Sunday, June 30, 2013

Star-Spangled Cranberry-Apple Pie

Ingredients

Preparation

Preheat the oven to 375?F.

Bake one pie crust. Roll out the second pie crust and cut out a dozen small (1-1/2- to 2-inch) stars. Chill 30 minutes or longer if possible. Place them on a baking sheet and bake until golden brown. Reserve. (This can be done while you are prebaking the pie crust.)

Melt the butter in a large skillet. Add the brown sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, apples, and cranberries and gently stir to mix well and let the sugar dissolve. Cook over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally, until the cranberries have popped and the fruit is tender but the apples still have some body.

Remove the fruit with a slotted spoon and reserve. Bring the juices to the boil, reduce the heat, and simmer until they reduce and become thick and jammy, about 8 minutes. Stir the fruit into the thickened juice. Taste to be sure it is sweet enough, adding more sugar if necessary. If it is runny, boil down until the juices are reduced and thickened. The filling may be made ahead to this point several days or frozen for up to 3 months. When ready to use, reheat. Spoon the filling into the prebaked shell. Decorate the top with the stars. Serve with whipped cream or ice cream.

Yield

Serves 8 to 12

Cook Time

Prep Time: 15 mins.
Cook Time: 10 mins.

Nutrition information is provided as a resource. Values will vary depending on specific ingredients used.

Serving Size: 1
Number of Servings: Serves 8 to 12

Amount Per Serving:
Calories: 432
Calories from Fat: 171


Amount per Serving

% Daily Value*

Amount per Serving

% Daily Value*

Total Fat 19g

29%

Carbohydrates 87g

29%

Dietary Fiber 9g

36%

Saturated Fat 15g

75%

Calories 432kcal

21%

Cholesterol 38mg

12%

Protein 10g

16%

Sodium 51mg

2%

*Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Source: http://www.plumbsmarket.com/Recipes/RecipeFull.aspx?RecipeID=32506

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Mosby Building Arts Home Improvement Show ? CBS St. Louis

Rick Wallace, Rich Layton, and Denny Corr fill-in for Scott in hour one of the Home Improvement Show.

Home Improvement Show

Hour two with Rick Wallace, Rich Layton, and Denny Corr on the Home Improvement Show

Home Improvement Show

Final hour of the Home Improvement Show with Rick Wallace, Rich Layton, and Denny Corr

Home Improvement Show

Source: http://stlouis.cbslocal.com/2013/06/29/home-improvement-show-40/

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Google reveals new London 'groundscraper' HQ

By Tom Bill

LONDON (Reuters) - Google has revealed that its new UK headquarters is a building longer than the Shard skyscraper is tall.

The so-called groundscraper at the King's Cross Central development is the latest overseas property deal by the cash-rich U.S. internet group, which will house all of its London staff under one roof when completed in 2016.

Google revealed designs for the low-rise one million square feet scheme on Friday after announcing its move to King's Cross in January.

At 330 meters long, it exceeds the height of the 310-metre tall Shard, western Europe's tallest skyscraper.

Swiss bank UBS is undertaking a similar large-scale low-rise scheme at the Broadgate complex in London's main financial district.

Google said 35,000 people will work at the site - a large scale operation it would have found difficult to house in space-constrained central London where land is also more expensive.

Google has spent about 650 million pounds to buy and develop the 2.4 acre site and the finished development will be worth up to one billion pounds, sources told Reuters.

Construction will start early next year subject to planning approval and it will be one of the internet giant's largest offices outside its so-called Googleplex corporate headquarters in Mountain View, California.

The internet giant is a prized tenant for landlords and its presence is expected to draw other technology companies to King's Cross - especially small start-ups - and help bump up rents.

The new site is likely to include a 20,000 square feet area for bike parking, about the size of seven tennis courts, and features a climbing wall between floors, a source close to the project told Reuters.

The company's offices are famous for perks like gourmet food, bowling alleys, roof gardens, high-tech gyms and on-site medical staff and massages.

King's Cross Central, which sits on a former fish, coal and grain goods yard to the north of the city, spans 67 acres and will contain homes, offices and shops. It is being built by the King's Cross Central Limited Partnership which includes developer Argent Group.

Google has traditionally leased its overseas offices but in the past two years has purchased premises in Paris, Dublin, and now London, its filings show.

As of December 31, 2011, Google had $44.6 billion of cash, with $21.2 billion of that held offshore, according to its 2011 annual report. If the funds held offshore were repatriated, they would be subject to U.S. taxes, Google said.

Tax campaigner and accountant Richard Murphy told Reuters at the time of the January announcement that the decision to buy rather than rent was likely "tax motivated", driven by the fact the company cannot repatriate the cash to the U.S. without paying a fat tax bill.

Google declined to comment on the tax issue in relation to its new London building but said such a large-scale investment was a boost to the Britain's economy.

Earlier this month British MPs described Google's tax affairs as "contrived" after a Reuters report showed the company employed staff in sales roles in London, even though it had told MPs in November its British staff were not selling to UK clients - an activity that could boost its tax bill substantially.

(Editing by David Cowell)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/google-reveals-london-groundscraper-hq-132510940.html

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Aiming For 'Wild and Crazy' Energy Ideas

Guests:

Cheryl Martin, Deputy Director, Advanced Research Projects Agency?Energy (ARPA-E)

Jennifer Lewis, Wyss Professor, Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University

Shilpa Iyer, Graduate of Comsewogue High School, Freshman at Cornell University in the fall, Winner of the Proton OnSite Scholarship and Innovation Program

Shweta Iyer, Graduate of Comsewogue High School, Freshman at Stony Brook University in the fall, Winner of the Proton OnSite Scholarship and Innovation Program:

The Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy, or ARPA-E, backs energy technologies that are too risky for investors, but offer a potentially huge payoff ? if they work. The agency has gambled on flywheels, compressed air energy storage, lithium-air batteries, even wind-energy kites.

Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/06/28/196594974/aiming-for-wild-and-crazy-energy-ideas?ft=1&f=1007

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NY woman presumed dead after floodwaters carry away mobile home

Mike Groll / AP

Mud fills the parking lot of a convenience store after flooding on Friday, June 28, 2013, in Fort Plain, N.Y. Severe flooding caused by the spring and early summer's persistent rains damaged houses, closed roads and forced people to flee their homes Friday in New York's Mohawk Valley. Heavy rains Thursday and into early Friday caused the Mohawk River to overflow it banks where it traverses the southern end of Herkimer County, located 60 miles east of Syracuse.

By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

A woman was presumed dead after her mobile home was swept away by the swollen Mohawk River on Friday as flooding brought on by heavy rain forced evacuations in upstate New York.

A bulge in the jet stream over the Great Lakes that is scorching the West?was creating a different hazard for the East Coast, bringing scattered showers and thunderstorms that are expected to continue over the next several days, weather.com reported.

Police in Fort Plain, New York, northwest of Albany, told NBC station WNYT that the woman was warned of the flooding danger by officials but refused to leave her home. Witnesses said they saw the trailer carried away. Police were not releasing her name until dive teams were able to recover her body.


In the city of Oneida Deputy Fire Chief James Dalzell estimated that 250 homes and businesses were flooded after two levy breaks.

The Red Cross set up shelters in Oneida and Utica to house residents displaced by the floods.?

In the town of Sherrill, northeast of Albany, a dam failed at its edges and flooded homes. ?

"As the water was flowing down, it actually breeched around [the] side of the elevation dam and started to erode this entire bank, and then took some trees down with it, and then took some ... foundation stones," Sherrill City Manager Robert Comis?told NBC station WSTM of Syracuse.

The National Weather Service warned of flooding in several other states along the eastern seaboard, including in Pennsylvania, where Gov. Tom Corbett toured flood-damaged areas in a Black Hawk helicopter.

Emergency officials reminded drivers to avoid flooded areas, saying they could be cited for driving on flooded roads.

In Manassas, Va., the flat roof over the showroom of a Hyundai dealership collapsed, with Fire Marshal Francis Teevan saying it was likely caused by the weight of rainwater on the building.

Rain was expected to continue through Wednesday.

Related story: 200 suffer heat-related injuries as Las Vegas hits 117 degrees

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2df4088f/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C290C191970A0A0A0Eny0Ewoman0Epresumed0Edead0Eafter0Efloodwaters0Ecarry0Eaway0Emobile0Ehome0Dlite/story01.htm

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Shooting Challenge: Summer

Shooting Challenge: Summer

Kool-aid. Sunscreen. Swass. It's summer, that time we dream about all year, only to bitch about when it's finally here. And for this week's Shooting Challenge, capture the feeling of summer, in a single frame.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/uZw2xh4gIgU/shooting-challenge-summer-593584192

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Did a bird bring down F-16?

GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) ? The pilots flying an F-16 fighter jet that went down near Luke Air Force Base in suburban Phoenix reported hitting a bird shortly after takeoff, the Air Force general who commands their base said Thursday.

The two pilots, who were practicing landings and takeoffs at the base Wednesday evening, ejected safely and the fighter crashed in a farm field near the base.

"Shortly before the accident the pilot reported a bird strike," Brig. Gen. Mike Rothstein told reporters at the base 15 miles west of Phoenix.

The plane had just taken off when the pilots reported hitting a bird and the engine in the plane malfunctioned, 56th Operations Group commander Col. John Hanna said. They had little time to react.

"It sounds like they did a good job, the airplane didn't hit anybody or anything and they both survived with what I know is no injuries," Hanna told The Associated Press. "It's about as good as it gets when you have any kind of accident where you destroy an airplane."

Base spokeswoman Lt. Candice Dillitte said there's nothing to indicate a fleet-wide problem with the jets, but the Air Force will investigate the cause. The Air Force has more than 1,000 of the single-engine fighters.

The base, 15 miles west of Phoenix in Glendale, is the world's largest F-16 pilot training base and had 138 F-16s before Wednesday's crash. An instructor and a student were flying the jet that crashed.

The base is getting ready to transition to the military's new F-35 fighter. The Air Force announced Thursday it would receive three additional squadrons, bringing the total to 144 within about 10 years. The first plane is set to arrive next spring.

Witnesses said they heard the jet's engine sputtering and popping just before the plane went down. Photos posted on Twitter showed civilians helping two male pilots alongside a freshly plowed field.

Rothstein said the fact that the jet came down in farmland wasn't an accident. Glendale and other nearly cities have worked with the state to maintain open space around the base despite the rapid urbanization of the area.

Any engine problem shortly after takeoff is extremely dangerous and the pilots needed to react quickly, Hanna said.

"Certainly low altitude ejections are some of the more harrowing things that can happen, because you're close to the ground and a lot of things have to happen in a hurry in order for all of the ejection process to occur successfully," Hanna said. "You end up on the ground, able to stand, gather your gear and walk to the nearest pickup truck that's got some water sitting in it. So this worked out pretty well."

Bird strikes can severely damage jet engines. US Airways Flight 1549 lost both engines shortly after takeoff from LaGuardia Airport after hitting birds in January 2009 but landed safely on the Hudson River.

An inspector general's audit last year criticized the Federal Aviation Administration for not doing enough to stop bird strikes. The report cited a five-fold increase in bird strikes over the last two decades, from 1,770 reported in 1990 to 9,840 reported in 2011, due in part to growing bird populations. The strikes have led to at least 24 deaths and 235 injuries in the United States since 1988.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bird-may-brought-down-f-16-arizona-192912803.html

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Friday, June 28, 2013

PFT: Cops search Hernandez's uncle house

"FOX & Friends" All American Concert Series - Rodney AtkinsGetty Images

Geraldo Rivera and Rush Limbaugh are using the Aaron Hernandez case to tell their audiences that the NFL is contributing to a decaying American culture.

Rivera appeared on FOX News and said that the NFL and player agents should do more to keep players like Hernandez out of trouble.

?I don?t know why the league who recruits these kids from the inner city, how they don?t have minders, how the agents who are collecting 10 percent of $40 million, where are they in all of this?? Rivera said. ?Why aren?t they mentoring these young men who are fatherless, many of them ? Ray Lewis and all of the rest. Michael Vick. Uh, you can count them. There?s a ton of them. They sign them because they?re superb athletes and do nothing to preserve their character and put them on the right road toward manhood. It?s really pathetic.?

Rivera gets a few things wrong here: Hernandez isn?t from the inner city, he?s from a middle-class subdivision in Bristol, Connecticut. Hernandez?s father died when he was 16, but it?s wrong to call him ?fatherless,? as Hernandez often spoke about the close relationship he had with his father. Also, Hernandez?s agent didn?t get ?10 percent of $40 million,? as NFL agents can get a maximum of 3 percent of a player?s income, and $40 million represents the total value of the contract Hernandez signed last year ? most of which he will never see.

And, of course, the NFL does do plenty to try to encourage players to conduct themselves like professionals not only on the field but off, starting with the rookie symposium and continuing with player development programs that are available to every player during and after their careers. The NFL?s track record isn?t perfect, but how could any employer be 100 percent sure that none of its employees get into trouble away from work?

Those problems aside, Limbaugh piggybacked on Rivera?s comments. Limbaugh has long criticized what he sees as ties between the NFL and gangs, saying in 2007, ?The NFL all too often looks like a game between the Bloods and the Crips.? Limbaugh indicated that he thinks it?s unfair that he was criticized for those comments while Rivera will probably get a free pass, but Limbaugh added that he thinks the Hernandez case demonstrates the problem with a gang culture in the NFL.

?This guy is a star player in the National Football League, a star player for the New England Patriots. This has the potential to blow the lid open on the NFL and gangs and the whole concept,? Limbaugh said.

Rivera also decided that he wanted to bring Tim Tebow into the story and compare the two former teammates.

?Ironically a college classmate at the University of Florida of Tim Tebow ? ironic, why? Because Tim Tebow, probably the most religious, straight-shooting ballplayer in the league,? Rivera said. ?And Aaron Hernandez, a kid, an ex-hoodlum. You can take the kid out of the hood you can?t take the hood out of the kid. He was a Bristol Blood, he was a gang banger.?

Unfortunately for Rivera, The Onion beat him to trying to turn the Hernandez story into a Tebow story.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/06/27/police-search-hernandezs-uncles-house/related/

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Thursday, June 27, 2013

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

We're all familiar with the, uh, pitfalls of Apple's iOS Maps app. But Peder Norrby, the founder of a Stockholm-based tech company called Trapcode, has managed to capture some of the most bizarre 3D mapping glitches in high definition?turning them into lovely, surreal vignettes.

Norrby's project is called Mapglitch, and it's exactly what it sounds like: a series of high-def screen grabs from instances where the map has incorrectly laid 2D aerial imagery onto the 3D map. We got in touch with Norrby to find out what spurred the project, and apparently, it grew out of a Maps-surfing habit. "Ironically, I recently focused on the Mapglitch project because just sitting with iOS Maps looking around relaxes me," he said over email. "And now it got all this attention!"

Norrby is updating his Flickr page with new glitches as he finds them, so keep an eye on that for future images. And for now, enjoy the following finds?from Houses Throwing Up Trees in Barcelona to Hungry Plane Wants to Eat Terminal at JFK?below. [Flickr]

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

iOS Maps Atrocities? Nah, These Are Works of Art

Source: http://gizmodo.com/ios-maps-atrocities-nah-these-are-works-of-art-585375062

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Mandela's illness keeps Zuma at home

The health of South Africa's first black president, Nelson Mandela, appears to be deteriorating. President Jacob Zuma cancelled a planned trip to neighboring Mozambique after visiting the revered former leader on Wednesday.?

By Ed Cropley,?Reuters / June 26, 2013

An unidentified woman wearing earrings bearing the image of former South African President Nelson Mandela stands outside the hospital where he is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa, Wednesday.

AP Photo/Themba Hadebe

Enlarge

South African President?Jacob Zuma?cancelled a trip to neighboring?Mozambique?on Thursday, intensifying speculation about a deterioration in the health of anti-apartheid leader?Nelson Mandela, who remains critically ill in the hospital.

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Zuma made his decision not to leave the country after visiting the 94-year-old late on Wednesday in the Pretoria hospital where he has been receiving treatment for a lung infection for nearly three weeks.

"Clearly the issue of seriousness has been such that President?Jacob Zuma?has cancelled his trip," presidential spokesman?Mac Maharaj?told Talk Radio 702.

He declined to comment on reports that Mandela?was on life support, saying: "I cannot confirm any clinical details."

Mandela,?South Africa's first black president, is revered among most of the country's 53 million people as the architect of the 1994 transition to multi-racial democracy after three centuries of white domination.

However, his latest hospitalization - his fourth in six months - has reinforced a realisation that the father of the post-apartheid "Rainbow Nation" will not be around for ever.

The deterioration in his health at the weekend to "critical" from "serious but stable" caused a perceptible switch in the national mood, from prayers for his recovery to preparations for a fond farewell.

Maharaj added that it was too early to say whether the seriousness of Mandela's condition could force changes to the schedule of a planned visit to?South Africa?this weekend by U.S. President?Barack Obama.

Obama is also visiting two other African countries,?Senegal?and?Tanzania, starting in the Senegalese capital on Wednesday night.

Pillar of peace?

Well-wishers' messages, bouquets and stuffed animals have piled up outside Mandela's?Johannesburg?home and the wall of the hospital compound where he is being treated in the heart of the capital.

"We know that the day will come when he passes but it is so painful to accept," said?Patricia Ndiniza, 53, an estate agent who left a note wishing Mandela?a speedy recovery.

"He is a pillar for all of us. He is our pillar of peace and reconciliation," she said.

School children, prayer groups, office workers and comrades who followed Mandela?in the anti-apartheid fight have trickled past the hospital day by day, passing a gauntlet of journalists and camera crews camped outside the main gate.

Fallen notes have been collected and replaced with new ones, some written in crayon by children and others penned by adults expressing their appreciation for Madiba, the clan name by which Mandela?is affectionately known.

Mandela, who spent 27 years in apartheid prisons for plotting against the white-minority state, stepped down in 1999 after one five-year term in office.

Since then he has played little role in public life, dividing his time in retirement between his home in the wealthy?Johannesburg?suburb of Houghton and Qunu, the village in the impoverished?Eastern Cape?province where he was born.

His last public appearance was waving to fans from the back of a golf cart before the final of the World Cup in?Johannesburg's Soccer City stadium?in July 2010.

The public's last glimpse of him was a brief clip aired by state television in April during a visit to his home by Zuma and other senior officials from the ruling African National Congress.

At the time, the 101-year-old liberation movement assured the public Mandela?was "in good shape", although the footage showed a thin and frail old man sitting expressionless in an armchair.

(Additional reporting by Pascal Fletcher and Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Alison Williams)

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Uucf5NuAEcw/Mandela-s-illness-keeps-Zuma-at-home

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'Resident Evil 6' Director: This Will Never Get Old

The people have spoken, and they want their "Resident Evil." In an interview with "The Star," director Paul W.S. Anderson said he'd be making the sixth installment in the slow-mo-iest movie series ever this fall. "I think the undead genre really plays to primal human fears," Anderson said regarding the popularity of zombies since his [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/06/27/resident-evil-6-director/

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Exercise benefits patients with type 2 diabetes

June 25, 2013 ? Moderate-intensity exercise reduces fat stored around the heart, in the liver and in the abdomen of people with type 2 diabetes mellitus, even in the absence of any changes in diet, according to a new study published online in the journal Radiology.

Type 2 diabetes occurs when the body does not produce enough insulin, a hormone that regulates the movement of sugar into the cells, or when the cells resist the effects of insulin. The disease can lead to a wide range of complications, including damage to the eyes and kidneys and hardening of the arteries.

Exercise is recommended for people with diabetes, but its effects on different fat deposits in the body are unclear, according to the study's senior author, Hildo J. Lamb, M.D., Ph.D., from the Department of Radiology at Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands.

"Based on previous studies, we noticed that different fat deposits in the body show a differential response to dietary or medical intervention," he said. "Metabolic and other effects of exercise are hard to investigate, because usually an exercise program is accompanied by changes in lifestyle and diet."

For the new study, Dr. Lamb and colleagues assessed the effects of exercise on organ-specific fat accumulation and cardiac function in type 2 diabetes patients, independent of any other lifestyle or dietary changes. The 12 patients, average age 46 years, underwent MRI examinations before and after six months of moderate-intensity exercise totaling between 3.5 and six hours per week and featuring two endurance and two resistance training sessions. The exercise cycle culminated with a 12-day trekking expedition.

MRI results showed that, although cardiac function was not affected, the exercise program led to a significant decrease in fat volume in the abdomen, liver and around the heart, all of which have been previously shown to be associated with increased cardiovascular risk.

"In the present study we observed that the second layer of fat around the heart, the peracardial fat, behaved similarly in response to exercise training as intra-abdominal, or visceral fat," Dr. Lamb said. "The fat content in the liver also decreased substantially after exercise."

Dr. Lamb noted that the exercise-induced fat reductions in the liver are of particular importance to people with type 2 diabetes, many of whom are overweight or obese.

"The liver plays a central role in regulating total body fat distribution," he said. "Therefore, reduction of liver fat content and visceral fat volume by physical exercise are very important to reverse the adverse effects of lipid accumulation elsewhere, such as the heart and arterial vessel wall."

The findings point to an important role for imaging in identifying appropriate treatment for patients with type 2 diabetes, which the World Health Organization projects to be the seventh leading cause of death worldwide by 2030.

"In the future, we hope to be able to use advanced imaging techniques to predict in individual patients which therapeutic strategy is most effective: diet, medication, exercise, surgery or certain combinations," Dr. Lamb said.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/9a11kQoMo3I/130625074139.htm

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ICAP executive seen linked to LIBOR scandal: Wall Street Journal

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A senior executive at British brokerage firm ICAP PLC knew that some of the firm's brokers worked with traders at UBS AG to manipulate benchmark interest rates, according to the Wall Street Journal, which cited sources familiar with the matter.

The executive, David Casterton, was included in some emails sent in 2007 documenting the discussions, in which UBS agreed to make quarterly payments to ICAP for help in rigging the London Interbank Offered Rate, or LIBOR, the paper said on its website on Wednesday.

A call and email to ICAP spokeswoman Brigitte Trafford were not immediately returned after business hours.

The rate-fixing scandal has infected many of the world's biggest banks, put in motion new attempts to set global interest rates and indirectly led to the departure of several top executives at Barclays PLC and UBS.

Casterton, who the paper said is a longtime deputy to ICAP Chief Executive Michael Spencer and currently head of global broking at the London-based firm, would nevertheless be one of the most senior executives affected by the Libor scandal, the Journal said.

An ICAP spokeswoman told the paper that no one at the company was "aware of any corrupt payment from any source at any time" and said it would be false and defamatory to suggest otherwise.

(Reporting by Jed Horowitz; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/icap-executive-seen-linked-libor-scandal-wall-street-001050670.html

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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

avast! SecureLine


SecureLine ($7.99 per month) is a personal VPN service from the antivirus outfit avast! Nothing really sets it apart from all the other VPN services currently flooding the market?it is easy to use, hides your online activity from eavesdroppers, and allows you to spoof your IP address to view content that's restricted to a certain geographic location. It has a cleaner interface and simpler setup than most of the competition, but the support for international servers is, at best, still hit-and-miss.

There are many VPN services on the market, some of which we've reviewed, such as Norton Hotspot Privacy, VPN Direct, and HideIPVPN.

How VPN Services Work
Your computer has an IP address assigned by your ISP which someone can lookup to try to figure out your geographic location. Sometimes, you may want to change that address so that it will be harder to trace online activity back to you. Perhaps all the recent revelations about the government snooping through records of what users are doing has you feeling paranoid. SecureLine overrides the IP address with one drawn from its pool of servers, so you can suddenly pretend you're in a different state or? country of your choice from a list of options.

VPN services are useful if you frequently log into wireless networks other than the one you control, such as coffeeshops and airports. On a recent trip, I used it when I logged into Google Apps to check my email and my bank account. SecureLine is not intended to replace my corporate VPN as it won't let me connect to work servers, but it did encrypt my network connection regardless of which site I was on.

Installation
When installing the free antivirus, I had the option to perform a typical installation, which includes the real-time shields in the antivirus tool, along with a firewall, antispam tool, browser protection, and the SafeZone feature. I didn't really want to install all those features on this device, though. I already have a firewall I am happy with, and my mail server includes antispam functionality. I was pleased to see the "minimal" installation, which just installs the antivirus, browser protection, and SecureLine.

I was glad to see the service wasn't restricted to just people who had paid for avast! antivirus, but was available to the free users, as well. However, even users of the free antivirus have to pay for SecureLine, for $7.99 per month. Yearly plans for $59.99 are available, as well. Users can also try out SecureLine for free for 24 hours. The "market" tab in the avast! user interface has an easy way to pay for and to add SeucreLine protection.

Since the antivirus software is a Windows-only product, SecureLine protects only Windows users. However, avast! has released a separate iOS version of the VPN service.

It is clear, however, that SecureLine is an add-on feature, and intended only for avast! users. If you already have antivirus protection you are happy with and don't want to replace it with avast!, you won't be able to use SecureLine?because it's not a good idea to run more than one AV app at the same time: they tend to conflict. On one hand, this is a great way for avast! to extend network protection to its users, and I am glad to see more and more antivirus vendors beginning to realize that many of their users are at risk each time they hop on to an open Wi-Fi hotspot. On the other hand, considering SecureLine is not a bundled service but one I have to pay for, it seems a little shortsighted to integrate it so tightly that it can't be a stand-alone product, like Symantec's Norton Hotspot Privacy.

Getting Started
I clicked on SecureLine from the left pane on the avast! user interface and uploaded the license file to activate SecureLine. If I didn't have the license file, I would have to go to the Market and pay for my SecureLine subscription first. Once activated, SecureLine appeared as its own icon in my system tray, independent of avast! antivirus.

Once activated, it was pretty simple to use. I could choose any one of the servers in Dallas, Miami, New York, Seattle, Amsterdam, Frankfurt, London, Prague, and Singapore and hit "connect." I could also set avast! to prompt me to start SecureLine whenever I connect to an unsecure Wi-Fi network.

That's it?nothing else to clutter up the interface, and no advanced features that can be overwhelming for users.

SecureLine has the easiest installation I've ever seen. There is no message about installing the WinTAP adapter, no software installation, zilch. You just enable the service, and everything is handled in the background quietly and efficiently.

App Features and Performance
I could also connect using "best possible network" by clicking on the "connect" button directly from the systray icon. Once I was connected, I verified that my IP address had changed by checking my public IP address. It's not enough to just have my IP address change?I want the assurance that my network traffic is passing through an encrypted tunnel so that my information stays private from snoops. I hit a few websites while connected to SecureLine and kept an eye on the packets being generated in WireShark to verify that the data were not being transmitted in cleartext and that everything was encrypted.

I took the laptop to a few places with wireless networks and tried connecting. Whenever I connected to an open wireless network, I was prompted to enable SecureLine. I was a little disconcerted the first time the computer "spoke" to me about SecureLine, as I hadn't realized audio notifications were on by default?Next: Measuring Network Performance on SecureLine

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/qWfyt8b4Kqc/0,2817,2420857,00.asp

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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

NSA Surveillance Scandal: Snowden a No-Show On His Flight To Cuba

NSA Surveillance Scandal: Snowden a No-Show On His Flight To Cuba

11:56 AM?Edward Snowden's seat on the Russian airliner to Cuba was empty today, with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange announcing that the NSA whistleblower is safe but giving no other details. Snowden is seeking political asylum in Ecuador after fleeing Hong Kong and reportedly arriving in Moscow on Sunday. Washington has revoked Snowden's U.S. passport and Secretary of State John Kerry is demanding that the Russians hand over the former intelligence contractor. Snowden has been on the run since he first revealed details of Verizon's participation in a telecommunications industry program to store information on all telephone calls, and then broke news of the NSA/Silicon Valley PRISM system that watches over the whole Interent. Developing...

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/W7Bp-dfhGJ0/nsa-surveillance-scandal-snowden-a-no-show-on-his-flig-511588927

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Is Chris Weidman the one to take out Anderson Silva?

When Anderson Silva fights Chris Weidman at UFC 162 next weekend, he will be putting his 17-fight win streak, consecutive wins record, and consecutive title defenses record on the line. Silva's last five fights have ended in a stoppage. He is the closest thing the UFC has to unbeatable.

But more and more MMA folks say Weidman is the guy who can take him out. He is undefeated, and has six wins by a stoppage. UFC welterweight champion Georges St-Pierre has trained with Weidman and said he will beat Silva. UFC commentator Joe Rogan said Weidman has the game to take out Silva. Frankie Edgar said he thinks Weidman will win, and noted BJJ expert Roger Gracie said Weidman can submit anyone, even Gracie.

Are you on board with the Weidman hypetrain? Will he win, or will it be Silva's 18th straight? Speak up on Facebook or Twitter.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/chris-weidman-one-anderson-silva-161041788.html

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Rise of craft beer highlights needs in accounting and tax planning ...

NORTH BAY ? After a number of accounting and advising firms have found a focus in serving the specific needs of the North Bay wine industry, demand from a different beverage category ? craft beer ? is highlighting another niche for tax and bookkeeping.

Many North Bay accounting firms with clients in both industries drew parallels between brewing and winemaking, including the heightened financial reporting requirements required as alcohol producers.

Yet as craft beer explodes in popularity in the North Bay and beyond, the accounting and tax nuances facing an ever-growing roster of craft brewers are becoming a topic of increased interest for the region?s large and small brewers alike.

Tom McCormick

Tom McCormick

?For many years, a lot of us were driving in the dark, trying to help each other. It was easier to get someone to help you with equipment and sourcing ingredients than finances,? said Tom McCormick, executive director of the industry trade group, the California Craft Brewers Association. ?It?s just now beginning to develop where we?re seeing some people who are popping up to serve our industry.?

Sonoma County craft breweries, along with distillers and cider makers, were responsible for nearly $450,000 in outside accounting,? tax preparation, bookkeeping and payroll services in 2012, according to the first-ever Sonoma County Craft Beverage report released last week by the Sonoma County Economic Development Board.

Those breweries ? currently 18 in Sonoma County alone ? range widely in size. The largest in the region, Petaluma?s Lagunitas Brewing Company, produced more than 250,000 barrels of beer last year and plans to produce over 2 million after expansion both locally and within a new Chicago facility, according to the EDB. Other larger-scale producers include Cloverdale?s Bear Republic Brewing Company and Boonville?s Anderson Valley Brewing Company.

Yet production volume drops significantly from there, with even venerable brewers like Santa Rosa?s Russian River Brewing Co. producing 12,480 barrels in 2011 ? the only other North Bay craft brewery producing more than 5,000 barrels that year. And even Chico?s Sierra Nevada Brewing Company, which produces nearly 1 million barrels a year as the largest craft brewer in California, still represents only 1 percent of the production of Anheuser-Busch Inbev, Mr. McCormick said.

Ken Dansie

Ken Dansie

The majority of breweries ?are essentially small businesses,? said Ken Dansie, partner in the Private Company Services Group of BPM, accountants and consultants in the North Bay. Limited resources make planning for a capital-intensive expansion more difficult, even when a large demand exists.

?When you have a small craft brewery starting to produce, the underlying capital costs just to get started are significant,? he said, noting the cost of production brewing equipment. ?Going from doing your first brew underneath your stairs to selling 1,000 barrels a year are very different things.?

As one aspect of financial planning, the tax code has continued to evolve in respect to craft brewers in recent years. While aging beer in wooden barrels once used for wine or spirits has become a widely adopted brewing technique, those beers were until recently subject to the higher excise tax reserved for liquor in California. That changed last year, when North Coast Assemblyman Wes Chesbro?s proposal to reclassify those beverages as beer was signed into law. ?

Tami Norgrove

Tami Norgrove

Yet those tax issues don?t stop at California, creating another layer of complication for craft breweries distributing outside of the state and the U.S., said Tami Norgrove, chief financial officer at Bear Republic. The brewery has developed an in-house system to track those differences and other data.

?It can be challenging,? she said, with differences that include aspects such as alcohol content and volume measurements. The brewery distributes its beer in 35 states and seven countries, and ?each state has different requirements and different rules.?

Meanwhile, other tax questions still loom at the federal level, including the question of what the federal tax code considers a ?craft brewery? itself. The proposed Brewers Excise and Economic Relief Act ? more commonly known as the BEER Act ? is one proposal backed by large-scale producers that would drop the tax on mass-production brewers from $18 a barrel to $9, essentially raising the small brewer tax by $2. A competing Small BREW Act, short for the Small Brewer Reinvestment and Expanding Workforce Act ? would lower a current federal tax of $7 per barrel for those producing less than 60,000 barrels to $3.50.

Jim Craven

Jim Craven

Yet regardless of the specific tax or industry definition for craft breweries, consumers appear to be embracing them with significant brand loyalty that in many cases starts with a direct-to-consumer experience at a brewpub-type setting, said Jim Caven, a director with Pisenti & Brinker LLP.

?Too often, we are separating our accounting info into silos,? he said. ?It?s up to the accountant to empty those silos and put them together,? he said.

One of the firm?s clients, Davis-based Sudwerk Brewing, is seeking to address those complexities by implementing a brewery-specific accounting system known as OrchestratedBEER, he said. Like similar systems developed for the wine industry and otherwise, the program allows services such as the tracking of company revenues and costs down to the ingredient level for various brews.

The system is meant to be flexible enough for breweries of different scales and approaches.

?We?re fortunate that there are a lot of very good breweries up here in Northern California. We can talk to each other, and learn from each other. Everyone is finding a different way to grow,? Ms. Norgrove said.

Source: http://www.northbaybusinessjournal.com/75272/rise-of-craft-beer-highlights-needs-in-accounting-and-tax-planning/

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NSA leaker's global flight appears stalled for now

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) ? Edward Snowden's stop-and-start flight across the globe appeared to stall in Moscow as the United States ratcheted up pressure to hand over the National Security Agency leaker who had seemed on his way to Ecuador to seek asylum.

In Ecuador's most extensive statement about the case, the foreign minister hailed Snowden on Monday as "a man attempting to bring light and transparency to facts that affect everyone's fundamental liberties."

The decision whether to grant Snowden the asylum he has requested is a choice between "betraying the citizens of the world or betraying certain powerful elites in a specific country," Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino told reporters while visiting Vietnam.

But what had been expected to be a straightforward journey to this South America nation dissolved into uncertainty by day's end. Snowden didn't use a reservation for a Havana-bound Russian airline flight that could have served as the first leg of a trip to safety in Ecuador, and his allies would not say where he was or what changed. Patino said Tuesday that he didn't know Snowden's exact whereabouts.

In Washington, the White House demanded that Ecuador and other countries deny Snowden asylum. It also sharply criticized China for letting him leave Hong Kong, and urged Russia to "do the right thing" and send him to the U.S. to face espionage charges.

A high-ranking Ecuadorean official told The Associated Press that Russia and Ecuador were discussing where Snowden could go, and the process could take days. He also said Ecuador's ambassador to Moscow had not seen or spoken to Snowden. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case publicly.

Ecuadoreans debated whether accepting Snowden would be a step too far for leftist President Rafael Correa, who has won wide popularity with oil-funded social and infrastructure programs while picking public fights with his country's main export market, the U.S. Correa has expelled U.S. diplomats, shuttered an American military base and offered refuge at Ecuador's embassy in London to Julian Assange, praising the founder of Wikileaks for publishing reams of leaked secret U.S. documents. Assange has embraced Snowden and WikiLeaks experts are believed to be assisting him in arranging asylum.

With unprecedented international attention focused on Ecuador, many citizens said they felt giving asylum to Snowden would be courting trouble for no reason, particularly with a key U.S. trade agreement up for renewal in coming weeks.

"I think it's just being provocative," said Blanca Sanchez, 50, who sells cosmetics in the capital, Quito. "He needs to take responsibility for himself. This isn't our problem."

U.S and Ecuadorean officials said they believed Snowden was still in Russia, where he fled Sunday after weeks of hiding out in Hong Kong following his disclosure of the broad scope of two highly classified counterterror surveillance programs to two newspapers. The programs collect vast amounts of Americans' phone records and worldwide online data in the name of national security.

Assange declined to discuss where Snowden was but said he was safe. Assange said Snowden was only passing through Russia and had applied for asylum in Ecuador, Iceland and possibly other countries.

State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said the U.S. had made demands to "a series of governments," including Ecuador, that Snowden be barred from any international travel other than to be returned to the U.S. The U.S has revoked Snowden's passport.

The White House said Hong Kong's refusal to detain Snowden had "unquestionably" hurt relations between the United States and China. While Hong Kong has a high degree of autonomy from the rest of China, experts said Beijing probably orchestrated Snowden's exit in an effort to remove an irritant in Sino-U.S. relations.

Secretary of State John Kerry urged Moscow to "do the right thing" and turn over Snowden.

"We're following all the appropriate legal channels and working with various other countries to make sure that the rule of law is observed," President Barack Obama told reporters when asked if he was confident that Russia would expel Snowden.

White House spokesman Jay Carney said the U.S. was expecting the Russians "to look at the options available to them to expel Mr. Snowden back to the United States to face justice for the crimes with which he is charged."

Carney was tougher on China.

"The Chinese have emphasized the importance of building mutual trust," he said. "And we think that they have dealt that effort a serious setback. ... This was a deliberate choice by the government to release a fugitive despite a valid arrest warrant, and that decision unquestionably has a negative impact on the U.S.-China relationship."

Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said China had harmed its relationship with the U.S. by allowing Snowden to leave Hong Kong. China's move set a "bad precedent" that could unravel extradition treaties or other legal agreements between countries, she said Monday in Los Angeles.

Assange and attorneys for WikiLeaks assailed the U.S. as "bullying" foreign nations into refusing asylum to Snowden. WikiLeaks counsel Michael Ratner said Snowden is protected as a whistleblower by the same international treaties that the U.S. has in the past used to criticize policies in China and African nations.

Ecuadorean analysts said accepting Snowden could jeopardize tariff-free access to U.S. markets for Ecuador's fruit, seafood and flowers. U.S. trade, which also includes oil, accounts for half of Ecuador's exports and about 400,000 jobs in the nation of 14.6 million people.

The U.S. Andean Trade Preference Act requires congressional renewal soon and hosting Snowden "doesn't help Ecuador's efforts to extend it," said Ramiro Crespo, director of the Quito-based financial analysis firm Analytica Securities. "The United States is an important market for us, and treating a big client this way isn't appropriate from a commercial point of view."

At the same time, high oil prices, a growing mining industry and rising ties with China may give Correa a sense of protection from U.S. repercussions. Many of the Ecuadoreans who re-elected Correa in February with 57 percent of the vote see flouting the U.S. as a welcome expression of independence, particularly when it comes in the form of granting asylum.

"This person who's being pursued by the CIA, our policy is loving people like that, protecting them, perhaps giving them the rights that their own countries don't give them. I think this is a worthy effort by us," said office worker Juan Francisco Sambrano.

In April 2011, the Obama administration expelled the Ecuadorean ambassador to Washington after the U.S. envoy to Ecuador, Heather Hodges, was expelled for making corruption allegations about senior Ecuadorean police authorities in confidential documents disclosed by WikiLeaks.

American experts said the U.S. will have limited, if any, influence to persuade governments to turn over Snowden if he heads to Cuba or nations in South America that are seen as hostile to Washington.

"There's little chance Ecuador would give him back" if that country agreed to take him, said James F. Jeffrey, a former ambassador and career diplomat.

Snowden is a former CIA employee who later was hired as a contractor for the NSA. In that job, he gained access to documents that he gave to The Guardian and The Washington Post to expose what he contends are privacy violations by an authoritarian government.

Snowden also told the South China Morning Post that "the NSA does all kinds of things like hack Chinese cellphone companies to steal all of your SMS data." He is believed to have more than 200 additional sensitive documents in laptops he is carrying.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nsa-leakers-global-flight-appears-stalled-now-051718996.html

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TWG 102: Succeeding with grief and loss | The Wellness Couch

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This week The Wellness Guys talk about grief and loss. This is something that everyone goes through at some stage in their life and there is no one right answer in regards to how to deal with it. The guys share some of their own personal experiences with loss in the hope that it will be of benefit to others too. Tune in for this very important episode on The Wellness Guys Show.

Source: http://thewellnesscouch.com/twg/twg-102-succeeding-with-grief-and-loss?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=twg-102-succeeding-with-grief-and-loss

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Migrating animals add new depth to how the ocean 'breathes'

June 24, 2013 ? The oxygen content of the ocean may be subject to frequent ups and downs in a very literal sense -- that is, in the form of the numerous sea creatures that dine near the surface at night then submerge into the safety of deeper, darker waters at daybreak.

Research begun at Princeton University and recently reported on in the journal Nature Geoscience found that animals ranging from plankton to small fish consume vast amounts of what little oxygen is available in the ocean's aptly named "oxygen minimum zone" daily. The sheer number of organisms that seek refuge in water roughly 200- to 650-meters deep (650 to 2,000 feet) every day result in the global consumption of between 10 and 40 percent of the oxygen available at these depths.

The findings reveal a crucial and underappreciated role that animals have in ocean chemistry on a global scale, explained first author Daniele Bianchi, a postdoctoral researcher at McGill University who began the project as a doctoral student of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at Princeton.

"In a sense, this research should change how we think of the ocean's metabolism," Bianchi said. "Scientists know that there is this massive migration, but no one has really tried to estimate how it impacts the chemistry of the ocean.

"Generally, scientists have thought that microbes and bacteria primarily consume oxygen in the deeper ocean," Bianchi said. "What we're saying here is that animals that migrate during the day are a big source of oxygen depletion. We provide the first global data set to say that."

Much of the deep ocean can replenish (often just barely) the oxygen consumed during these mass migrations, which are known as diel vertical migrations (DVMs).

But the balance between DVMs and the limited deep-water oxygen supply could be easily upset, Bianchi said -- particularly by climate change, which is predicted to further decrease levels of oxygen in the ocean. That could mean these animals would not be able to descend as deep, putting them at the mercy of predators and inflicting their oxygen-sucking ways on a new ocean zone.

"If the ocean oxygen changes, then the depth of these migrations also will change. We can expect potential changes in the interactions between larger guys and little guys," Bianchi said. "What complicates this story is that if these animals are responsible for a chunk of oxygen depletion in general, then a change in their habits might have a feedback in terms of oxygen levels in other parts of the deeper ocean."

The researchers produced a global model of DVM depths and oxygen depletion by mining acoustic oceanic data collected by 389 American and British research cruises between 1990 and 2011. Using the background readings caused by the sound of animals as they ascended and descended, the researchers identified more than 4,000 DVM events.

They then chemically analyzed samples from DVM-event locations to create a model that could correlate DVM depth with oxygen depletion. With that data, the researchers concluded that DVMs indeed intensify the oxygen deficit within oxygen minimum zones.

"You can say that the whole ecosystem does this migration -- chances are that if it swims, it does this kind of migration," Bianchi said. "Before, scientists tended to ignore this big chunk of the ecosystem when thinking of ocean chemistry. We are saying that they are quite important and can't be ignored."

Bianchi conducted the data analysis and model development at McGill with assistant professor of earth and planetary sciences Eric Galbraith and McGill doctoral student David Carozza. Initial research of the acoustic data and development of the migration model was conducted at Princeton with K. Allison Smith (published as K.A.S. Mislan), a postdoctoral research associate in the Program in Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, and Charles Stock, a researcher with the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/NeinHNYdfDo/130624144822.htm

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Friends of Syria agree to supply urgent rebel aid

By Yara Bayoumy

DOHA (Reuters) - Western and Arab opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad agreed on Saturday to give urgent military support to Western-backed rebels, aiming to stem a counter-offensive by Assad's forces and offset the growing power of jihadist fighters.

Assad's recapture of the strategic border town of Qusair, spearheaded by Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas, and an expected assault on the divided northern city of Aleppo have alarmed supporters of the Syrian opposition.

The U.S. administration responded by saying, for the first time, it would arm rebels, while Gulf sources say Saudi Arabia has accelerated the delivery of advanced weapons to the rebels over the last week.

Ministers from the 11 core members of the Friends of Syria group agreed "to provide urgently all the necessary materiel and equipment to the opposition on the ground", according to a statement released at the end of their meeting in Qatar.

The statement did not commit all the countries to send weapons, but said each country could provide assistance "in its own way, in order to enable (the rebels) to counter brutal attacks by the regime and its allies".

The aid should be channeled through the Western-backed Supreme Military Council, a move that Washington and its European allies hope will prevent weapons falling into the hands of Islamist radicals including the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front.

The ministers also condemned "the intervention of Hezbollah militias and fighters from Iran and Iraq", demanding that they withdraw immediately.

As well as fighting in Qusair, Hezbollah is deployed alongside Iraqi gunmen around the Shi'ite shrine of Sayyida Zainab, south of Damascus, while Iranian military commanders are believed to be advising Assad's officers on counter-insurgency.

SAUDI SPEEDS UP SUPPORT

Two Gulf sources told Reuters that Saudi Arabia, which started supplying anti-aircraft missiles to the rebels on a small scale two months ago, had accelerated delivery of sophisticated weaponry.

"In the past week there have been more arrivals of these advanced weapons. They are getting them more frequently," one source said, without giving details. Another Gulf source described them as "potentially balance-tipping" supplies.

Rebel fighters say they need anti-aircraft and anti-tank weapons to stem the fightback by Assad's forces in a civil war that has killed 93,000 people, driven 1.6 million refugees abroad and cost tens of billions of dollars in destruction of property, businesses and infrastructure.

Rebel spokesman Louay Meqdad said the Supreme Military Council, led by former Syrian army general Salim Idriss, had received several batches of weapons.

"They are the first consignments from one of the countries that support the Syrian people and there are clear promises from Arab and foreign countries that there will be more during the coming days," he told Reuters Television in Istanbul.

The increasingly sectarian dynamic of the war pits mainly Sunni Muslim rebels against forces loyal to Assad - who is from the Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam - and has split the Middle East along Sunni-Shi'ite lines.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani of Qatar, which along with Saudi Arabia has been one of the most open Arab backers of the anti-Assad rebels, said that supplying them with weapons was the only way to resolve the conflict.

"Force is necessary to achieve justice. And the provision of weapons is the only way to achieve peace in Syria's case," Sheikh Hamad told ministers at the start of the talks.

"We cannot wait due to disagreement among (U.N.) Security Council members over finding a solution to the problem," he said.

The meeting in Qatar brought together ministers and senior officials of countries that support the anti-Assad rebels - France, Germany, Egypt, Italy, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Britain and the United States - although the fractured Syrian opposition itself was notably absent.

Sheikh Hamad said all but two countries had agreed on the kind of support to provide to the rebels. He did not name the dissenters, but Germany and Italy have both said in the past they oppose arming the rebel brigades.

The final statement expressed concern at Syria's worsening humanitarian crisis, which prompted the United Nations to launch a $5 billion appeal earlier this month - its biggest ever.

It called on the world "to shoulder its responsibilities by taking urgent and tangible actions to alleviate the Syrian people's suffering". In a message that appeared aimed at Assad, it also called for "cross-border humanitarian access" in Syria.

CRISIS "SET TO WORSEN"

Speaking before the start of talks, British Foreign Secretary William Hague reiterated that London had yet to take a decision on arming the rebels, but said that only by strengthening the opposition could the West hope to bring about talks for a political settlement.

"At the moment, this crisis is on a worse trajectory. It is set to get worse," Hague said. "I don't want to understate the severity of it, and the bleakness of it."

"We won't get a political solution if Assad and his regime think they can eliminate all legitimate opposition by force, and so we do have to give assistance to that opposition," he said.

The United States and Russia, which back opposing sides in the conflict, hope to bring them together for negotiations in Geneva originally scheduled for this month. Hague said there was little prospect of that happening "in the next few weeks".

Moscow, which says it will not break military supply contracts with Damascus, opposes arming rebel forces that it says include terrorist groups, and has warned that a swift exit by Assad would risk a dangerous power vacuum.

In northern Syria, rebels announced an offensive on Saturday that they said aimed to capture the western districts of the city of Aleppo from government forces.

Assad's troops have been fighting rebels in rural areas around Syria's biggest city and are believed to be reinforcing in the region, ahead of their own expected assault on rebel-held parts of the contested northern hub.

In Damascus, the army sustained its bombardment of the eastern rebel-held district of Qaboun and soldiers clashed with rebels in the Barzeh district, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

(Additional reporting by Yara Bayoumy in Doha and Ayhan Uyanik in Istanbul; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by Alison Williams and Robin Pomeroy)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/putin-warns-arming-syrian-rebels-conflict-widens-083445291.html

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How Much Will Obama's Africa Trip Cost? The White House Isn't Exactly Sure

  • Cristina Fernandez, President Of Argentina

    President Barack Obama meets with Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez at the G20 Summit in Cannes, France, Friday, Nov. 4, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

  • Hamid Karzai, President Of Afghanistan

    Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai (L) and U.S. President Barack Obama shake hands after a joint news conference in the East Room of the White House on January 11, 2013 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

  • Julia Gillard, Prime Minister Of Australia

    U.S. President Barack Obama (L) and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard shake hands during a bilateral meeting at Parliament House in Canberra on November 16, 2011. (JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Dilma Rousseff, Prime Minister Of Brazil

    U.S. President Barack Obama (L) shakes hands with Brazilian President Dilma Vana Rousseff (R) during a joint press conference at Palacio do Planalto in Brasilia on March 19, 2011. (JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Hun Sen, Prime Minister Of Cambodia

    U.S. President Barack Obama (L) and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen (R) reach out to shake hands on arrival at the Peace Palace for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and US summit in Phnom Penh on November 19, 2012 following the 21st ASEAN Leaders Summit. (ROMEO GACAD/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Stephen Harper, Prime Minister Of Canada

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with Canada?s Prime Minister Stephen Harper in bilateral meeting during the G20 Summit, Tuesday, June 19, 2012, in Los Cabos, Mexico. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

  • Sebastian Pinera, President Of Chile

    U.S. President Barack Obama greets Chilean President Sebastian Pinera before a dinner at the Washington Convention Center during the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, DC, on April 12, 2010. (JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Xi Jinping, President Of China

    U.S. President Barack Obama shakes hands with then-Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping during meetings in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, February 14, 2012. (SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Juan Manuel Santos, President Of Colombia

    Colombia President Juan Manuel Santos (R) and U.S. President Barack Obama shake hands during a joint press conference in the framework of the VI Summit of the Americas at Casa de Huespedes in Cartagena, Colombia, on April 15, 2012. (SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Laura Chinchilla, President Of Costa Rica

    President Barack Obama and Costa Rica's President Laura Chinchilla shake hands at the end of their joint press conference in San Jose, Costa Rica, Friday, May 3, 2013. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

  • Francois Hollande, President Of France

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with French President Francois Hollande on arrival for the G8 Summit Friday, May 18, 2012 at Camp David, Md. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

  • Angela Merkel, Chancellor Of Germany

    U.S. President Barack Obama (R) shakes hands with German Chancellor Angela Merkel looks after a joint press conference following their meeting in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on June 7, 2011. (JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Giorgio Napolitano, President Of Italy

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano during their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Friday, Feb. 15, 2013. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

  • Shinzo Abe, Prime Minister Of Japan

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Friday, Feb. 22, 2013. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

  • Park Geu-Hye, President Of South Korea

    President Barack Obama and South Korea President Park Geun-Hye shake hands at the conclusion of their joint news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, May 7, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

  • Enrique Pena Nieto, President Of Mexico

    President Barack Obama, left, and Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto, right, shake hands following a news conference at the Palacio Nacional in Mexico City, Thursday, May 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

  • Benigno Aquino, President Of The Philippines

    U.S. President Barack Obama (R) shakes hands with President Benigno Aquino of the Philippines in the Oval Office at the White House on June 8, 2012 in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch-Pool/Getty Images)

  • Donald Tusk, Prime Minister Of Poland

    Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk (R) shake hands with U.S. President Barack Obama (L) during their meeting in Warsaw on May 28, 2011. (JANEK SKARZYNSKI/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, Amir Of Qatar

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani of Qatar during their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, April 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

  • Traian Basescu, President Of Romania

    U.S. President Barack Obama (R) greets Romania's President Traian Basescu before a dinner at the US Ambassador's residence in Prague on April 8, 2010. (JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Vladimir Putin, President Of Russia

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with Russia?s President Vladimir Putin in a bilateral meeting during the G20 Summit, Monday, June 18, 2012, in Los Cabos, Mexico. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

  • Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, King Of Saudi Arabia

    U.S. President Barack Obama shakes hands with King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia during meetings in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, June 29, 2010. (SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Lee Hsien Loong, Prime Minister Of Singapore

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with with Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong during their meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, April, 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

  • Fredrik Reinfeldt, Prime Minister Of Sweden

    U.S. President Barack Obama shakes hands with Sweden's Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt (L) during meetings in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, November 2, 2009. (SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Yingluck Shinawatra, Prime Minister Of Thailand

    U.S. President Barack Obama, left, and Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra shake hands following the conclusion of their joint news conference at Thai Government House in Bangkok, Thailand, Sunday, Nov. 18, 2012. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

  • Abdullah II, King Of Jordan

    FILE - In this March 22, 2013, file photo, President Barack Obama, left, and Jordan's King Abdullah II, right, shake hands following their joint new conference at the King's Palace in Amman, Jordan. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

  • Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Prime Minister Of Turkey

    U.S. President Barack Obama (R) shakes hands with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan after their bilateral meeting in Seoul on March 25, 2012 on the eve of the 2012 Seoul Nuclear Security Summit. (JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)

  • David Cameron, Prime Minister Of Great Britain

    President Barack Obama shakes hands with Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron on arrival for the G8 Summit Friday, May 18, 2012 at Camp David, Md. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

  • Hugo Chavez, Former President Of Venezuela

    Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez (R) gives a book, 'The Open Veins of Latin America' of Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano to US President Barack Obama (L) during a multilateral meeting to begin during the Summit of the Americas at the Hyatt Regency in Port of Spain, Trinidad April 18, 2009. (JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/21/obama-africa-trip-cost_n_3481438.html

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