Thursday, February 28, 2013

PSA: Kindle iOS app users should not update to version 3.6.1

PSA iOS Kindle users should not update to version 361

This one's coming straight from the horse's mouth. Amazon is acknowledging a "known issue" with version 3.6.1 of its Kindle app for iOS -- the company is recommending that current users avoid the latest update, which hit the App Store today. According to TUAW, the new version may completely erase a user's book library. How this passed the e-book giant's QA team is anyone's guess, but until a revision hits the cloud, we suggest you stay away.

Update: Amazon has reached out to clarify this issue. The update causes the app to "deregister," and as a result, items are removed from the smartphone or tablet. All of your content remains in the cloud, however, and can be re-downloaded after you re-register the device with Amazon. The update has been re-submitted to Apple and should appear soon. Consider us re-lieved. You'll find the official word below:

We have identified an issue with the app update that may cause your app to become deregistered. To register, enter your Amazon account e-mail address and password and all your Amazon content will be available in the cloud. We have submitted an update fix for this issue and are working with Apple to release.

Update 2: As of Wednesday afternoon, the app has been replaced with version 3.6.2, with listed improvements including "Fix for Registration Issue." The source link will now direct you to that latest version, which, presumably, won't make all your books disappear.

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Via: TUAW

Source: Amazon (iTunes)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/jkBDhgHZ9HM/

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German unemployment steady at 7.4 percent

(AP) ? The Federal Labor Agency says Germany's unemployment rate held steady at 7.4 percent in February and that the job market remains "robust."

The agency says Thursday that 18,000 more people were without a job in February over the previous month ? largely due to winter seasonal factors. A total of 3.156 million people were registered as jobless.

When seasonally adjusted, the number of unemployed was down 3,000 people and the unemployment rate was 6.9 percent ? also unchanged over January.

Agency head Frank-Juergen Weise says the German labor market "seems to be coping with the weak economic growth in recent months and appears to be overall robust."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-28-EU-Germany-Economy/id-af098aa9299149b9a9aaf0eec7072fb0

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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Legal aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 ...

Whilst the government comes under fire for reforms and policies on the budget deficit, welfare, education and health, the majority of the general public seem to be unaware that the Government has also pushed through its devastating attack on Access to Justice for injured people in spite of vociferous opposition from the trade unions, the Labour Party, victim support groups and civil rights organisations.

As a result of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders (LASPO) Act 2012, those who are injured in workplace accidents, road traffic accidents or those who develop diseases related to their work, such as asbestosis, will now find it much harder to find a specialist lawyer to take on their compensation claim.

The reforms of civil litigation funding and costs in England and Wales will come into effect in April of this year. These reforms turn the rules currently in place upon their head and expose those genuinely injured people needing legal representation to run the risk of having to pay from their own pocket if they lose their case as the existing ?No Win, No Fee? system will be no more.

The current system is knocked by government and the media because they say it encourages a so-called ?compensation culture?. Under the existing rules, the lawyer for the injured person doesn?t get paid for the work they have done if that case fails, whilst a success fee is payable by the guilty party in successful cases.

In April the guilty party will no longer have to pay the success fee. Insurance policies purchased by victims of accidents to protect themselves from any adverse costs orders will no longer be met by the guilty party.

In addition, the government is seeking to amend the Health & Safety at Work Act 1974 which will radically change the way injured workers claim compensation from their employers.

Currently an injured person will recover a 100% of their compensation with the new rules, this is unlikely to be the case.

It does not seem right that an innocent victim is not entitled to receive their compensation in full but this is the new regime as proposed by insurers and the government.

The real danger for anyone who suffers an injury or illness through the negligence of others, is that come April they will have difficulty in finding a lawyer who is able to take on their case, have the ability to recover an insurance premium to safeguard them with any costs they may incur in taking the matter to a trial and even if successful they will not recover 100% of any damages awarded.

The reason for these reforms is to curb the alleged rise in compensation claims for ?whiplash? injuries and yet the reforms that are being introduced are aimed at all accident and occupational illness victims.

Yes there are fraudulent claims out there and these must be stamped out with the full force of the law. However, the vast majority of claims are not fraudulent or exaggerated as the government and insurance industry would have us believe. The proverbial sledgehammer is being applied to crack the ?whiplash nut?.

More injured people will become reliant on the NHS and benefits when compensation for their accident would have helped pay for their loss of earnings, need for care and rehabilitation of injuries caused through no fault of their own.

If you or a member of your family think you have been injured through no fault of your own, do not delay in contacting Attwaters Jameson Hill on 01279 638888 for advice and assistance.? Click here for further information on our Personal Injury department.

Claiming before the 1st April will make all the difference.

Source: http://www.attwatersjamesonhill.co.uk/2013/02/legal-aid-sentencing-and-punishment-of-offenders-act-2012/

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18-Month-Old Hasn't Slept a Single - The Stir by CafeMom

baby Just the thought is horrifying to most parents. A child that can't sleep. Not just won't sleep, but can't. After all, it's lack of sleep that makes the early stages of parenthood so hard for most of us. But we all take solace in the fact that this bleary-eyed exhaustion phase passes. Eventually, our babies will sleep through the night, the bags under the eyes go away, and the brain fog will start to dissipate. Though new mom Jennifer Stella never experienced that relief even as her daughter Haley neared age 2. Little Haley Rivera has not slept one night since being born 18 months ago, and her insomnia has baffled her parents and doctors.

Jennifer and her husband Edgar Rivera noticed there was a problem two weeks after Haley came home. It was 3 in the morning and the newborn hadn't slept once the entire day. The mom of three was completely overwhelmed. Things didn't get much better. There were times she would sleep two to three hours, but that was far from the norm and never through the night.

I can imagine how scary and frustrating this can be. There were nights just after we brought our son home that I felt out of my mind with exhaustion. All I wanted was five or six hours of uninterrupted sleep. When that finally happened, I felt like a new woman. I felt renewed. I felt like, "I can do this." I don't know what I would have done if that never happened.

When Haley did actually sleep, Jennifer noticed her gasping for air as she awoke, so she took her to a pediatric pulmonologist and sleep specialist. They conducted an overnight sleep study and found a mild case of apnea, but couldn't figure out why she can't fall into a genuine, lengthy slumber. The conclusion is that it's behavioral and not medical. So what are these poor parents to do?

The recommendation was actually surprisingly simple. The doctor suggested placing pacifiers in her crib. Apparently, it's the ultimate child soother. And while most of us are desperate to wean our tots off these things around 2, for Haley, it could be the key to actually getting sleep. The idea is that when she wakes, sucking on one can help her more easily get back to sleep. I really hope it works for this poor, sleep-deprived family.

How did you fix your child's sleep issues?

?

Image via donnierayjones/Flickr

Source: http://thestir.cafemom.com/toddler/151757/18monthold_hasnt_slept_a_single

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One student dead after South Carolina university shooting

CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - A 19-year-old student died following a shooting on Tuesday at a residence hall of a South Carolina university near the resort area of Myrtle Beach, and authorities were searching for a gunman, university officials said.

Anthony Liddell, a sophomore from Bennettsville, South Carolina, died following the shooting at Coastal Carolina University in Conway, the university said in a statement.

The shooting occurred just before 7:30 p.m. at University Place, an apartment-style residence hall that is home to nearly 2,000 students.

Residence halls would remain on lockdown throughout the night, but the gunman was believed to have fled campus, school officials said. Classes will be held Wednesday, the statement said.

"The suspect fled in a vehicle. The campus is still on lockdown, although people in classrooms were allowed to go home. Those in dorms were advised to stay inside," said Mona Prufer, a university spokeswoman.

Conway police gave no information on the motive for the shooting and referred questions to state police, which did not return phone calls.

The nation remains on edge over gun violence following the elementary school massacre in Newtown, Connecticut, in December, in which 20 children and six adults were shot and killed.

That rampage reignited a broad national debate over gun control and prompted President Barack Obama to push Congress to pass tighter gun restrictions.

More than 9,000 students attend Coastal Carolina University, which was founded in 1954 as Coastal Carolina Junior College and became an independent university in 1993.

Counselors and ministers will provide assistance on Wednesday to students at a campus chapel and at residence halls, the university said.

(Reporting by Cynthia Johnston, Barbara Goldberg and Corrie MacLaggan; Editing by Jackie Frank and Lisa Shumaker)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/shooting-reported-south-carolina-university-college-website-023723332.html

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Bob Hope's Palm Springs estate on the block - LA Biz Observed

hope.jpgThe 23,000-square-foot home was designed by California Modernist architect John Lautner and built to resemble a volcano (including a hole that opens a courtyard to the sky). Some say it really looks like a mushroom. Nice views of the city of Palm Springs and the San Jacinto Mountains. Asking price: $50 million. From the NYT:

The roofline has been described as one of the most distinctive works of architecture in the Coachella Valley. The house has also been likened to a giant mushroom. Its original wood frame burned down during construction, in a fire sparked by a welder. Work was finally completed in 1980. Used mostly as a second home and entertaining space by the Hope family, it can accommodate as many as 300 guests for dinner under an enormous covered terrace. Each January for many years, the family threw a huge dinner party to mark the end of the Bob Hope Classic golf tournament, now called the Humana Challenge. "That was sort of a highlight of the desert social calendar," said Linda Hope, a daughter of the couple.

Source: http://www.laobserved.com/biz/2013/02/bob_hopes_palm_sprin.php

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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Jack Nicholson crashes ?Best Actress? Oscar winner Jennifer Lawrence?s interview (Americablog)

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2 Everest climbs put Nepalese woman in record book

KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) ? Nepalese mountaineer Chhurim has entered the record book by scaling Mount Everest twice in the same climbing season. In fact, she did so a week apart.

Nepal's Tourism Minister Posta Bahadur Bogati handed over the Guinness World Records certificate issued to 29-year-old Chhurim on Monday. She scaled the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) summit on May 12, 2012, and again a week later on May 19.

Chhurim says she plans to climb other high peaks in the future. She uses only one name like most Sherpas.

The Nepal Mountaineering Association says the world's highest peak has been climbed by nearly 4,000 people since New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal did so in 1953. Women are a small number of them.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/2-everest-climbs-put-nepalese-woman-record-book-024537065.html

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Monday, February 25, 2013

How'd that happen? Oscar questions answered

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, TODAY

Oscar night was a good time for Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lawrence and Daniel Day-Lewis, and a mixed bag for viewers. The awards show was long and uneven, and?also a puzzling night in many respects. We tackled some of the unanswered questions that remained after the Dolby Theatre emptied.

What was up with Michelle Obama's cameo?
Jack Nicholson took the stage to announce the best picture winner, but then the show cut to a satellite feed of first lady Michelle Obama live at the White House, wearing a glittery gown and announcing that "Argo" was the Oscar winner. The Hollywood Reporter writes that movie mogul Harvey Weinstein and Oscar producers worked the deal out with the first lady's staff and managed to keep it secret. Obama had been attending the?National Governors Association Dinner and stepped out to handle the award announcement. What we found most interesting: Nicholson had a backup envelope with the winner's name in it just in case the White House feed was somehow lost. Obama herself later tweeted, "It was a thrill to announce the?#Oscars2013?best picture winner from the?@WhiteHouse! Congratulations Argo!"

Chris Pizzello / Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

First lady Michelle Obama helped Jack Nicholson present the Oscar for best picture.

Was Andy Griffith left out of the In Memoriam segment?
Yes he was. While Griffith, who died in July, is best known for TV roles, he also starred in feature films, including "Hearts of the West," "Rustlers' Rhapsody," "Waitress" and others. Also left off was Larry Hagman, whose films included "Fail-Safe," "Nixon" and "Primary Colors." Phyllis Diller, Sherman Hemsley and Conrad Bain didn't make the cut either. But fans of Whitney Houston need not complain: She was in last year's In Memoriam segment, having died just weeks before the 2012 Oscars.

Why do the Oscars love 'Chicago' so much?
The show's theme was music in film, but you'd be forgiven if you thought its theme was "Hey, Wasn't The 2002 Best Picture Winner Really Great?" Catherine Zeta-Jones performed "Chicago" hit "All That Jazz"?and a group of the film's cast members reunited on stage as part of the show's tribute to musicals. Critics were quick to point out that the current Oscar producers Craig?Zadan and Neil?Meron also produced "Chicago."?Wrote TV critic Tim Goodman on Twitter, "Maybe I'll wake up tomorrow to find the Academy charged Zadan and Meron the cost of five commercials for that (expletive) 'Chicago' self-love."

Mario Anzuoni / REUTERS

Cast members Richard Gere, Renee Zellweger, Queen Latifah and Catherine Zeta-Jones of the 2002 Oscar-winning musical "Chicago" announced the award for best original score. Why so much love for a decade-old film? Ask the Oscar producers.

Was this the longest show ever?
Not by a long shot. Sunday's show lasted three hours, 35 minutes.?According to the L.A. Times, five shows were longer, with the 2002 show clocking in at four hours, 23 minutes, and two other years also passing the four-hour mark.

Wait, Scarlett Johansson sang one of the nominated songs?
Yep. Johansson sang best original song nominee "Before My Time," from the climate-change documentary "Chasing Ice." She was accompanied by violinist Joshua Bell on the song. It didn't win, but songwriter J. Ralph, who also worked with Johansson on a song for a 2010 film about autism, calls the actress "a world-class singer in every regard."

What tripped up Jennifer Lawrence?
The best actress winner wiped out while walking to receive her award, then joked that the audience only gave her a standing ovation because they felt sorry for her. What caused the fall? E! Online quotes Lawrence as saying, "What do you mean, what happened? Look at this dress." Her pink Dior gown was apparently just too much volume for the 22-year-old, at least when it came to stair-climbing.

Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

Actress Jennifer Lawrence falls as she walks up the steps to accept the best actress Oscar.

Why was Kristen Stewart limping?
If you saw "Twilight" star Stewart on either the red carpet, hopping from foot to foot as the paparazzi cameras flashed, or watched her closely when she came on stage with Daniel Radcliffe, you probably spotted a hitch in her walk. Her makeup artist told People magazine that Stewart cut her foot severely on broken glass, and indeed, she sported crutches on the red carpet.?

Sam Mircovich / REUTERS

Kristen Stewart used crutches on the red carpet as she nursed a cut foot.

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/02/25/17083139-how-did-michelle-obama-end-up-announcing-best-picture?lite

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Cuba's new heir apparent has work cut out for him

Vice President of the Council of Ministers Miguel Diaz-Canel, center, Commander of the Cuban Revolution Ramiro Valdes, right, and Ricardo Alarcon, outgoing parliamentary president, attend the opening session of the National Assembly in Havana, Cuba, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2012. Cuba?s President Raul Castro tapped rising star Diaz-Canel, 52, as the country's vice-president Sunday. Diaz-Canel has risen higher than any other Cuban official who didn't directly participate in the 1959 Cuban revolution. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco, Cubadebate)

Vice President of the Council of Ministers Miguel Diaz-Canel, center, Commander of the Cuban Revolution Ramiro Valdes, right, and Ricardo Alarcon, outgoing parliamentary president, attend the opening session of the National Assembly in Havana, Cuba, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2012. Cuba?s President Raul Castro tapped rising star Diaz-Canel, 52, as the country's vice-president Sunday. Diaz-Canel has risen higher than any other Cuban official who didn't directly participate in the 1959 Cuban revolution. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco, Cubadebate)

Cuba's new Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel, right, smiles at Cuba's President Raul Castro, during the closing session at the National Assemby in Havana, Cuba, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2012. Castro accepted a new five-year term that will be, he said, his last as Cuba's president and tapped rising star Miguel Diaz-Canel, 52, as vice president and first in the line of succession. Diaz-Canel has risen higher than any other Cuban official who didn't directly participate in the 1959 Cuban revolution. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco, Cubadebate)

Cuba's new Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel, right, and Cuba's President Raul Castro, talk during the closing session at the National Assembly in Havana, Cuba, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2012. Castro accepted a new five-year term that will be, he said, his last as Cuba's president and tapped rising star Diaz-Canel, 52, as vice-president and first in the line of succession. Diaz-Canel has risen higher than any other Cuban official who didn't directly participate in the 1959 Cuban revolution. (AP Photo/Ismael Francisco, Cubadebate)

Cuba's newly named Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel, right, looks at a sheet of paper as Cuba's President Raul Castro speaks during the closing session at the National Assembly in Havana, Cuba, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2012. Castro tapped rising star Diaz-Canel, 52, as the country's vice-president Sunday. Diaz-Canel has risen higher than any other Cuban official who didn't directly participate in the 1959 Cuban revolution. (AP Photo/Franklin Reyes)

(AP) ? Miguel Diaz-Canel has five years to get started and a lot of work to do.

The man tapped as Cuban President Raul Castro's chief lieutenant and likely successor must quietly fend off any challenges from within the Communist-run island's secretive citadel of power.

He must gain legitimacy with young, and even middle-aged, Cubans who have never known a leader not named Castro. And he must deal with an exiled diaspora and American officials who were already making clear on Monday they will not be mollified by a new, younger face.

"There's going to be a huge charisma deficit," said Ann Louise Bardach, author of "Without Fidel: A Death Foretold in Miami, Havana and Washington." ''You go from Fidel to Raul who at least had some of the shine of the Castro mantle, somebody who fought in the revolution."

She said Cuba faces "massive" problems including a large public debt, dependence on Venezuela, an aging population, decades of brain drain and one of the world's slowest Internet connections.

Whether Diaz-Canel is the man to fix all that is very much open to debate. Will Cubans accept another leader who was hand-picked from above and whose ascension ? if it happens ? will not come through multiparty democratic elections?

And will those passed over for the top job fall in line? If Fidel and Raul Castro are still alive, will the 52-year-old electrical engineer and former minister of higher education be able to set his own course?

On the streets of Havana, a day after Castro accepted a new term and said he would step down when it ends, many had their doubts about the future.

"Change? Was there a change?" asked Ernesto Silva, a 25-year-old student who scoffed at the idea that the country must wait another five years for new leadership, and said he hopes to emigrate to the United States in the meantime. "I find it hard to believe that he will be able to do, say or truly change anything."

Others were more enthusiastic, but still unsure how Diaz-Canel will establish control.

"I think it is good. He is a new and young figure. But he was trained by the old guys," said Maria Quesada, a 45-year-old office worker. "We still can't talk about a government without Castro because he's still going to be there, and I think the true test for Diaz-Canel will be when his vision differs from Raul's."

Raul himself faced a similar challenge when he took over from the ailing Fidel in 2006. The younger Castro was seen as a bland and unassuming figure who had always operated in the shadow of his larger-than-life older brother.

But he has overseen a series of sweeping changes since then in an effort to right the country's ever-weak Marxist economy, expanding private enterprise, legalizing a real estate market and eliminating most travel restrictions.

Behind the scenes, Raul has led an anti-corruption campaign and replaced many of Fidel's confidantes with loyal military officials who earned his trust during his four plus decades as the nation's armed forces chief.

Observers say it is those men, who have been put in charge of important state-owned enterprises like the phone company, the enormous holding company Cimex and virtually the entire tourism industry, who Diaz-Canel must persuade to follow him.

"I'm sure he's shown himself to be acceptable to the military already, otherwise this would never have happened," said Paul Webster Hare, the British ambassador to Cuba from 2001 to 2004 and now a lecturer in international relations at Boston University. "He has to be acceptable to them."

In Washington on Monday, State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said the U.S. remained "hopeful for the day that the Cuban people get democracy, when they can have the opportunity to freely pick their own leaders."

"We're clearly not there yet," he added.

Ventrell said Cuba needed to do more to open up if it wants repaired relations with the United States.

Still, observers said the naming of a successor, along with the economic and social changes Castro has instituted, could eventually lead to detente, or at least an easing of bad blood.

"There is a psychological and political benefit to naming somebody now," said Julia Sweig, a Cuba expert at the Washington-based Council on Foreign Relations. "It can demonstrate to the United States that there is an opportunity to change how we relate to this new Cuba."

Reaction to Diaz-Canel's promotion was met with a shrug by Cuban-American politicians who said that changing the nameplate outside the presidential office won't alter a system they see as repressive and undemocratic. And some analysts and exiles in South Florida questioned whether he will survive politically long enough to ever take control.

Little is known of Diaz-Canel's relationship with Cuba's other political or military elites, or his own personal ideology.

He is said to be a fan of the Beatles who in his youth wore his hair long at a time when both acts were considered anti-revolutionary. And a former colleague says he is a private jokester despite his somber public demeanor.

Like almost all Cuban politicians who earned their stripes by mastering the art of backroom party maneuvering, Diaz-Canel seems to have learned long ago that there was no benefit to putting himself in front of the cameras.

It was a lesson he probably learned back in 2002, when fellow young turk Roberto Robaina was dumped as foreign minister after being accused of "political and ethical errors."

Diaz-Canel, who was part of Robaina's circle, not only survived the purge and a subsequent one that took down the next foreign minister and a prominent young vice president ? but he appears to have thrived behind the scenes.

Robaina, who now paints pictures and runs a private restaurant in Havana, would not comment Monday on Diaz-Canel's rise. But a former colleague who has known Diaz-Canel since the 1980s said his career really began to take off after the purge.

In 2003, he was named head of the Communist Party in Holguin, a role he had held previously in his native Santa Clara. The same year, Raul Castro helped get him a seat on the Political Bureau, the island's equivalent of a Politburo.

The experience in Holguin was a trial by fire for Diaz-Canel, who had been popular in Santa Clara but met resistance in his new role.

"People didn't like him in Holguin," said the former colleague, who would speak only on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter. But he caught Castro's eye, and earned his praise.

"He has demonstrated a solid ideological firmness," Castro, who was then vice president himself, said of his protege, perhaps presaging his future rise.

Cuban officials insist that a post-Castro era will be no different and that the nation's institutions will unquestionably back the new prince. They point to a long history of exiles wrongly predicting the collapse of the revolution, which has so far survived the demise of the Soviet Union and retirement of Fidel Castro, not to mention Washington's 51-year economic embargo.

But Hare, the former ambassador, says it would be a mistake to underestimate the challenges Diaz-Canel would face getting state machinery and political rivals to fall in line.

"Does he have rivals in the 50-something generation in Cuba who perhaps resent what happened?" Hare asked. "There is a scenario where other people will be sensing ... that Diaz-Canel doesn't have all the attributes of the Castros and therefore (will ask) 'Why shouldn't I have a chance at it?'"

___

Peter Orsi and Anne-Marie Garcia in Havana, Bradley Klapper in Washington and Christine Armario in Miami contributed.

___

Follow Paul Haven on Twitter: www.twitter.com/paulhaven

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-25-CB-Cuba-The-Heir-Apparent/id-7108e63b2252417896f1b1ab05dda3bc

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Sunday, February 24, 2013

Are Cats Lovable House Pets or Non-Native, Exotic Species ...

Most people see cats as a loveable household pet; some people however, see cats only as a non-native, exotic species that is decimating the environment.

The United States has a?feral cat?problem?some feline experts estimate that there are 70 million feral cats in the United States.

While cats do not seem very exotic, Felis Catus, or the house cat, was domesticated from the African Wild Cat; cats are not native to North America. Free-roaming cats are an invasive species.

According to Maryanne Mott in her 2004 National Geographic article, The US Faces a Growing Feral Cat Problem, there are approximately 70 million free-roaming cats in the United States. These cats colonize, reproduce, prey off of native bird and small mammal species and out-compete native predators.

In a lecture for a Forest and Wild Life Ecology class at the University of Wisconsin Madison, Stan Temple estimates that each cat kills 5.6 birds per year. That may not seem like a lot of birds?but it means that 7.8 million birds are killed each year in Wisconsin by free-roaming and feral cats, 392 million nationwide.

That?s a lot of birds.

Free cats also pose a threat to humans. According to Paul Barrows in his paper ?Professional, ethical, and legal dilemmas of trap-neuter-release,? cats are known to carry many zoonotic diseases. A zoonotic disease is one that can be transferred from one species to another.

In this case, diseases are being passed from cats to humans.?Some of these diseases are rabies, toxoplasmosis and cat scratch fever. Rabies is especially serious to humans?unless treated early, it?will result in death.

Barrows also says that cats are the domestic animals most likely to carry rabies.

The free roaming cat problem must be addressed; the two most talked about methods of controlling the cat population are Trap-Neuter-Release (TNR) and Trap-Euthanize (TE).

TE supporters want the cats out of the ecosystem?they do not believe that TNR is an effective way to reduce the cat population.

TNR?groups, however, support releasing cats into controlled colonies after being sterilized; they present TNR as a humane alternative to the feral cat problem.

?TNR improves the lives of feral cats, improves their relationships with the people who live near them, and decreases the size of colonies over time.? ~ Alley Cat Allies

Several studies have shown this to be true.

Alley Cat Allies states that a study conducted by Julie Levy, David Gale and Leslie Gale ,found a 66 percent?decrease in the TNR?populations over an 11-year span. Another TNR?study by Eugenia Natoli?found that documented colony sizes decrease 16 to 32 percent over a 10-year period.

However, TNR does not immediately decrease cat colony sizes.

It?s a long process?these cats still hunt and they still spread disease to humans and other animals. For many people, it?s not a fast enough solution; cats are still decimating the bird populations.

The best way to keep the free roaming cat population under control is to keep your cat indoors.

?

Laurel PurvesLaurel Purves?is a junior at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is studying Life Sciences Communication and hopes to become a science writer after she graduates. Laurel also plays the mellophone in the University of Wisconsin Marching Band. Laurel is also a Summer 2012 editorial assistant intern at LivingGreenMag.com

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Source: http://www.elephantjournal.com/2013/02/are-cats-lovable-house-pets-or-non-native-exotic-species-laurel-purves/

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Evad3rs update the evasi0n jailbreak tool to version 1.5, now offers improved boot times

Evad3rs update the evasi0n jailbreak tool to version 1.5, now offers improved boot timesThe Evad3rs team have released another update for their hugely popular jailbreak tool known as evasi0n. The latest update sees mostly bug fixes surrounding boot up times of jailbroken devices; you should see a significant improvement with version 1.5. The update also offers a refreshed Cydia package list.

The team has also released an update that you can install via the Cydia jailbreak installer if you are already jailbroken; there is no need to re-jailbreak to get the latest version. Simply fire up Cydia and you should see an update 0.4 for Evasi0n.

The team certainly hasn?t rested on their laurels and have always been on the ball with updates to the evasi0n jailbreak tool. Earlier this week, Apple released iOS 6.1.2 and within hours, evasi0n was updated with full support for iOS 6.1.2; pretty impressive stuff.

If you need help with the jailbreak process itself, you can follow our guide linked below. Hit the source link to download the newest version of evasi0n.

Source: evasi0n

Additional resources:



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/BkDkzDMzP7A/story01.htm

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California Department of Fish and Wildlife stocks 10,000 Steelhead in Thermalito Afterbay

Feather River Hatchery stocked 10,000 steelhead in the Thermalito Afterbay in February. This follows the stocking of 5,000 steelhead last year as the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) strives to improve recreational fishing opportunities and provide a unique fishery in the Thermalito Afterbay near Oroville. All the steelhead released were raised in the Feather River Hatchery and have two fin clips to identify them.

"The fish stocked this year should provide fast action through the spring months and trophy fishing opportunities over the next several years," said CDFW biologist Jay Rowan. "We have double-marked these fish so there will be no question as to where they were planted and what the limit is."

The shallow, productive nature of the Thermalito Afterbay allows these native fish to grow rapidly, providing a unique fishing opportunity for trophy class trout. Fish planted last year have grown significantly and are currently running between 2 to 4 pounds. CDFW staff placed $10 reward tags on a number of the steelhead planted along with non-reward tags on others. Anglers are encouraged to send these tags in to help biologists calculate and track catch rates.

The raising and release of these steelhead is coordinated through a partnership between CDFW and the California Department of Water Resources to provide recreational fisheries in the Oroville-Thermalito complex.

Source: http://www.redbluffdailynews.com/ci_22653657/california-department-fish-and-wildlife-stocks-10-000?source=rss_viewed

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James Marsden Joins Anchorman: The Legend Continues

James Marsden 541x360 James Marsden Is Rival Newsman In Anchorman: The Legend Continues

I?m trying really hard to control my excitement for Anchorman: The Legend Continues. I know that sequels to beloved originals ? especially comedies ? are often disappointments. I know the lightning rarely strikes in the same place twice. I know ? but I can hope. This latest news, though, makes it really difficult for me not to run around the apartment screaming ?You guys! You Guys! Seriously! Oh my God, you guys!? Because James Marsden has been cast as Ron Burgundy?s nemesis.

The only information that we have right now is that Marsden has been cast as a rival anchor, but of course that could mean anything. What is exciting about this is that it?s another, excellent addition to the original cast ? which includes Will Ferrell, Steve Carell, Paul Rudd, and Christina Applegate, all back in their original parts. Marsden has proven that he can play comedy, even if the film surrounding him sometimes leaves something to be desired (I?m looking at you, Sex Drive). And who better to stand up again Burgundy than the quaffed, blue-eyed Marsden with his giga-watt smile? I can see all kinds of comedic possibilities here.

Marsden is a confirmed addition to the cast, joining fellow newcomer Kristen Wiig, who we think is playing Brick Tamland?s (Steve Carell) wife. Nice to see some quality newbies joining up with the original team.

We shall have to wait and see what the folks behind Anchorman: The Legend Continues have up their sleeves. Will Marsden team up with Vince Vaughn?s Wes Mantooth? Will Burgundy?s mustache be threatened? And will we have another flute solo? Only director Adam McKay knows for sure.

Production on Anchorman: The Legend Continues begins in March. We?ll keep you updated on casting decisions as they come in. Until then: stay classy, San Diego. (Sorry, I had to do it.)

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1926895/news/1926895/

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Honoring ceremony for Hut 3rd uprising of Kabul residents against the Former Soviet Union by Tebyan Cultural-Social Activities Center

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

Source: http://avapress.com/vglcpiqp.2bqos25a-sy82.,.html

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Saturday, February 23, 2013

Check Out Beyonce's Pop Art Pepsi Campaign!

Beyonce shared her colorful new poster for Pepsi! Check out other cute and candid moments from the stars

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/celebrity-twitter-pictures/1-b-229669?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acelebrity-twitter-pictures-229669

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Analysis: Israeli government hints at new peace talks

Ronen Zvulun / Reuters

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signed his first coalition partner in centrist Tzipi Livni, a move that could get a nod of approval from peace activists and U.S. President Barack Obama. But how cohesive any message of peace will be depends largely on the makeup of the rest of the coalition.

By Martin Fletcher, Correspondent, NBC News

News analysis

TEL AVIV -- In the Middle Eastern bazaar, the first sale of the day is prized beyond any other. It is called the ?siftach,? and to clinch the deal the seller gives a discount to the buyer, to launch a good day?s business.

In the case of the agreement announced Wednesday between Likud Beitenu leader Benjamin Netanyahu and Tzipi Livni, leader of? ?Hatnua? (Movement) to join a coalition government, Netanyahu was desperate to get one of the several political parties he is negotiating with to be the first to reach agreement.

So to entice Livni to sign, he sweetened his offer to include what Livni dearly wanted: the role of chief peace negotiator with the Palestinians, in addition to the guarantee of the post of justice minister for her and the post of minister of the environment for another member of her party.

Her brief in a new Netanyahu government, then, would be to launch a new peace process with the Palestinians, according to the published agreement, ?with the aim of reaching a settlement with them that will put an end to the conflict.?

The significance of this is that the responsibility passes from the foreign minister, who loudly proclaimed that he did not believe in peace with the Palestinians, to Livni, who does.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is still in charge, but he may no longer be Israel's most consequential politician. The Daily Rundown's Chuck Todd takes a "deep dive" into the new face of Israeli politics, Yair Lapid.

In addition to being the first step toward forming Netanyahu?s third government, it allows him to send a signal to U.S. President Barack Obama, expected in Israel on his first state visit next month, that he is serious about moving toward peace and that Obama should support him; Netanyahu?s relationship with Obama is famously fraught.

What this means in practice, however, is far from clear. It depends on who else joins Netanyahu and Livni in building a coalition government. Pundits expect Netanyahu to focus his attention next on the Labor party, as well as a couple of the religious Jewish parties, and only then to go for broke -- to offer a role to the two young newcomers, one on the left and one on the right, who have surprisingly found common cause.

The question: Can Netanyau pull off a brilliant ploy and form a government without the second- and third-largest parties, Yair Lapid?s ?Yesh Atid? (There is a Future) and Naftali Bennett?s Bait Hayehudi (Jewish Home)?

Or is it so brilliant? When the voters speak clearly and give the second- and third-largest number of votes to two new parties with new leaders and a large majority of new members of parliament, shouldn?t this call for change be reflected in any new government?

The problem is, and this brings us back to Livni?s role as peace negotiator, Bennett and Lapid, who agree on many social and economic issues, could not be further apart on the central question: What about the Palestinians? Bennett is absolutely clear: No Palestinian state. Lapid is with Livni.

So is there a real change in the Israeli government?s position vis a vis peace talks? As always, Netanyahu is hard to read. Does he really want Livni to take Israel down the road to compromise and peace? Or does he just want to form a new government so badly that he will offer any enticement to make it happen?

Cynics argue the latter. Some others believe that maybe a miracle is at hand.

And as Israel?s first president, David Ben Gurion, once said: To be a pragmatist in Israel, you have to believe in miracles.

Martin Fletcher is the author of "The List," "Breaking News" and "Walking Israel."

Related:

Fatah, Hamas hold talks ahead of possible negotiations with Israel

UN panel: Israel must withdraw all settlers from the West Bank

Surprisingly centrist vote has Netanyahu reaching to the left

This story was originally published on

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/21/17031818-what-about-palestinians-israeli-coalition-may-be-hard-pressed-to-answer?lite

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Friday, February 22, 2013

The Google Glass Team Is Just 50 People - Business Insider

Owen Thomas, Business Insider

Google Glass team member Isabelle Olsson shows off the headset at Google I/O.

?

Google Glass, the search giant's Internet-connected headset, is getting a lot of buzz outside the company.

It's also been getting a lot of buzz inside the company, with engineers and product people vying to get a spot on the team.

Google has even been dangling the prospect of working on Google Glass and other projects within the Google X skunkworks to restive engineers who are thinking of bolting the company.

But the Google Glass team is tiny?just 50 people, according to a source familiar with Google's recruiting efforts for Glass.

That's less than 0.1 percent of the company, which has about 55,000 employees, including Motorola.

The team has grown since Glass was unveiled at Google I/O last summer. At the time, its size was described as a "handful" of industrial designers and software engineers, and only a half-dozen or so employees even got to wear test units.

Now, LinkedIn shows 20 Google employees who list "Project Glass" on their profiles and 48 who mention "Google Glass." ("Project Glass" was the name for the earlier, experimental effort that led to the development of the Google Glass device.)

We asked Google about our source's claim.

"We don't generally comment on team sizes," Google spokesperson Jay Nancarrow told us.

Bloomberg recently reported that Apple's similar effort to develop wearable computers, the so-called "iWatch" project, has 100 people working on it.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/google-glass-team-size-2013-2

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Backpacking Essentials that can Make the Experience Safer and ...

These days, travel has been made easy for everyone.With holiday destination guide, budget flights, and alternative forms of accommodation, people who aren?t as well off as ?classical? tourists can now go around the world. Holidaymakers who are short on cash are the most inclined to take advantage of these offers as they?d be able to save big time on these holiday packages. As such, they learn and experience more about the country?s culture, discover more hidden wonders and treasures, and easily integrate into the local society better than ordinary tourists.

Being a backpacker is the exact opposite of a spend thrift. Thus, public transportation is their best friend if hiking is not a possibility. Because of this, they carry all their essentials in a backpack.

In theory, backpackers carry whatever they want. However, that would also translate to a heavy burden on the shoulders, which would become a nuisance when they?re trying to enjoy their trip. Thus, other backpackers only carry what they deem is essential for their trip and leave everything else in their hostels. Here are a backpacker?s essentials for a day tour.

What Should Be Carried for a Day Tour

1. Day pack

Often times, backpackers lug around huge rucksacks to keep all the things they have during their trip. They also have day packs with them, which are smaller versions of their backpacks that they use for a common hiking jaunt, packing only what they need for the hike or day tour. The relatively small backpacks, with shoulder straps, are used for day hikes, carrying books, or the like. And thus, lighter in comparison.

2. Foul-weather gear

You can?t really say what the climate is going to be once you?re already out there. Thus, they are in the mercy of rain, snow, strong winds, and the hot sun. Experienced backpackers always make sure that they carry gear such as rain jackets, fleeces, hats, and coats to protect themselves from the onslaught of weather. The gear makes the backpacking experience safer, more convenient, and more enjoyable.

3. Money belt

Backpackers dread the thought of being mugged. That?s why they carry money belts to safely keep their money, IDs, credit cards, and other documents. These normally are worn under the clothes to keep it away from sight.

4. Extra set of clothes

A backpacker can perspire a lot, get dusty and sweaty from all that walking, getting his clothes, dusty and sweaty, too. Thus, they usually carry with them a set of clean, extra clothes if a quick change is necessary.

5. Jug of water

Exploring a place for a day on foot takes a lot of physical effort. That also means that the body needs to hydrate sufficiently. A veteran hiker knows to keep a bottle of water in his rucksack all the time, for easy hydration.

6. First aid kit

Chafes from thorns. Cuts from broken pieces of glass. Head pain. Heat stroke. These are health problems and minor injuries that backpackers may face during their adventures. Bringing basic first-aid kits ensure that injuries, health problems, and emergencies can be dealt with while they are out there.

7. Cellular phone

Backpackers keep their mobile phone devices with them in case they need to contact people. Mobile phones are very useful, especially in case of emergency situations.

8. Camera

Backpackers love to document their travels. Bringing a simple digital camera allows them to seize moments and scenes so they can share them with friends or publish them in blogs.

Take a look at holidayshoppers.co.uk for more pointers about holiday package deals, backpacking and budget travelling.

Source: http://parquetecsin.com/backpacking-essentials-that-can-make-the-experience-safer-and-more-enjoyable

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

Former Episcopal coach Gallagher named Stars & Stripes assistant

POSTED: Monday, February 18, 2013, 5:12 PM

Former Episcopal Academy head football coach Bill Gallagher has been tabbed as an assistant coach for Team Stars & Stripes in the Global Bowl Italy. The game, which will be played April 13 in Turin, pits U.S. student-athletes against the Italian Under-19 National team.

Gallagher, a member of the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame, will coach the running backs and linebackers. Gallagher, who stepped down from Episcopal after the 2010 season, coaches the Philadelphia Little Quakers, a youth football all-star team.

The Team Stars & Stripes roster has yet to be announced. Last year, players were chosen from 20 high schools from eight states, including Shawn Wilson of Malvern Prep. Wilson earned MVP honors by carrying 10 times for 170 yards and two touchdowns in a 50-0 victory in Rome.

Source: http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/rally/Former-Episcopal-coach-Gallagher-named-Stars--Stripes-assistant.html

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Sunbathing Photos: Paul Rousteau Captures Public Sunbathers In 'Swiss, Sweat & Sun' Series (PHOTOS)

What would summer be without the obligatory onslaught of nearly nude beach bodies, often over-tanned and glistening with sweat? Photographer Paul Rousteau captures the strange beauty to such fleshy oversharing in his summer series entitled, "Swiss, Sweat & Sun."

sunbathing photos

In 2007, Rousteau snapped candid shots of public sunbathers in all their brazen glory. The resulting photographs, voyeuristic yet non-threatening, resemble the imaginary lovechild of Rineke Dijkstra and TMZ paparazzi. We recently stumbled upon the shots over at It's Nice That and immediately wished we were on the beach.

Do you think Rousteau's up close and personal shots of strangers cross the line? Or should public sunbathers be ready for the attention? Check out Rousteau's sun-drenched series below and let us know. You can find more of his work on Tumblr.

  • by Paul Rousteau

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/21/sunbathing-photos-paul-rousteau_n_2732980.html

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Mushroom-supplemented soybean extract shows therapeutic promise for advanced prostate cancer

Feb. 20, 2013 ? A natural, nontoxic product called genistein-combined polysaccharide, or GCP, which is commercially available in health stores, could help lengthen the life expectancy of certain prostate cancer patients, UC Davis researchers have found.

Men with prostate cancer that has spread to other parts of the body, known as metastatic cancer, and who have had their testosterone lowered with drug therapy are most likely to benefit. The study, recently published in Endocrine-Related Cancer, was conducted in prostate cancer cells and in mice.

Lowering of testosterone, also known as androgen-deprivation therapy, has long been the standard of care for patients with metastatic prostate cancer, but life expectancies vary widely for those who undergo this treatment. Testosterone is an androgen, the generic term for any compound that stimulates or controls development and maintenance of male characteristics by binding to androgen receptors.

The current findings hold promise for GCP therapy as a way to extend life expectancy of patients with low response to androgen-deprivation therapy.

Paramita Ghosh, an associate professor in the UC Davis School of Medicine, led the pre-clinical study with a team that included UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center Director Ralph de Vere White, a UC Davis distinguished professor of urology. Ruth Vinall in the UC Davis Department of Urology and Clifford Tepper in the UC Davis Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine directed the studies in mice; Ghosh's laboratory conducted the cell studies.

The research focused on GCP, a proprietary extract cultured from soybeans and shiitake mushrooms and marketed by Amino-Up of Sapporo, Japan. Researchers found that the combination of the compounds genistein and daidzein, both present in GCP, helps block a key mechanism used by prostate cancer cells to survive in the face of testosterone deprivation.

The research team had earlier shown that when a patient's androgen level goes down, cancerous prostate cells kick out a protein known as filamin A, which is otherwise attached to the androgen receptor in the cell's nucleus. The androgen receptor regulates growth of prostate cancer cells. Once filamin A leaves the cancerous cell's nucleus, that cell no longer requires androgens to survive. Thus, loss of filamin A allows these cells to survive androgen deprivation, at and the cancer essentially becomes incurable.

The paper, titled "Enhancing the effectiveness of androgen deprivation in prostate cancer by inducing Filamin A nuclear localization," shows for the first time that GCP keeps filamin A in the nucleus. As long as this protein remains attached to the androgen receptor, the cancerous cells need androgens to survive and grow. They die off when starved of androgens, thus prolonging the effects of androgen deprivation, which ultimately prolongs the patient's life.

The team's hypothesis is that metastatic prostate cancer patients with the weakest response to androgen-deprivation therapy could be given GCP concurrently with androgen deprivation therapy to retain Filamin A in the nucleus, thereby allowing cancer cells to die off.

De Vere White is now pursuing funding to begin GCP human clinical trials. Because GCP is a natural product rather than a drug, and requires fewer government approvals, it's expected that these trials will proceed rapidly once funded.

"We should know within the first eight months or so of human clinical trials if GCP works to reduce PSA levels," says de Vere White, referring to prostate-specific antigen levels, a tumor marker to detect cancer. "We want to see up to 75 percent of metastatic prostate cancer patients lower their PSA levels, and GCP holds promise of accomplishing this goal. If that happens, it would probably be a greater therapy than any drug today."

The research was supported by a Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development service Merit Award (I01BX000400) from the Department of Veterans Affairs and by R01CA133209 from the National Cancer Institute.

Other authors were Benjamin A. Mooso, Sheetal Singh, Salma Siddiqui, and Maria Mudryj of the VA Northern California Health Care System; Ruth L. Vinall, Rosalinda M. Savoy, Jean P. Cheung, and Yu Wang of the UC Davis Department of Urology; Clifford G. Tepper, Anthony Martinez, and Hsing-Jien Kung of the UC Davis Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine; and Roble G. Bedolla of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Davis Health System.

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


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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/iFxvbOHIcYA/130220132005.htm

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Correction: LAPD-Revenge Killings-The Ruins story

BIG BEAR LAKE, Calif. (AP) ? In a story Feb. 16 about the manhunt for former Los Angeles Police Officer Christopher Dorner, The Associated Press reported erroneously that section 10851 is part of California's penal code. It is part of the state motor vehicle code.

A corrected version of the story is below:

How life on run ended for California police killer

LAPD cop killer gone but suffering remains for 3 police forces, victims' loved ones

By A. BREED, JULIE WATSON and TAMI ABDOLLAH

Associated Press

BIG BEAR LAKE, Calif. (AP) ? As soon as he heard officers were chasing the suspected cop killer in a stolen truck, San Bernardino County Sheriff's Deputy Roger Loftis was certain: His buddy Jeremiah MacKay would be there.

In 15 years with the department, "Jer" had earned about a dozen and a half awards for 10851s ? the California motor vehicle code for grand theft auto. Once, while heading to a bar to celebrate another award, MacKay noticed there were no keys in the ignition of the car next to him at a traffic light, and he veered off.

He waltzed into the bar two hours later, a grin stretched across that fair, freckled face, a copy of an auto recovery record in his hand.

Last week, Loftis called his fishing, drinking and golfing buddy to see how he was doing. He knew the 35-year-old detective had been working around the clock, scouring the San Bernardino Mountains in the search for former Los Angeles Police Officer Christopher Dorner.

"If that guy's still on this mountain," MacKay told him, "I'm going to find him."

When the announcer reported that two deputies had exchanged fire with the suspect, Loftis got a sick feeling in his stomach. The 54-year-old corrections officer sent his friend a text.

"I know you're busy," he typed. "But let me know you're OK. ASAP."

There was no answer.

About an hour later, a colleague called with the news: MacKay, husband and father of two, was dead. Soon, so would be his killer.

Like the Unabomber and other mass killers, the 33-year-old former cop wrote a "manifesto." And, like so many others, Dorner's perceptions of the world and its supposed injustices against him seem out of sync with reality.

Why now?

Was it the supposed institutional racism that cost him his LAPD badge? That was four years ago.

Was it, as he once suggested, residual trauma from his military service in the Middle East? Records show a relatively benign tour of duty, well outside the war zone.

One marriage fell apart; a second went no further than the license application. This, too, he seemed to blame on others ? anyone but himself.

"I never had the opportunity to have a family of my own," he wrote to his targets. "I'm terminating yours."

Even his boasts of paramilitary prowess and promise to "bring unconventional and asymmetrical warfare" to southern California evaporated in a cavalcade of broken-down vehicles, failed hijackings and a botched hog-tying. His weeklong stint as America's most wanted fugitive ended in a shootout with police, and then what officials said was a self-inflicted gunshot to the head.

___

At 6 feet and 270 pounds, Christopher Jordan Dorner looked every inch the college football player he once was.

Melinda Yates befriended Dorner when they attended Southern Utah University together in Cedar City, a small town northeast of Las Vegas. She remembers him as "kind of like a big teddy bear," always smiling.

Apparently, behind that sweet smile there was rage.

Dorner claimed his earliest experience with racism was in first grade at a Christian school, when he punched and kicked a fellow student who'd called him a "nigger" on the playground. The principal "swatted" the other boy for the slur, then struck Dorner for failing to "turn the other cheek as Jesus did."

"That day," he would write in the now infamous manifesto, "I made a life decision that i will not tolerate racial derogatory terms spoken to me."

Dorner joined the Navy in July 2002. He told a reporter that he wanted to fly SH-60/MH-60 Seahawk helicopters on special operations and search-and-rescue missions ? but later told an acquaintance that a problem with vertigo killed those dreams.

So he went into the Navy Reserve doing mostly administrative work after his active-duty stint ended in June 2004.

Soon afterward, he shifted his sights to the LAPD.

He entered the academy on Feb. 7, 2005.

Like the other cadets, Dorner went through the department's rigorous six-month, 920-hour academy training. Upon completion, he joined a training officer on the street, working regular 12-hour shifts. There was at least one bump in the road: He was suspended for two days for accidental discharge of his firearm.

A year after Dorner became a police officer, he rose to the rank of lieutenant in the Navy on Aug. 1, 2006 ? his last promotion.

He was called up in the Reserve and left on a six-month deployment to Bahrain on Nov. 3, 2006. He worked mostly providing port protection, earning an Iraq Campaign Medal and Global War on Terrorism Service Medal.

Dorner returned to the LAPD in 2007 and resumed his training. That is when his career ? and life ? went off the rails.

Sgt. Teresa Evans, his training officer, said Dorner repeatedly asked why he was being put back on patrol without reintegration training. On one occasion, she said, he began weeping in the patrol car and demanded to go back to the academy.

Dorner told Evans that he "might have some issues regarding his deployment," she told investigators.

A day after Evans submitted a poor review, Dorner told internal affairs that she had kicked a mentally ill man in the chest and left cheek during an arrest. He was relieved of duty on Sept. 4, 2008.

A police review panel ultimately found the allegation untrue. He was officially fired on Jan. 2, 2009.

There were already hints of a troubled personal life; Dorner married April Carter in April 2007 and bought a home a few miles from the Las Vegas Strip. Less than a month later, the couple filed for a divorce.

(More than five years later, on Oct. 19 of last year, Las Vegas records show that he and Ali Kristine McDonald obtained a marriage license. But there is no indication they actually married.)

Months after he was fired, Dorner filed a writ in Los Angeles Superior Court against the LAPD, alleging wrongful termination. He continued filing appeals in different courts up until 2011.

But why Dorner unleashed his revenge now is unclear. Former roommate J'Anna Viskoc has a theory.

For about two months in the summer of 2008, the Las Vegas manicurist rented a room in Dorner's home. Aside from all the guns ? which were "on the floor, under the cushions" ? she remembers the uniformed portraits and framed displays of his medals.

"I feel like being a police officer and being in the military, that was his identity," she said. "That was who he was."

On Feb. 1, Dorner received an honorable discharge, ending his lackluster 11-year Navy career.

"Maybe that's what set him off," Viskoc wondered. "That he couldn't win."

___

Dorner claimed his first victims on Feb. 3.

Monica Quan, 28, was an assistant women's basketball coach at California State University, Fullerton. She was also the daughter of retired LAPD Capt. Randal Quan ? the man who had represented Dorner in his disciplinary hearings.

She lived in an Irvine condominium with boyfriend Keith Lawrence ? a former basketball player and University of Southern California cop whose shoes and buckles she had stayed up until the wee hours polishing when he was at the police academy. On Jan. 26, Lawrence, 27, had strewn the apartment floor with rose petals, gotten down on one knee and proposed, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Just over a week later, at 9:10 p.m., Quan and Lawrence were found slumped in their car in the parking lot of their condo complex. They were fatally shot.

The next morning, an employee emptying the trash behind a San Diego-area auto parts store spotted some military gear in a trash bin. Around that same time, Dorner posted his 11,000-word screed entitled "Last Resort" on Facebook.

"This was a necessary evil that had to be executed in order for me to obtain my NAME back," Dorner wrote. "The only thing that changes policy and garners attention is death."

The rambling post went on: "When the truth comes out, the killing stops."

The document would lurk in cyberspace for two more days before police discovered it and connected it to the Irvine killings. They held a news conference to name Dorner as a suspect.

The next day, Feb. 7, Dorner struck again.

Around 1:30 a.m. two LAPD officers assigned to protect one of the people named in Dorner's manifesto spotted him in the Riverside County community of Corona. During a shootout, one officer was grazed on the forehead.

A short while later in nearby Riverside, SWAT team Officer Michael Crain and trainee Andrew Tachias were in the middle of a graveyard shift.

The 34-year-old former Marine had served two tours of duty in Kuwait before joining the Riverside force in 2001. As a Marine, Crain had once taught urban warfare tactics, but on this day he had no time to react.

The two were waiting at a stoplight when someone ? believed to be Dorner ? raced up and opened fire on them. Tachias, 27, was critically wounded; Crain was pronounced dead at a hospital.

Before dawn, freeway signs lit up statewide with a description of Dorner and his pickup, and a warning that he should be considered armed and extremely dangerous.

Later that morning, authorities found a burned-out pickup truck near the Bear Mountain ski area in the San Bernardino Mountains. The truck, which had a broken axle, was loaded with weapons and camping gear.

Police later confirmed it was the black Nissan Titan Dorner had so religiously buffed and polished.

Tips poured in, topping 1,000 after a $1 million reward was posted on Feb. 9. The Mexican navy went on alert following a report that Dorner had attempted to steal a yacht in San Diego.

Other suspected sightings of Dorner over the week led to authorities mistakenly firing on two newspaper carriers, shutting down a Navy base in San Diego, evacuating a Los Angeles area home improvement store, and raiding at a low-budget motel across the border in Tijuana, Mexico. But the manhunt was centered on the mountains. That was Jeremiah MacKay's territory.

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MacKay's father, Alan, is something of a legend in these hills.

A former captain with the San Bernardino County Fire Department, the elder MacKay had played a key role during the 2003 "Old Fire," which burned more than 91,000 acres, killed five people and destroyed more than 1,000 homes. The Redlands resident put in 15-hour days, fighting the fire and acting as a department spokesman when needed.

Loftis says the son had initially planned to follow in the father's footsteps. But a few ride-alongs with deputies patrolling the waters of Lake Arrowhead convinced him to go for another type of badge.

The younger MacKay had been putting in 12-hour days searching for Dorner. On Feb. 9, an Associated Press reporter ran across him during a patrol around the lake.

Despite having been on duty since 5 a.m., MacKay and his partner were in good spirits. Standing by the car door in full tactical gear, MacKay tucked the stock of his Mini-14 rifle against his shoulder and practiced sighting down the barrel, aiming playfully at a snowdrift.

"This one, you just never know if the guy's going to pop out or where he's going to pop out," he told a reporter, crinkling his brow and shaking his head. "We're hoping this comes to a close without any more casualties. The best thing would be for him to give up."

The next day, MacKay was excited to see his photo on the front page of the Los Angeles Times. But he chided himself, cousin Kelly Mitchell says, for having what he considered "a smug look" on his face.

Jeremiah and Lynette MacKay married in late 2011. Lynette had a 7-year-old daughter from a previous relationship; about four months ago, she gave birth to a son.

As a bagpiper for the Inland Empire Emerald Society, MacKay had played at many memorials and funerals for fallen officers. He knew this hunt was perilous, but he knew just as well that Dorner had to be stopped.

And he was determined to be the one who did it.

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Jim and Karen Reynolds were in the process of refurbishing their condo near Big Bear, working on it off and on through the winter season. They had last been there on Feb. 6 and weren't planning to come back until Valentine's Day, but decided to check in early after learning that Dorner's truck had been abandoned nearby.

When they walked into the upstairs living room Tuesday morning, Dorner was waiting for them with his gun drawn. He had been there at least five days ? within shouting distance of a command post set up by the people hunting him.

"Stay calm," he shouted. When Karen Reynolds turned to run out, he grabbed her from behind.

Karen Reynolds said Dorner was calm and "very methodical" as he instructed them to sit, then tied their hands and legs.

"I don't have a problem with you," he told the couple. "I just want to clear my name."

Dorner moved the couple to a bedroom and shut the door.

When they felt he had gone, Karen Reynolds managed to get to her feet and, with her hands still tied behind her back, open the door. To her amazement, Dorner had left her cellphone on the living room table.

She picked it up and dialed 911. It was 12:22 p.m. Tuesday.

Dorner had taken off in the couple's purple Nissan SUV. It wasn't long before officers, now alerted, spotted the fugitive.

Dorner managed to evade a group of wardens from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and some sheriff's deputies. But he later crashed the Nissan and struck out on foot.

Rick Heltebrake was driving the perimeter of a Boy Scout camp he watches over when Dorner ? his bulletproof vest bristling with rifle magazines ? emerged from the tree line.

"I don't want to hurt you," Dorner said in a calm, businesslike voice as he pointed his rifle at the 51-year-old Heltebrake. "Start walking and take your dog."

Heltebrake sensed that Dorner, who stole his truck, was on a mission, and that he wasn't part of the agenda. Suni took his 3-year-old Dalmatian and walked away.

Heltebrake had just called police when he heard gunfire.

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When he left the house that morning, MacKay told his wife that he'd never been happier, Mitchell, his cousin, said. He called her the love of his life.

Hours later, he was on the trail of the stolen pickup.

The fugitive raced 25 miles down the mountain as officers converged. MacKay and his partner, Alex Collins, responded.

Not far up the road from where Dorner had left Heltebrake, some game wardens spotted the white truck speeding erratically. Dorner opened the window and fired.

According to sheriff's department officials, MacKay and his partner followed where they believed the truck had gone. They were unaware that Dorner had crashed it. They spotted tracks in the snow leading to a cabin and got out of their cruiser.

The pair stopped about 30 yards from the cabin to devise a plan when shots were fired. Neither deputy had a chance to return fire. Both were hit multiple times. A doctor told Loftis death for MacKay came instantly or in "just seconds."

Collins survived but has undergone multiple surgeries. A SWAT team arrived quickly and laid down covering fire to allow the officers to be airlifted.

Dorner set off some smoke grenades and prepared to make his last stand. His end game would play out on live television.

Officers from across the region converged on the cabin, cutting off all escape. Four hours after the chase Tuesday, police launched tear gas through the windows.

Around 4:45 p.m., flames and smoke began billowing from the house. Officers then heard the single gunshot from inside.

The manhunt was over.

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In the end, Dorner fell blessedly short of his stated goals.

Despite declaring war on "those in LAPD uniform whether on or off duty," the only victim with a direct link to the department was Monica Quan. And it is more than a little ironic that a man lashing out against racial injustice should murder the daughter of the LAPD's first Chinese-American captain.

A joint memorial service for Quan and Lawrence is planned for Feb. 24 at Irvine's Concordia University, where they met. Lawrence ? at the request of his father ? will be buried in his public safety officer's uniform, said his training supervisor Capt. David Carlisle.

The service had been on hold while Quan's father was in custody to protect him from Dorner's rampage.

On Wednesday, Crain ? the father who loved attending his 4-year-old daughter's dance recitals and coaching his son's baseball team ? was buried with full honors. His 10-year-old son, Ian, joined officers carrying his father's casket out of the church to the mournful drone of bagpipes.

MacKay's funeral is scheduled Thursday at San Bernardino's San Manuel Amphitheater. The Los Angeles Police Emerald Society Pipes and Drums, with whom he'd often played, will be there to send him off.

Loftis is having trouble imagining life without his friend. Coming to grips with the depth of Dorner's betrayal is even harder.

"He got the best of us. He took one of the best that we have," he said ruefully. "He lost a job because he didn't deserve it, and he takes these officers' lives, really, for nothing. It was stupid and senseless."

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Julie Watson and Tami Abdollah reported from California; A. Breed reported from Raleigh, N.C. Associated Press writers Greg Risling, Gillian Flaccus, Robert Jablon in Los Angeles; Elliot Spagat in San Diego; Ken Ritter in Las Vegas; and researchers Rhonda Shafner and Susan James in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/correction-lapd-revenge-killings-ruins-story-183054580.html

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