebloodshed0E20A130A630A/story01.htm

neil degrasse tyson neil degrasse tyson davy jones death born this way foundation lytro camera lytro camera andrew brietbart

Gay, evangelical and seeking acceptance in church

Evangelicals are being challenged to change their views of gays and lesbians, and the pressure isn't coming from the gay rights movement or watershed court rulings: Once silent for fear of being shunned, more gay and lesbian evangelicals are speaking out about how they've struggled to reconcile their beliefs and sexual orientation.

Students and alumni from Christian colleges have been forming gay and lesbian support groups ? a development that even younger alumni say they couldn't have imagined in their own school years. Gay evangelicals have published memoirs that prod traditional Christians to re-examine how they think about gays and lesbians. Among the most recent is Jeff Chu's "Does Jesus Really Love Me? A Gay Christian's Pilgrimage in Search of God in America." Paul Southwick, a gay evangelical attorney in Oregon, has started an "It Gets Better" style video project, "On God's Campus: Voices from the Queer Underground," with testimonials from gays and lesbians at the Christian schools.

The goals of these activists and writers vary. Some argue monogamous same-sex marriages are consistent with traditional Bible views and hope to remain in conservative churches. Others agree with traditional teaching on marriage and have committed to staying celibate for life, but are speaking out because they feel demonized within their communities.

Whatever their aims, they are already having an impact.

"There are a growing number of us who grew up hearing a certain origin story about our same-sex attraction that didn't resonate with us," said Wesley Hill, 32, who teaches at a conservative Anglican seminary, Trinity School for Ministry in Pennsylvania, and wrote the book "Washed and Waiting: Reflections on Christian Faithfulness and Homosexuality." ''We are wanting to have conversations that older generations of evangelicals haven't had or haven't wanted to have."

A February survey by the Public Religion Research Institute found seven in 10 white evangelicals overall were against gay marriage. However, younger respondents backed same-sex marriage by 51 percent. Younger Christians grew up with openly gay friends and relatives, and often found their elder's fight for traditional marriage damaging to the church, according to studies by the Barna Group's David Kinnamon, among other surveys.

Still, it is only in the last few years that gay and lesbian evangelicals have discussed their same-sex attraction so openly. It has been far more common for gays and lesbians from traditional faith groups to join liberal houses of worship or leave organized religion altogether. In a recent survey of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans by the Pew Research Center, 48 percent said they had no religious affiliation, compared with 20 percent of the general public. Of the LGBT adults with religious ties, one-third said there is a conflict between their religious beliefs and their sexual orientation.

Evangelical leaders are taking notice. After the U.S. Supreme Court last week gave federal recognition to gay marriages, several evangelicals responded not only by renewing their commitment to traditional marriage, but also by urging like-minded Christians to be more sensitive in the way they express their beliefs. For those outside conservative Christianity, this may not seem significant, but it's a notable change for Christians who believe their faith requires them to challenge same-sex relationships.

"We need to show grace and friendship to those who struggle, while holding fast to what the Scriptures teach. Without hiding our beliefs, we need to look for opportunities to have conversations, build relationships and demonstrate grace," wrote Ed Stetzer, head of the research arm of the Southern Baptist Convention, on his blog, "The Exchange."

A week earlier, the head of Exodus International, a Christian ministry that helped conflicted Christians rid themselves of unwanted same-sex attraction through counseling and prayer, apologized to the gay community for inflicting "years of undue suffering." Alan Chambers said he continues to hold "a biblical view that the original intent for sexuality was designed for heterosexual marriage." Still, he said the organization would shut down and he would instead work to promote reconciliation between people with opposing views.

In the last few years, more than 40 gay and lesbian support groups have been formed at Christian colleges, by Southwick's estimate. The 29-year-old lawyer has been reaching out to the groups as part of his video project and is also active in OneGeorgeFox, the support group founded by gay and lesbian alumni and students of his alma mater, George Fox University, a Christian school in Oregon.

He said few of the groups have been formally recognized by their schools and some meet secretly off campus. Christian colleges generally have community standards policies barring sex outside of marriage between a man and a woman. Students fear publicly identifying as gay ? celibate or not ? could jeopardize their futures at the schools.

"The goal is survival," Southwick said. "If you talk to any of the LGBT students at these campuses, they are in environments that are really hostile."

However, at least one prominent evangelical school, Wheaton College in Illinois, officially recognized its support group, called Refuge, four months ago. Wheaton is known as the Harvard of evangelical schools, graduating evangelist Billy Graham and other influential leaders. LaTonya Taylor, a Wheaton spokeswoman, said the goal of Refuge "is for students who experience same-sex attraction to be mentored by a Christian community" within traditional biblical standards, "rather than to struggle alone in silence." Other schools, including George Fox, have responded to the groups by organizing campus discussions about the Bible and homosexuality, including speakers who support same-sex relationships.

Another sign of change: Gay evangelicals have already prompting a backlash.

The influential Pentecostal magazine Charisma ran a critical three-part series starting in May, titled "Can a Christian be Gay?" in response to the recent book "Torn: Rescuing the Gospel from the Gays vs. Christians Debate" by Justin Lee, founder of the Gay Christian Network.

Lee is gay and celibate, but encourages dialogue among evangelicals with different views. He frames the discussion as "Side A" and "Side B" Christians. "Side B" believes gays should be celibate because of a consistent Christian teaching that sex is only for marriage between a man and a woman. "Side A" Christians believe God blesses same-sex relationships because the particular Bible verses cited to condemn homosexuality do not reflect advances in knowledge about same-sex attraction.

Lee started the network as an online-only community in 2001. It has since grown to become a national organization based in Raleigh, N.C., with annual conferences that organizers say draw hundreds of people.

In his Charisma articles, evangelist Larry Tomczak wrote that he wanted to clear up confusion caused by Lee's arguments.

"An entire chapter in the Old Testament lists certain activities and calls them 'detestable,' stating in no uncertain terms, "Stay away!" The New Testament uses five terms to describe both male and female homosexual conduct: 'unnatural,' 'perverted,' 'degrading,' 'shameful' and 'indecent,'" Tomczak wrote. "Not to be facetious, but is that hard to understand?"

Tomczak said being gay is a choice ? and one that dishonors God.

Inadvertently, Exodus and other ministries that have promised a gay-to-straight transformation have played a role in prompting gay and lesbian evangelicals to go public. Many gay evangelicals who unsuccessfully sought out a "cure" in the programs have emerged with profound misgivings about the way Christians approach the issue.

A 2005 graduate of George Fox University, Southwick said he was encouraged by the school to enter a two-year counseling program with a local affiliate of Exodus, which included a graduation ceremony that Southwick dismissed as "a straight diploma." He became depressed and suicidal during the program.

Lee, of the Gay Christian Network, was raised Southern Baptist believing that gays could become straight "if they trusted God and had the willingness to do so." In college, he attended Exodus conferences and sought out other similar ministries hoping to become attracted to women. It didn't work. Lee says he's always been celibate, so the ministries' focus on changing behavior wasn't helpful.

"I was focused on changing the attractions. That led me to ask a lot of tough questions about whether people's attractions were changing and I realized they were not," Lee said.

The Rev. Russell Moore, head of the public policy arm of the Southern Baptist Convention, cautioned against reading too much into the collapse of Exodus International or any talk of a more compassionate evangelical response to gays and lesbians.

' 'There is no change in the Christian sexual ethic, because there can't be. For us it's a matter of Gospel fidelity," Moore said.

Instead, he considers the Exodus shutdown the end of a misguided therapeutic approach that Moore argues promised a quick fix it couldn't deliver. "We like conversion stories, and we like them to be quickly resolved in two or three minutes with a happy ending, but that's not what the Christian life is like in Scripture," he said.

Still, Moore agrees religious conservatives are at least approaching the debate about homosexuality differently in what he calls "a more authentic, honest conversation about sexuality."

At Fuller Theological Seminary, a leading evangelical school in Pasadena, Calif., the group OneTable formed to foster open discussion about religion and homosexuality.

Last October, Episcopal Bishop Gene Robinson, the first bishop in world Anglicanism to live openly with a same-sex partner, spoke to the students, at a screening of a movie "Love Free or Die," about the uproar that followed his 2003 election as the New Hampshire bishop.

"Everyone thought there would be some horrendous blowup. It was a wonderful evening. The questions to me were absolutely honest and thoughtful and faithful," said Robinson, who recently retired from his diocese. "A lot of people came in certain and a lot of people left confused ? which is huge."

___

Follow Rachel Zoll at www.twitter.com/rzollAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gay-evangelical-seeking-acceptance-church-161522243.html

kelis dick clark dies ibogaine jamie moyer bone cancer hossa the cell

From ethnic slaughter to stability in two decades: Former war zone Croatia joins EU

Antonio Bronic / Reuters, file

A combination picture shows the old town of Mali Ston, Croatia, in 1991 and the same area, rebuilt, in 2012. The city of Dubrovnik was severely damaged due to shelling by Serb-dominated Yugoslav troops during Croatia's 1991-95 war of independence.

By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

Only 18 years after a peace deal ended violence that left the former Yugoslavia bloodsoaked and?gave birth to the term "ethnic cleansing," Croatia is to join the European Union at midnight on Sunday.

It is a major milestone for Balkan countries trying to close the door on decades of Communist rule and the horrors of civil wars that?tore apart communities along ethnic and religious lines.

But while European leaders trumpet the latest expansion of the economic bloc, celebrations may be muted in austerity-weary Croatia.

With its thousands of miles of glistening Adriatic coastline, modern highways and sidewalk cafes, Croatia looks as prosperous as its new cousins in western Europe.

That masks an economy crippled by soaring national debt, an unemployment rate of 18.1 percent and an economy heavily dependent upon tourism.

?I fear that we will become another Greece, another Cyprus,? said Vesna Mitrovic, who runs a vacation apartment near Dubrovnik ? the historic city that became trapped in a six-month siege in 1991 and is now home to the Museum of Croatia?s War of Independence.

?I signed the petition against EU membership," she said. "I think we will become a small fish in a big pond.?

However Igor Nicolic, 84, of Sibenik, a town north of Split, said he was pleased to see his country join the EU.

Yves Herman / Reuters

A miniature reproduction of Saint Mark's Church of Zagreb is inaugurated at Mini-Europe park in Brussels, Belgium, on Monday. Croatia, which applied for European Union membership in 2003, is set to become the bloc's 28th member.

?I have seen World War II, the Iron Curtain and the breakup of Yugoslavia,? he said. ?We always thought of ourselves as part of central Europe, so it is really good that we can now join the union. I think it will help with the corruption here and in the long run it will benefit all of us economically.?

He appears to be in the minority. In a poll this month by Ipsos Puls, only 7 percent of Croatians said they would be watching a fireworks display marking Monday?s occasion,?Reuters reported. Forty-two percent said such a ceremony was unnecessary.

Croatia is not the first country to join the EU from behind the ?Iron Curtain,? the Cold War divide that separated the West from the Communist countries of the Soviet Bloc. Poland and Hungary, for example, joined in 2004.

Nor is Croatia the first part of the?Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia?to join: Slovenia, whose 1991 struggle for independence lasted a few weeks and claimed only 70 lives, was admitted in 2004.

However,?Croatia is the first EU member among the protagonists in the post-1991 Balkan civil wars?that also included Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo and Montenegro. By the time fighting ended in Kosovo in 1999,?140,000 lives were lost and more than a million people were displaced.?

Serbia could join the EU next year, it was announced Tuesday, with Montenegro next in line - once monitoring teams approve efforts to eradicate corruption and weak public governance. Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo have yet to be formally adopted as candidates.

As well as passing economic tests to join the EU, these western Balkan countries were required to comply with efforts by the International Criminal Court in The Hague to bring war criminals on all sides to justice.

Croatia?s first post-independence ruler, autocratic nationalist?President Franjo Tudjman, was facing investigation over his possible role in war crimes when he died in 1999. In 2005, Croatia took a significant step, handing over suspected war criminal Ante Gotovina ??although he was cleared at the The Hague seven years later.

Antonio Bronic / Reuters

Fisherman Danilo Latin fears Croatia's accession to the European Union on July 1, and strict new laws and regulations that come with it, may drive the last nail into his industry's coffin.

?Croatia?s membership is part of the political agenda to normalize the Balkan countries,? said Professor Iain Begg, research fellow at the European Institute of the London School of Economics.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Bosnia-Herzegovina Richard Kauzlarich called Croatia?s entrance into the EU a ?positive step? for both the country and the region as a whole.??

?I can remember the bad old days,? he said. ?Croatia experienced a great deal of loss during the war, but the West, the U.S., the EU supported Croatia?s evolution and did everything we could to encourage the kind of leadership that would be necessary to undertake the EU process.?

Now a fellow at the Brookings public policy organization, Kauzlarich said that the country had resolved a lot of issues in order to join.

?I think if there is ? a negative element out there it is that Croatia still has a significant corruption problem and they?re not going to be able to drop that because they?ve achieved this very important objective,? he added.

Croatia?s size means its accession will make more of a difference at home than across the rest of the EU. It is slightly smaller than West Virginia, and its 4.4 million citizens will represent less than one percent of the EU total.

Membership means it will qualify for Europe?s generous regional assistance programs ? equivalent to federal aid in the United States ? in which public money is spent on infrastructure projects that reduce the inequalities compared to wealthier members.

In March, the European Investment Bank?approved a $150 million loan for the expansion of the Zagreb Airport, a key link with the rest of Europe. Cultural funds will also help protect Croatia?s heritage in places like Dubrovnik.?

Not all EU citizens are happy. Germany?s Bild magazine labelled Croatia "the new graveyard for our taxpayers' money,? a reference to the Berlin-led economic bailouts necessary to prevent the total collapse of other southern European nations including Greece, Spain and Portugal.

ARCHIVAL VIDEO: TODAY's Matt Lauer profiles Croatia's past in this video which originally aired on Nov. 11, 2005.

Instead of riding high on Monday?s accession, Croatia?s Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic was forced to address those concerns, saying his country ?is not a rose garden but it is not a Greece, either.?

"My message to German taxpayers: We will cost you nothing," Milanovic said.

However, there are fears of a brain drain because EU membership also means fewer barriers to cross-border migration. A Facebook group, "Young people, let's leave Croatia" has attracted almost 60,000 likes.

"I'm happy we'll be able to seek jobs abroad and make more money," Zagreb computer science student Marko Jakic told Reuters. "But I'm also sad we can't do that in Croatia because our economy is bad and there are no jobs, even for us."

NBC News' Henry Austin and Reuters contributed to this report.

?

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663309/s/2dee9f03/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C280C191872110Efrom0Eethnic0Eslaughter0Eto0Estability0Ein0Etwo0Edecades0Eformer0Ewar0Ezone0Ecroatia0Ejoins0Eeu0Dlite/story01.htm

49ers Vs Falcons Mama Movie flyers epo suits PlayStation Network chip kelly

Stylist warned Jackson manager singer might die

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Michael Jackson's longtime stylist told jurors Friday that she tried to warn the singer's manager that concert promoter AEG Live LLC would look responsible if the singer died because of numerous signs his health was declining.

Hair and makeup artist Karen Faye testified about two emails she sent to Jackson's manager Frank Dileo within the five days before the singer's death that his health was deteriorating. In one of the messages, Faye warned Dileo that he and AEG Live CEO Randy Phillips might become "villains" or "financial victims" if Jackson were to die while preparing or performing a series of comeback shows called "This Is It."

Faye said she struck a dire tone in the messages because she felt that earlier concerns about Jackson's health had been ignored.

Faye sent the warning that Jackson may die in a message on June 20, 2009 ? five days before the singer died of an overdose of the anesthetic propofol. Two days later, on June 22, she sent the warning about Dileo, Phillips and tour director Kenny Ortega being held financially responsible for the entertainer's demise.

"I don't think you, Kenny, or Randy deserve becoming the villains, or the financial victims," her email states. She wrote that the message was "between you and me alone."

She told jurors she was concerned the men "could be responsible for that in some way. Just kind of like where we are right now," she said, referencing Katherine Jackson's ongoing civil case against AEG Live.

Ortega was initially sued by Jackson's mother, but was dismissed from the case.

Faye's emails described Jackson as emaciated, paranoid and unable to perform. She told jurors Friday that while the singer's performances dramatically improved in his final two rehearsals, she was still not convinced he would be able to perform the 50-concert schedule of "This Is It," let alone its premiere.

Katherine Jackson claims AEG executives missed signs about the singer's health and failed to properly investigate the doctor convicted of administering a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol.

AEG denies it hired Conrad Murray, the former physician convicted of giving Jackson an overdose of the anesthetic propofol. The company also denies it pushed Jackson to rehearse.

Faye told jurors that she was never pressured by AEG executives Randy Phillips or Paul Gongaware to get Jackson to rehearse.

The stylist testified earlier in the trial that she overheard Gongaware tell Jackson's assistant to get him out of a locked bathroom and to a rehearsal. Gongaware denies that conversation ever happened.

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP. Follow Sarah Parvini on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/parviniparlance.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/stylist-warned-jackson-manager-singer-might-die-001953418.html

Ray Harryhausen elizabeth smart chipotle Shakira Amanda Berry Farrah Abraham Sex Tape Met gala

শুক্রবার, ২৮ জুন, ২০১৩

Congress Softball Team Loses 2013 Game To Press Corps

The congressional women's team almost had it.

Going into the 6th inning at the 5th Annual Congressional Women?s Softball Game Wednesday evening, the lawmakers led the press corps 8-5, had the backing of a racuous cheering section, and looked like they could have the momentum to pull out a win.

But the Bad News Babes scored six runs in the sixth inning to take the lead for good, earning an 11-8 victory and Capitol Hill bragging rights. The annual matchup has congresswomen playing against women of the Washington press corps for glory and to raise money for young women diagnosed with breast cancer.

Long before MSNBC television host Mika Brzezinski threw out the first pitch, it was clear that the congresswomen came to play. In pre-game interviews with The Huffington Post, Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-Ohio) said she was feeling "really pumped up" and team captain Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) said the group had been "practicing hard." It showed on the field as lawmakers took the early lead. By the end of the second inning, they were up 2-0 (at which point it was announced that the Republican women on the congressional team had scored more than all the Republican men in their annual game.)

Led by captains Abby Livingston (CQ Roll Call) and Amy Walter (Cook Political Report), the Bad News Babes were looking to defend their title as reigning champions.

"We're confident. We've been working hard, they've been working hard. But I think we're going to come out ahead," Livingston said before taking the field.

The newswomen started off slow. Between strikeouts and the lawmakers? strong defense, the journalist team couldn?t get on the scoreboard until the third inning. When the lawmakers had the lead, the announcers noted the average age of the team's players is 53.

Yet, once the dam burst for the Bad News Bears, the runs started flowing, and they tacked on five runs in the third.

From there, the congresswomen regained the lead until the sixth inning. Bad News Bears scored six runs -- a two-run double by Emmarie Huetteman (New York Times) brought Kasie Hunt (NBC News) and Livingston home and gave the team the lead for good.

Members of Congress came to the field to cheer their colleagues. Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) sported a pink tie, and Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) provided commentary.

"Three up, three down ... That's how we say it in New York," Schumer said.

A notable highlight for the Bad News Babes was Walter's one run and two RBIs. Carrie Budoff Brown (Politico) pitched the entire game. She had had four walks and gave away 14 hits without making a strikeout.

Pitcher Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) had a particularly strong showing. In what the announcers called "the best game of her career," Gillibrand had three hits, the most of any player, and an RBI double that put the lawmakers on the scoreboard. She pitched for six and a third innings, and struck out three batters.

This was no pickup softball game.

?We meet in January to begin planning the game,? Kate Yglesias Houghton, co-chair of the 2013 organizing committee, said during a pregame press conference.

As game day approached, the congressional team held practices from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. three times a week. Ben Gerdes, the game's spokesman and press secretary for Rep. Donna Edwards (D-Md.), said it was not uncommon for members to rush after practice to make a breakfast by 8:45 a.m., or a committee hearing by 9:30 a.m.

"I think a lot of people think [the members] just show up and play softball, but actually these women take the game so seriously," Gerdes said. "These women, they practice when the sun comes up, and then they go to work.?

For the past few weeks, Twitter has been the outlet of choice for players to trash-talk the opposing team.

On Monday, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.) tweeted at press corps members a picture of a destroyed softball with the hashtags #beafraid, #beveryafraid. Instead of recoiling, Huffington Post reporter Jen Bendery shot back, ?it doesn't count when you have your kids unravel the stitching. #BeatCongress.?

The annual rivalry between the lawmakers and press corps began in 2009, when Wasserman Schultz asked former Rep. Jo Ann Emerson (R-Mo.) and her congressional colleagues to help take her personal fight against breast cancer to a new level by playing in a softball game.

?I needed an outlet to show cancer that it messed with the wrong person,? Wasserman Schultz said before the game.

The following year, members asked women of the D.C. press corps to join in the competition, and a Washington tradition was born.

From the pink uniforms to the press releases, it is evident this game is about raising breast cancer awareness. Though the game is friendly, the fundraising is serious. This year?s matchup raised $115,000 for the Young Survival Coalition, an advocacy organization that provides programs and resources for young women that have been diagnosed with breast cancer.

According to the American Cancer Society, one in 14 women is under the age of 40 when diagnosed with breast cancer, and one in eight women is younger than 45 when they receive their diagnosis. The Young Survival Coalition works with these young women to ensure their needs are met before, during, and after they have received their diagnoses.

In the game?s five years, it has raised more than$250,000 for the organization, and this year?s total surpasses the $62,000 the game raised last year.

This year?s event has additional personal significance for Wasserman Schultz: it marks five years the congresswoman has been cancer-free.

Lawmakers on the team were able to table partisan differences in an increasingly divided Washington to wage a battle with cancer.

?Washington is a place that's as broken as can be, but not here on the field. It's bipartisan, we get to know each other, not only as teammates but as friends,? Gillibrand said before the game.

?The other day at practice -- I won?t name names -- but one of the Democratic women members, who is a new member, was playing on the team, actually had to be told that the Republican women members that play on the team were Republican," Wasserman Schultz said.

Also on HuffPost:

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/27/congress-softball-2013-game_n_3507453.html

unc asheville stephen jackson marchmadness mike d antoni nba trade rumors desean jackson 2012 ncaa tournament schedule

Instagram for BlackBerry, Windows Phone not coming ?anytime soon?

Well, the hits just keep on coming. Grease being Paula Deen has not just been dropped from her ham company in the wake of her racist remark scandal. She's also been dumped by Walmart, and now Home Depot, and diabeetus drug company Novo Nordisk. All because she admitted to saying and doing some racist things years ago in a deposition. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/instagram-blackberry-windows-phone-not-coming-anytime-soon-212554517.html

Hunter Pence NBCOlympics Danell Leyva Ye Shiwen OJ Murdock Olympics Live Mens Gymnastics

বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৭ জুন, ২০১৩

Ovarian Cancer: Seven Terms You Should Know | Insight

By?Melanie Graham

A diagnosis of ovarian cancer?can raise a lot of questions. It can also raise many new medical terms, which your doctor or a member of your care team can explain. Here are a few terms to know.


1. Ovarian epithelial cancer

Most forms of ovarian cancer begin in the tissue cells covering the ovaries (ovarian epithelial cancer) or in malignant germ cell tumors that begin in the ovary?s germ cells (ovarian germ cell tumor).

There are several stages of ovarian cancer, each of which represent how far the cancer has spread.

?

Clipboard and pen

2.?Brachytherapy

Brachytherapy is a form of radiation treatment in which radioactive material is sealed in needles, seeds, wires, or catheters and placed directly into or near a tumor. Different types of brachytherapy include tandem and ovoid brachytherapy, cylinder brachytherapy, and interstitial brachytherapy. New techniques in the procedure are also being developed, including three-dimensional image-guided brachytherapy.

Brachytherapy is also known as implant radiation therapy, internal radiation therapy, and radiation brachytherapy.

Watch a detailed explanation of the brachytherapy process.

?

3. Oophorectomy

Many ovarian cancer patients undergo surgery to remove as much of the tumor as possible. An oophorectomy?? the surgical removal of one or both ovaries ? is one of those surgical options.

A unilateral salpingo-oophorectomy is the removal of one ovary and fallopian tube; a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy is the removal of both ovaries and fallopian tubes.

?

4.?Hysterectomy

Some patients may undergo a hysterectomy, which is a surgical procedure to remove the uterus and sometimes, the cervix. A total hysterectomy is the removal of both the uterus and the cervix while a partial hysterectomy only removes the uterus. In a radical hysterectomy, the uterus, cervix, both ovaries, both fallopian tubes, and nearby tissue are all removed.

Physicians are also exploring new technology for these surgeries, such as robot-assisted hysterectomies.

?

5. Intraperitoneal chemotherapy (IP)

Chemotherapy is a cancer treatment that uses drugs to stop the growth of cancer cells. Intraperitoneal chemotherapy is a type of regional chemotherapy where a thin tube carries the anticancer drugs directly into the peritoneal cavity (the space that contains the abdominal organs, including the ovaries).

?

6. Hormone-sensitive cancer

Ovarian cancer is a hormone-sensitive cancer, meaning that hormones can help fuel the cancer?s growth. Patients with ovarian cancer should avoid highly-concentrated soy foods and flaxseeds, which can have an estrogen-like effect in the body.

The best foods for a cancer diet include fruits and vegetables, lean protein and whole grains. For more healthy food ideas, visit Dana-Farber?s nutrition site, the recipe page or download the Ask the Nutritionist: Recipes for Fighting Cancer iPhone app.

?

7. Metastasis

Metastasis refers to the spread of cancer from one part of the body to another. During metastasis, cancer cells break away from the original tumor and may form another tumor elsewhere in the body.

?

For more help on cancer terminology visit Dana-Farber?s Medical Glossary or Dana-Farber?s Ovarian Cancer resource page. Learn more about ovarian cancer care and research at Dana-Farber?s Susan F. Smith Center for Women?s Cancers.

Source: http://blog.dana-farber.org/insight/2013/06/ovarian-cancer-seven-terms-you-should-know/

rosh hashanah boardwalk empire iOS 6 Release Date Chavez vs Martinez Yunel Escobar Irish Daily Star Black Mesa

WSJ outs Apple's iTunes Radio terms, says many are 'more generous' than Pandora's

WSJ Apple's iTunes Radio terms more generous to labels than Pandora

According to a document obtained by the Wall Street Journal, Apple will pay 0.13 cents and 15 percent of advertising revenue to major labels for every song played on iTunes Radio in its first year, climbing to .14 cents and 19 percent in year two. In comparison, Pandora currently pays 0.12 cents per song, and WSJ added that Apple is offering publishers more than double Pandora's rate for royalties. There are some exclusions to Apple's offering, however: it won't need to pay for songs streamed for 20 seconds or less, those that are already in your iTunes library or certain promoted tracks. For its part, Pandora said that comparing the two is unfair, since varying features between the services could trigger royalty payments differently. It also addressed recent controversy about those royalties in a detailed blog post (see the More Coverage link below). In addition, insiders say that Apple's primary aim is to encourage listeners to buy more tracks on iTunes, in turn boosting hardware sales. Still, the new service will no doubt reap the benefits of Apples new iAd mobile advertising platform, so it's likely that Cupertino will have its cake and eat it, too.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: WSJ Digits

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/5KlwxaSRvcQ/

Farrah Abraham Tape amber heard Google Now Jason Collins White House Correspondents Dinner 2013 NHL playoff schedule Queen of Versailles

A Pint-Sized Dialysis Machine Gets Its First Taste of Human Blood

A Pint-Sized Dialysis Machine Gets Its First Taste of Human Blood

Who needs gigantic dialysis machines? The first portable blood filter has just been approved for testing on humans, and it's practically pocket-sized.

The Hemopurifier has been in development for years now, and it finally got approval from the FDA for a extremely limited field test where it'll try to treat Hepatitis C by filtering the blood Hep-afflicted kidneys can't handle. The very first phase of tests will involve 10 patients, all with end stage renal disease, who get to replace two weeks of standard dialysis sessions with the rolling pin-sized device.

To use it, all you have to do is slam the thing into your arm, at which point your blood pressure is all it takes to draw blood up into the tube, push it through the filter, and back into your arm. It's equal parts creepy and awesome.

This is a super early trial, so the goal is just to get safety procedures in place before even thinking about how effective the thing actually is. But if it works well in practice, it could be a useful weapon against all kinds of blood-borne diseases, and could even help fight certain forms of cancer. That is, if you can get over the unpleasantness of plugging it into your arm. [Medgadget]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-pint-sized-dialysis-machine-gets-its-first-taste-of-h-589453823

Autumn Pasquale ann coulter minecraft Ben Wilson Latest Presidential Polls trump presidential debate

বুধবার, ২৬ জুন, ২০১৩

Court says suit testing blogger's rights can go on

(AP) ? A federal appeals court says former Agriculture Department employee Shirley Sherrod can continue her defamation case against a conservative blogger.

Larry O'Connor, a colleague of the late blogger Andrew Breitbart, asked a federal court of appeals to throw out the case, saying it violates his freedom of speech rights. The appeals court on Tuesday upheld a federal district court's rejection of that motion to dismiss.

The case is one of the first high-profile federal lawsuits to test bloggers' freedom of speech rights, and large news organizations including the New York Times Co., Washington Post Co. and Dow Jones & Company, Inc., have filed friend-of-the-court briefs in the suit.

Sherrod was ousted from her job as a rural development official in 2010 after Breitbart posted an edited video of Sherrod, who is black, supposedly making racist remarks. She sued Breitbart, O'Connor and an unnamed defendant for defamation and emotional distress after USDA officials asked her to resign and the video ignited a racial firestorm.

Breitbart died unexpectedly last year. Sherrod's lawyers say the unnamed defendant is the person whom they believe passed the video on to Breitbart, though the person's identity remains unknown.

The video on Breitbart's website turned out to be edited, and when Sherrod's full speech to an NAACP group earlier that year came to light, it became clear that her remarks about an initial reluctance to help a white farmer decades ago were not racist but an attempt at telling a story of racial reconciliation. Once that was obvious, Sherrod received public apologies from the administration ? even from President Barack Obama himself ? and an offer to return to the Agriculture Department, which she declined.

Sherrod's 2011 lawsuit says the incident affected her sleep and caused her back pain. It contends that she was damaged by having her "integrity, impartiality and motivations questioned, making it difficult (if not impossible) for her to continue her life's work assisting poor farmers in rural areas" even though she was invited to return to the department.

O'Connor's lawyers had argued to have the case dismissed under a District of Columbia statute called an anti-SLAPP law that aims to prevent the silencing of critics through lawsuits. A federal district court judge rejected their motion to dismiss, citing timing and jurisdictional issues, prompting the appeal.

In March arguments, the lawyers told the court of appeals that O'Connor and Breitbart, before he died, stood by the content, saying the blog post was opinion.

"What happened here is what happens in journalism every day," said Bruce Brown, a lawyer for O'Connor.

Sherrod's lawyers disagreed and said dismissal under the District of Columbia statute would violate their right to a trial.

The case has been closely watched as a test of the District of Columbia's anti-SLAPP statute.

___

Follow Mary Clare Jalonick on Twitter: http://twitter.com/MCJalonick

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-06-25-USDA-Racism-Resignation/id-829de553f12b4414bda2836c405a16eb

helicopter crash matt jones whitney houston in casket photo resolute national enquirer whitney houston casket photo

সোমবার, ১৭ জুন, ২০১৩

Get the Most Out of Your Home Appliances (Without Taking Them Apart)

Get the Most Out of Your Home Appliances (Without Taking Them Apart)

When was the last time you had to salt your perishables, got dishpan hands, or beat your laundry against a washboard? Chances are, not recently. Your home appliances do so much for you, shouldn't you return the love? Here's how to keep your domestic machine in peak condition without putting on a tool belt.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/wE2O_ofc_zA/get-the-most-out-of-your-home-appliances-without-takin-512332890

Xbox WWE Extreme Rules 2013 powerball winner powerball winner Eurovision Ken Venturi ben affleck

Digg's RSS reader begins rolling out next week.

Digg's RSS reader begins rolling out next week. Everyone should have access by June 26, which is great timing in light of Google Reader shutting down July 1.

Source: http://gizmodo.com/diggs-rss-reader-begins-rolling-out-next-week-everyone-513808231

lra eric johnson eric johnson big east tournament ashley olsen new apple tv sun flare

Pavement: The Sutcliffe Catering Song

The days are getting longer, the weather's getting warmer. It's this time of year that anyone and everyone could use some killer strollin' music to strut to. Might I suggest the hidden Pavement not-exactly-a-classic-but-damn-well-should-be "The Sutcliffe Catering Song"? You just have to like it.

The final track off the second disc of the enhanced version of Pavement's sophomore album Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain: LA's Desert Origins, "The Sutcliffe Catering Song" is something of a hidden gem. It's not something likely to be found by anyone other than a serious Pavement spelunker. But it's so goddamned good. The sort of carefree, I-don't-give-a-fuck spirit is in full. glorious force here, as well as the insane, word-salad lyrics which reach new peaks of lunacy.

It's a love song, it's a ballad about real estate, it's a commentary on those interest rates. It's everything you ever needed and never knew you wanted. So jam out, and try not to let those prime-rate interest slashing Germans screw up your monetary plan. Whatever. [Spotify, Amazon, iTunes]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/pavement-the-sutcliffe-catering-song-513602502

lottery winners lottery winners april fools day pranks ohio state vs kansas daniel von bargen 8 bit google maps kids choice awards 2012

AP IMPACT: Bites derided as unreliable in court

FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2013, AT 9:00 A.M. EDT - In this April 19, 2013 photo, Ray Krone poses at his home in Newport, Tenn. Krone was convicted in 1992 and again in 1996, after winning a new trial, in the death of a Phoenix bartender found naked and stabbed in the men's restroom of her workplace. A forensic dentist testified at both trials that bite marks on the bartender's breast and neck could have come only from Krone. The jury at Krone's second trial found him guilty despite three top forensic dentists who testified for the defense that Krone couldn't have made the bite mark. In 2002, DNA testing matched a different man, proving Krone's innocence, and he was released. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)

FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2013, AT 9:00 A.M. EDT - In this April 19, 2013 photo, Ray Krone poses at his home in Newport, Tenn. Krone was convicted in 1992 and again in 1996, after winning a new trial, in the death of a Phoenix bartender found naked and stabbed in the men's restroom of her workplace. A forensic dentist testified at both trials that bite marks on the bartender's breast and neck could have come only from Krone. The jury at Krone's second trial found him guilty despite three top forensic dentists who testified for the defense that Krone couldn't have made the bite mark. In 2002, DNA testing matched a different man, proving Krone's innocence, and he was released. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)

FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2013, AT 9:00 A.M. EDT - In this April 17, 2013 photo, Peter Bush and Mary Bush, research scientists at the University at Buffalo, demonstrate a modified Vise-Grip tool attached to a dental mold that is used for test bites in skin at the University in Buffalo, N.Y. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2013, AT 9:00 A.M. EDT - In this April 17, 2013 photo, Peter Bush and Mary Bush, Research Scientists at the University at Buffalo, pose for a photo with a dental mold, at the school in Buffalo, N.Y. Bite marks, long accepted as criminal evidence, now face doubts about reliability. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2013, AT 9:00 A.M. EDT - In this April 17, 2013 photo, Mary Bush, Research Scientist at the University at Buffalo, shows dental molds that are part of an experiment showing systematic alteration of tooth position to determine when small differences in tooth arrangement can be recognized in bite marks in skin, at the school in Buffalo, N.Y. Bite marks, long accepted as criminal evidence, now face doubts about reliability. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2013, AT 9:00 A.M. EDT - This April 17, 2013 photo shows dental molds that are part of an experiment showing systematic alteration of tooth position to determine when small differences in tooth arrangement can be recognized in bite marks in skin, at the school in Buffalo, N.Y. Bite marks, long accepted as criminal evidence, now face doubts about reliability. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

At least 24 men convicted or charged with murder or rape based on bite marks on the flesh of victims have been exonerated since 2000, many after spending more than a decade in prison. Now a judge's ruling later this month in New York could help end the practice for good.

A small, mostly ungoverned group of dentists carry out bite mark analysis and their findings are often key evidence in prosecutions, even though there is no scientific proof that teeth can be matched definitively to a bite into human skin.

DNA has outstripped the usefulness of bite mark analysis in many cases: The FBI doesn't use it and the American Dental Association does not recognize it.

"Bite mark evidence is the poster child of unreliable forensic science," said Chris Fabricant, director of strategic litigation at the New York-based Innocence Project, which helps wrongfully convicted inmates win freedom through DNA testing.

Supporters of the method, which involves comparing the teeth of possible suspects to bite mark patterns on victims, argue it has helped convict child murderers and other notorious criminals, including serial killer Ted Bundy. They say problems that have arisen are not about the method, but about the qualifications of those testifying, who can earn as much as $5,000 a case.

"The problem lies in the analyst or the bias," said Dr. Frank Wright, a forensic dentist in Cincinnati. "So if the analyst is ... not properly trained or introduces bias into their exam, sure, it's going to be polluted, just like any other scientific investigation. It doesn't mean bite mark evidence is bad."

The Associated Press reviewed decades of court records, archives, news reports and filings by the Innocence Project in order to compile the most comprehensive count to date of those exonerated after being convicted or charged based on bite mark evidence. Two dozen forensic scientists and other experts were interviewed, including some who had never before spoken to a reporter about their work.

The AP analysis found that at least two dozen men had been exonerated since 2000, mostly as a result of DNA testing. Many had spent years in prison, including on death row, and one man was behind bars for more than 23 years. The count included at least six men arrested on bite mark evidence who were freed as they awaited trial.

Two court cases this month are helping to bring the debate over the issue to a head. One involves a 63-year-old California man who is serving a life term for killing his wife, even though the forensic dentist who testified against him has reversed his opinion.

In the second, a New York City judge overseeing a murder case is expected to decide whether bite mark analysis can be admitted as evidence, a ruling critics say could kick it out of courtrooms for good.

Some notable cases of faulty bite mark analysis include:

? Two men convicted of raping and killing two 3-year-old girls in separate Mississippi crimes in 1992 and 1995. Marks on their bodies were later determined to have come from crawfish and insects.

? A New Mexico man imprisoned in the 1989 rape and murder of his stepdaughter, who was found with a possible bite mark on her neck and sperm on her body. It was later determined that the stepfather had a medical condition that prevented him from producing sperm.

? Ray Krone, the so-called "Snaggletooth Killer," who was convicted in 1992 and again in 1996 after winning a new trial in the murder of a Phoenix bartender found naked and stabbed in the men's restroom of the bar where she worked. Krone spent 10 years in prison, three on death row.

Raymond Rawson, a Las Vegas forensic dentist, testified at both trials that bite marks on the bartender could only have come from Krone, evidence that proved critical in convicting him. At his second trial, three top forensic dentists testified for the defense that Krone couldn't have made the bite mark, but the jury didn't give their findings much weight and again found him guilty.

In 2002, DNA testing matched a different man, and Krone was released.

Rawson, like a handful of other forensic dentists implicated in faulty testimony connected to high-profile exonerations, remains on the American Board of Forensic Odontology, the only entity that certifies and oversees bite mark analysts. Now retired, he didn't return messages left at a number listed for him in Las Vegas.

Rawson has never publicly acknowledged making a mistake, nor has he apologized to Krone, who described sitting helplessly in court listening to the dentist identify him as the killer.

"You're dumbfounded," Krone said in a telephone interview from his home in Newport, Tenn. "There's one person that knows for sure and that was me. And he's so pompously, so arrogantly and so confidently stating that, beyond a shadow of doubt, he's positive it was my teeth. It was so ridiculous."

The history of bite mark analysis began in 1954 with a piece of cheese in small-town Texas. A dentist testified that a bite mark in the cheese, left behind in a grocery store that had been robbed, matched the teeth of a drunken man found with 13 stolen silver dollars. The man was convicted.

The first court case involving a bite mark on a person didn't come until two decades later, in 1974, also in Texas. Two dentists testified that a man's teeth matched a bite mark on a murder victim. Although the defense attorney fought the admissibility of the evidence, a court ruled that it should be allowed because it had been used in 1954.

Bite mark analysis hit the big time at Bundy's 1979 Florida trial.

On the night Bundy went on a killing spree that left two young women dead and three others seriously wounded, he savagely bit one of the murder victims, Lisa Levy. A Florida forensic dentist, Dr. Richard Souviron, testified at Bundy's murder trial that his unusual, mangled teeth were a match.

Bundy was found guilty and executed. The bite marks were considered the key piece of physical evidence against him.

That nationally televised case and dozens more in the 1980s and 1990s made bite mark evidence look like infallible, cutting-edge science, and courtrooms accepted it with little debate.

Then came DNA testing. Beginning in the early 2000s, new evidence set free men serving prison time or awaiting the death penalty largely because of bite mark testimony that later proved faulty.

At the core of critics' arguments is that science hasn't shown it's possible to match a bite mark to a single person's teeth or even that human skin can accurately record a bite mark.

Fabricant, of the Innocence Project, said what's most troubling about bite mark evidence is how powerful it can be for jurors.

"It's very inflammatory," he said. "What could be more grotesque than biting someone amid a murder or a rape hard enough to leave an injury? It's highly prejudicial, and its probative value is completely unknown."

Fabricant and other defense attorneys are fighting to get bite mark analysis thrown out of courtrooms, most recently focusing their efforts on the New York City case.

It involves the death of 33-year-old Kristine Yitref, whose beaten and strangled body was found wrapped in garbage bags under a bed in a hotel near Times Square in 2007. A forensic dentist concluded a mark on her body matched the teeth of Clarence Brian Dean, a 41-year-old fugitive sex offender from Alabama, who is awaiting trial on a murder charge.

Dean told police he killed Yitref in self-defense, saying she and another man attacked him in a robbery attempt after he agreed to pay her for sex; no other man was found.

Dean's defense attorneys have challenged the prosecution's effort to admit the bite mark evidence, and a judge is expected to issue a ruling as early as mid-June ? a pivotal step critics hope could eventually help lead to a ban on such evidence.

A dayslong hearing last year over the scientific validity of bite marks went to the heart of the debate.

"The issue is not that bite mark analysis is invalid, but that bite mark examiners are not properly vetted," Dr. David Senn, of San Antonio, testified at the hearing.

Another case gaining attention is that of William Joseph Richards, convicted in 1997 of killing his wife, Pam, in San Bernardino, Calif., and sentenced to life in prison.

Pam Richards had been strangled and beaten with rocks, her skull crushed by a cinder block, and her body left lying in the dirt in front of their home, naked from the waist down.

Dr. Norman Sperber, a well-respected forensic dentist, testified that a crescent-shaped wound on her body corresponded with an extremely rare abnormality in William Richards' teeth.

But at a 2009 hearing seeking Richards' freedom, Sperber recanted his testimony, saying that it was scientifically inaccurate, that he no longer was sure the wound was a bite mark, and that even if it was, Richards could not have made it.

Shortly after that, a judge tossed out Richards' conviction and declared him innocent. The prosecution appealed and the case went all the way to the California Supreme Court, which ruled in December that Richards had failed to prove his innocence, even though the bite mark evidence had been discredited. In a 4-3 decision, the court said forensic evidence, even if later recanted, can be deemed false only in very narrow circumstances and Richards did not meet that high bar.

Since April 27, Richards' attorneys have been on what they dubbed a two-month "innocence march" from San Diego to the state capital, Sacramento, to deliver a request for clemency to Gov. Jerry Brown and raise awareness about wrongful convictions. They are expected to arrive later this month.

The American Board of Forensic Odontology recently got a request from Richards' attorneys, who are affiliated with the Innocence Project, for a written opinion on the shoddy bite mark evidence used against him. The board declined.

Only about 100 forensic dentists are certified by the odontology board, and just a fraction are actively analyzing and comparing bite marks. Certification requires no proficiency tests. The board requires a dentist to have been the lead investigator and to have testified in one current bite mark case and to analyze six past cases on file ? a system criticized by defense attorneys because it requires testimony before certification.

Testifying can earn a forensic dentist $1,500 to $5,000 per case, though most testify in only a few a year. The consequences for being wrong are almost nonexistent. Many lawsuits against forensic dentists employed by counties and medical examiner's offices have been thrown out because as government officials, they're largely immune from liability.

Only one member of the American Board of Forensic Odontology has ever been suspended, none has ever been decertified, and some dentists still on the board have been involved in some of the most high-profile and egregious exonerations on record.

Even Dr. Michael West, whose testimony is considered pivotal in the wrongful convictions or imprisonment of at least four men, was not thrown off the board. West was suspended and ended up stepping down.

Among his cases were the separate rapes and murders of the two 3-year-old girls in Mississippi, where West testified that two men later exonerated by DNA evidence were responsible for what he said were bite marks on their bodies. The marks later turned out to be from crawfish and insects, and a different man's DNA matched both cases.

West now says DNA has made bite mark analysis almost obsolete.

"People love to have a black-and-white, and it's not black and white," said West, of Hattiesburg, Miss., where he has a dental practice but no longer works on bite mark cases. "I thought it was extremely accurate, but other cases have proven it's not."

Levon Brooks, convicted of killing one of the girls, spent 16 years in prison. The other, Kennedy Brewer, was behind bars for 13 years, many of them on death row.

West defended his testimony, saying he never testified that Brooks and Brewer were the killers, only that they bit the children, and that he's not responsible for juries who found them guilty.

Other dentists involved in exonerations have been allowed to remain on the board as long as they don't handle more bite mark cases, said Wright, the Cincinnati forensic dentist.

"The ABFO has had some internal issues as far as not really policing our own," he said.

Wright and other forensic dentists have been working to develop guidelines to help avert problems of the past while retaining bite mark analysis in the courtroom.

Their efforts include a flow chart to help forensic dentists determine whether bite mark analysis is even appropriate for a given case. Wright also is working on developing a proficiency test that would be required for recertification every five years.

An internal debate over the future of the practice was laid bare at a conference in Washington in February, when scores of dentists ? many specializing in bite mark analysis ? attended days of lectures and panel discussions. The field's harshest critics also were there, leading to heated discussions about the method's limitations and strengths.

Dr. Gregory Golden, a forensic dentist and president of the odontology board, acknowledged that flawed testimony has led to the "ruination of several innocent people's lives" but said the field was entering a "new era" of accountability.

Souviron, who testified against Bundy in 1979 and is one of the founding fathers of bite mark analysis in the U.S., argued there's a "real need for bite marks in our criminal justice system."

In an interview with the AP, Souviron compared the testimony of well-trained bite mark analysts to medical examiners testifying about a suspected cause of death.

"If someone's got an unusual set of teeth, like the Bundy case, from the standpoint of throwing it out of court, that's ridiculous," he said. "Every science that I know of has bad individuals. Our science isn't bad. It's the individuals who are the problem."

Many forensic dentists have helped the Innocence Project win exonerations in bite mark cases gone wrong by re-examining evidence and testifying for the wrongfully convicted.

But a once-cooperative relationship has turned adversarial ever since the Innocence Project began trying to get bite mark evidence thrown entirely out of courtrooms, while at the same time using it to help win exonerations.

"They turn a blind eye to the good side of bite mark analysis," Golden told the AP.

One example is a case Wright worked on in 1998. He analyzed the bite marks of the only three people who were in an Ohio home when 17-day-old Legacy Fawcett was found dead in her crib. Of the three, two sets of teeth could not have made the bite marks, Wright testified; only the teeth of the mother's boyfriend could have. The boyfriend was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and served eight years in prison.

Without the bite mark, Wright said, the wrong person might have been convicted or the man responsible could have gone free, or both.

"Bite mark evidence can be too important not to be useful," Wright said. "You can't just throw it away."

___

Myers reported from Cincinnati. Associated Press News Researcher Barbara Sambriski in New York and AP writers Eric Tucker in Washington, D.C., and David B. Caruso in New York contributed to this report.

___

Follow Amanda Lee Myers on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AmandaLeeAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2013-06-16-Bite%20Mark%20Evidence/id-5c2ea06e21fd43de9f3b9f5a8329c534

Alex Cobb Jason Leffler us open blackhawks 300 Rise Of An Empire Us Open Leaderboard Jason Kidd

রবিবার, ১৬ জুন, ২০১৩

Series of attacks kill 40 people across Iraq

An Iraqi man and Iraqi security force members inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Basra, 340 miles (550 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, June 16, 2013. Most of the car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and were the cause of most of the casualties. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)

An Iraqi man and Iraqi security force members inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Basra, 340 miles (550 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, June 16, 2013. Most of the car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and were the cause of most of the casualties. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)

An Iraqi man inspects damages at his cafe, after a car bomb attack outside Kut, 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Jun 16, 2013. Most of the car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and were the cause of most of the casualties, killing tens. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country. Pictures of Shiite saints hand on walls at background. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

Iraqi security forces inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Basra, 340 miles (550 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, June 16, 2013. Most of the car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and were the cause of most of the casualties, killing tens. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)

Iraqi security force members inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Basra, 340 miles (550 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, June 16, 2013. Most of the car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and were the cause of most of the casualties, killing tens. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)

Iraqi security forces, background, inspect the site of a car bomb attack in Basra, 340 miles (550 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, June 16, 2013. Most of the car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and were the cause of most of the casualties, killing tens. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)

(AP) ? A blistering string of apparently coordinated bombings and a shooting across Iraq killed at least 40 and wounded dozens Sunday, spreading fear throughout the county in a wave of violence that is raising the prospect of a return to widespread sectarian killing a decade after a U.S.-led invasion.

Violence has spiked sharply in Iraq in recent months, with the death toll rising to levels not seen since 2008. Nearly 2,000 have been killed since the start of April, including more than 170 this month.

The surge in bloodshed accompanies rising sectarian tensions within Iraq and growing concerns that its unrest is being fanned by the Syrian civil war raging next door.

Most of Sunday's car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and caused most of the casualties. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country.

There was no claim of responsibility for any of the attacks, but they bore the hallmark of al-Qaida in Iraq, which uses car bombs, suicide bombers and coordinated attacks, most aimed at security forces and members of Iraq's Shiite majority.

The U.S. Embassy condemned the attacks, saying it stands with Iraqis "who seek to live in peace and who reject cowardly acts of terrorism such as this." The U.S. withdrew its last combat troops from Iraq in December 2011, though a small number remain as an arm of the embassy to provide training and facilitate arms sales.

Sunday's blasts began with a parked car bomb exploding early in the morning in the industrial area of the city of Kut, killing six people and wounding 15 others. That was followed by another car bomb outside the city that targeted construction workers. It killed five and wounded 12, according to police.

In a teahouse hit by one of the blasts, a blood-stained tribal headdress and slippers were strewn on the floor, alongside overturned chair and couches. Kut is 160 kilometers (100 miles) southeast of Baghdad.

In the oil-rich city of Basra in southern Iraq, a car bomb exploded on a busy downtown street. As police and rescuers rushed to the scene of the initial blast, a second car exploded. Six people were reported killed. Cleaners were seen sweeping up pieces of the car bomb, which damaged nearby cars and shops.

About an hour later, parked car bombs ripped through two neighborhoods in the southern city of Nasiriyah, 320 kilometers (200 miles) southeast of Baghdad, killing two and wounding 19, police said.

In the Shiite holy city of Najaf, 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of Baghdad, a blast struck a produce market, killing eight and wounding 28. Watermelons, tomatoes and apples were seen scattered on the ground. A bulldozer loaded charred and twisted stalls and cars into a waiting truck.

Blasts were also reported in the communities of Hillah, Mahmoudiya and Madain, all south of Baghdad, killing seven in total. In the northern city of Tuz Khormato, a roadside bomb targeted a passing police patrol, killing two policemen.

The shooting broke out near the restive northern city of Mosul. Police officials say gunmen attacked police guarding a remote stretch of an oil pipeline, killing four and wounding five. Mosul, some 360 kilometers (225 miles) northwest of Baghdad, has been the scene of some of the deadliest unrest outside the Baghdad area in recent weeks.

Medical officials confirmed the casualty figures. Officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they weren't allowed to release the information to reporters.

The attacks came a day after the leader of al-Qaida's Iraq arm, known as the Islamic State of Iraq, defiantly rejected an order from the terror network's central command to stop claiming control over the organization's Syria affiliate, according to a message purportedly from him.

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's comments reveal his group's determination to link its own fight against the Shiite-led government in Baghdad with the cause of rebels trying to topple the Iran-backed Syrian regime.

___

Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Adam Schreck contributed.

___

Follow Sinan Salaheddin on Twitter at twitter.com/sinansm

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-16-Iraq/id-420d4ff42c7540e19e5e5cbf3a37ef30

wisconsin recall doris day buffalo sabres texas news kim mulkey sarah palin today show dallas tornado video

Video: The $25,000 Bicycle

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52209588/

MLB Draft 2013 Brian Hallisay Deacon Jones Mel B Gordon Gee National Hurricane Center Google Glass