Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Justin Bieber investigated for reckless driving

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Los Angeles County Sheriff's detectives are investigating Justin Bieber for reckless driving after witnesses ? including former NFL star Keyshawn Johnson ? complained about the pop-star's alleged freeway speeds in their gated community in north Los Angeles County.

At about 8 p.m. Monday, Bieber allegedly drove his white Ferrari at freeway speeds in what is a 25 mph zone, Sheriff's spokesman Steve Whitmore said.

Johnson was outside with his 3-year-old daughter who was preparing to get into a small electric car when Bieber zoomed by. Johnson was upset and got into his Prius, following Bieber to his nearby home. As the garage door was closing, Johnson put out his arm and stopped it, telling Bieber he wanted to talk about his reckless driving.

Whitmore said Bieber scurried into his home without speaking.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department received two calls and responded to the location. When they tried to talk to Bieber, however, they were also turned away.

"His security detail said he declined to talk to us based on the advice of counsel," Whitmore said.

Deputies interviewed two witnesses, including Johnson, and wrote up their report. They handed that off to detectives who are continuing to investigate the incident.

"Their eyewitness testimony to our deputies was definitive ? not only the speed, not only the vehicle, but Mr. Bieber was sitting and driving in the driver's side seat," Whitmore said.

Deputies plan to send a reckless driving report to the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office to consider filing misdemeanor charges in the next week or two.

Bieber's publicist did not immediately return a call for comment. Johnson declined to comment via ESPN, where he now works as a TV commentator.

Prosecutors are also looking at whether to charge Bieber for battery in a separate incident involving a neighbor, who complained the pop-star attacked and threatened him.

"We take this very seriously and if this actually did occur, which it appears that it did, it is unacceptable behavior from anybody, anywhere, anytime," Whitmore said.

___

Follow Tami Abdollah on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/latams

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/justin-bieber-investigated-reckless-driving-020739558.html

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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Biomarkers discovered for inflammatory bowel disease

May 21, 2013 ? Using the Department of Defense Serum Repository (DoDSR), University of Cincinnati researchers have identified a number of biomarkers for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which could help with earlier diagnosis and intervention in those who have not yet shown symptoms.

This finding, the first of its kind and led by UC's Bruce Yacyshyn, MD, is being presented via podium presentation by staff from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center at Digestive Disease Week 2013, being held May 18-21 in Orlando, Fla.

The DoDSR is a biological repository operated by the U.S. Department of Defense and contains over 50 million human serum specimens, collected primarily from applicants to and members of the U.S. uniformed services.

"With collaborators from Walter Reed, we were able to identify all of the active duty service men and women who developed IBD and then used the repository to go back and look at various biomarkers to see what each person had in common," says Yacyshyn, a professor of medicine at the UC College of Medicine and UC Health gastroenterologist.

IBD is a group of inflammatory conditions of the colon and small intestine. The main types of IBD are Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis; inflammatory bowel diseases are considered autoimmune diseases in which the body's own immune system attacks elements of the digestive system.

In this study, researchers used the repository to identify 50 cases of Crohn's disease and 50 cases of ulcerative colitis. They analyzed proteins from three samples per case -- two taken before and one after diagnosis -- using a statistical analysis format.

Certain proteins were found in elevated levels in samples from patients who developed IBD.

"The selection of proteins we chose to analyze was based on a prior study conducted at UC," Yacyshyn says. "Although the presence of proteins in those who develop Crohn's disease varies from those present in ulcerative colitis patients, we were able to show that there were elevated levels of certain proteins in patients who developed IBD."

"Future large validation studies are needed to confirm the presence of biomarkers to guide in diagnosis, prevention and management of these patients," he adds.

Yacyshyn and his collaborators in the division of digestive diseases and at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center are hoping to study this further in a pediatric population and have requested funding from the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation.

"This could change the way we currently screen for and treat IBD, which could improve prevention strategies, patient outcomes and their overall quality of life," he says.

This study was investigator-initiated.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/vFFZ7pcfSYc/130521194227.htm

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Friday, May 17, 2013

Departing IRS head cites need to restore trust in agency

May 15 (Reuters) - Post positions for the 138th running of the Preakness Stakes, to be run at Pimlico on Saturday (Post Position, Horse, Jockey, Trainer, Odds) 1. Orb, Joel Rosario, Shug McGaughey, even 2. Goldencents, Kevin Krigger, Doug O'Neill, 8-1 3. Titletown Five, Julien Leparoux, D. Wayne Lukas, 30-1 4. Departing, Brian Hernandez, Al Stall, 6-1 5. Mylute, Rosie Napravnik, Tom Amoss, 5-1 6. Oxbow, Gary Stevens, D. Wayne Lukas, 15-1 7. Will Take Charge, Mike Smith, D. Wayne Lukas, 12-1 8. Govenor Charlie, Martin Garcia, Bob Baffert, 12-1 9. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/departing-irs-head-cites-restore-trust-agency-225424477.html

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Thursday, May 16, 2013

The New Yorker unveils Strongbox, a tool for sources to submit files and tips anonymously

The New Yorker unveils Strongbox, a tool for sources to submit files and tips anonymously

As with most news organizations, a lot of the posts we publish start out as emailed tips from you, our dear readers. But some employees put their jobs on the line when they share info, which, as you might imagine, makes them reluctant to hit send. The New Yorker seems to have a solution that'll offer a much higher degree of anonymity, stripping IP addresses and other identifying data whenever you upload a file or submit a tip. You create an alias, and all correspondence takes place within a secure environment, called Strongbox. Best yet, the code for this tool, called DeadDrop, is completely open-source, so you can download the necessary software and implement it on your own site, free of charge. More info on both are available at the source links below.

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Source: Strongbox, DeadDrop

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/kZb7epv1X-k/

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How Einstein's theory of special relativity helped find a new planet

To find the planet, astronomers used Einstein's theory as it pertains to the intensity of a beam of light. The method could add more exoplanets to a growing list, no 'wobble' or 'transit' required.

By Pete Spotts,?Staff writer / May 14, 2013

Kepler space telescope is designed to search for Earth-like planets in the Milky Way galaxy. The telescope has been in space since 2009, but scientists keep finding new ways to use it ? even using special relativity ? to find extra-solar planets.

Courtesy of NASA / AP

Enlarge

With a little help from Einstein's theory of special relativity, astronomers have discovered a planet orbiting a star some 2,000 light-years away using a new approach that was barely a gleam in its proposers' eyes a decade ago.

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The planet is a bit larger and about twice as massive as Jupiter. It orbits its sun-like star once every 1.5 days. The team making the discovery estimates the planet's temperature at a searing 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit.

On one level, such "hot Jupiters" are a dime a dozen these days. Because they are massive and close to their host stars, they are the easiest planets to spot with virtually every planet-hunting technique astronomers have used to date.

What sets this discovery apart, however, is that the planet is the first to have been found through a process that in some ways could simplify planet hunting, researchers say. Its effectiveness is limited to big planets orbiting close to their stars, the team reporting the discovery acknowledges.

But it also holds out the hope of finding such planets when the parent stars may be too faint for other, currently used techniques. This opens the possibility of adding many more extra-solar planets to a catalog that now tops 800 of them.

No need to hunt for the wobble a planet's gravity imparts to its star's spectrum. No need to wait for a planet to pass in front of its star, known as a transit.

Instead, the team looked for a combination of three relatively small effects that wax and wane throughout a planet's orbit around a star. This delivers a different signal to a planet-hunting device like NASA's Kepler spacecraft than the eclipsing planet, or transit method, delivers, notes David Latham, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and a member of the team discovering the planet.

"The transits last just a short time, just a couple of hours," Dr. Latham writes in an e-mail. But the effects the team tracked "rise and fall continuously through the entire orbital period of the planet, roughly 36 hours, so it?s not hard to distinguish these phenomena."

And it can detect planets that don't transit their stars.

The approach was conceived 10 years ago by Harvard University astrophysicist Avi Loeb and Scott Gaudi, now an assistant professor of astronomy at The Ohio State University in Columbus, who took a cue from Albert Einstein.

One prediction of Einstein's theory of special relativity is that when an object is moving at a pace close to the speed of light, any light it emits appears more intense along the object's line of motion, forming a beam. To an observer watching the object approach, the light looks brighter than it would if the object were stationary.

The effect is most pronounced in powerful astronomical events such as gamma-ray bursts, in which matter emitting the gamma rays is accelerated to 99.9 percent of the speed of light, Dr. Loeb explains.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/s7W_P2kW5VE/How-Einstein-s-theory-of-special-relativity-helped-find-a-new-planet

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013

UK's Cameron urges "everything on table" in U.S.-EU trade talks

By Doug Palmer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron on Monday said a proposed free trade agreement between the European Union and United States should cover all sectors, drawing a contrast with France, which wants to leave out sensitive cultural industries.

"To realize the huge benefits this deal could bring will take ambition and political will. That means everything on the table, even the difficult issues, and no exceptions," Cameron said at a White House news conference with President Barack Obama.

France last month threatened to block the proposed free trade talks unless cultural sectors, such as television and radio, were excluded from the agreement.

The European Parliament's influential trade committee voted a week later to leave all of Europe's cultural and audiovisual services out of the negotiations due to start in July, a decision that will shape the negotiating mandate to be agreed on by trade ministers from the EU's 27 member states.

The Motion Picture Association of America, in comments filed last week with the U.S. Trade Representative's office, urged the United States not to agree to any "up-front, blanket sectoral exclusions," but acknowledged EU sensitivities on the issue and said there were limits to what it expected from the talks.

"We recognize the importance of cultural diversity and the contribution the audio-visual sector makes to achieve that goal ... We want, in particular, to make clear we are not calling into question existing EU or national financial support measures and mechanisms for the audio-visual sector," the industry group said.

BRITAIN'S FUTURE IN THE EU

Britain, which is in the midst of a national debate over whether to stay in the EU, is hosting the annual summit meeting of the Group of Eight leading industrial economies next month in Northern Ireland.

That gives Cameron a high-profile platform to help shape the negotiating mandate for the talks with the United States and to shore up support in Britain for remaining in the EU.

Leading EU states Germany, France and Italy are also members of the G8 along with Japan, Russia and Canada. The presidents of the European Commission and the European Council, two EU executive branch institutions, also attend G8 summits.

"President Obama and I have both championed a free trade deal between the European Union and the United States. And there's a real chance now to get the process launched in time for the G-8. So, the next five weeks are crucial," Cameron said.

Cameron has promised to renegotiate Britain's relationship with the EU and hold a referendum on membership if he wins the next election in 2015. But that has failed to stop his party's divisions over Europe or halt the rise of the anti-EU UK Independence Party.

Asked if the United States was concerned over Britain's possible exit from the EU, Obama said the issue was ultimately one for the British people to decide but he backed Cameron's plea for time to make reforms.

"I will say this, that David's basic point that you probably want to see if you can fix what's broken in a very important relationship before you break it off makes some sense to me," Obama said.

"I think the U.K.'s participation in the EU is an expression of its influence and its role in the world, as well as, obviously, a very important economic partnership," he said.

(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Vicki Allen and Cynthia Osterman)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uks-cameron-urges-everything-table-u-eu-trade-165048482.html

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Tuesday, May 14, 2013

'90210's' 7 craziest story lines

TV

10 hours ago

Image: "90210" cast

The CW

The cast of "90210."

Over the course of five seasons, the kids of The CW's ?90210? have seen their share of drama. From kidnappings (multiple!) to various run-ins with the law, the plot lines have always been a bit far-fetched.

As the show bids its final farewell with its series finale Monday, we take a look back at some of the jaw-dropping (and mind-boggling) twists.

7. 18-year-old Liam buys a bar (season 4)

Despite the fact that he is barely out of high school, Liam (Matt Lanter) buys a beachfront bar during the fourth season?s premiere episode. Say what?! Yes, after Annie (Shenae Grimes) turned down his proposal, Liam spent all night drinking at the establishment, only to learn the next morning that he had purchased it from its owner the night before. Despite the fact that he is three years shy of the legal drinking age, he is able to open, run and turn the Offshore into a hip nightlife spot where all of the gang is able to drink. Illegally, of course.

6. Annie commits a hit-and-run on prom night (season 1)

At a post-prom party, an infuriated Naomi (AnnaLynne McCord) accused Annie of sleeping with her boyfriend. The false accusation caused Annie to jump in her car and speed home, and while driving distracted, she hit a pedestrian on a deserted road. The first season ends with Annie driving away without getting out of her car to check on the man, who ended up dying. In a strange twist, she ends up dating his nephew.

5. Adrianna kidnaps the daughter she gave up for adoption (season 4)

When Silver (Jessica Stroup) discovered that the new guy she was dating was the adoptive father of the daughter Adrianna (Jessica Lowndes) gave up for adoption during the first season, she tried to hide the news from her friend. Adrianna eventually found out, of course, and desperate to spend time with her daughter, took the little girl from her day care.

4. Annie becomes a prostitute (season 4)

After her brother Dixon (Tristan Wilds) developed a drug addiction, Annie became determined to get him the help he needed by sending him to a pricey rehab facility. Unfortunately, the inheritance money she was expecting was late, so she took a job as a professional escort. (Great idea ...) She eventually began dating Patrick, who paid her to sleep with him. She used the money to fund Dixon?s rehab stay, but didn't tell anyone how she got her hands on the money. Annie eventually wrote a best-selling book about her experiences as a call girl.

3. Naomi is raped by a teacher (season 2)

Naomi made faculty member Mr. Cannon?s life miserable after she falsely accused him of sexually harassing her. Then one night, when she was alone at school with him, he raped her. When Mr. Cannon drugged Silver and attempted to take advantage of her too, Naomi?s sister and teacher, Ryan, convinced her to press charges against Mr. Cannon. Naomi?s troubles continued when she and Silver are held hostage in her home by her crazed teacher.

2. Adrianna switches Silver?s pills (season 3)

After Adrianna discovered that Silver had been hooking up with her boyfriend, Navid (Michael Steger), she plotted to get revenge. She broke into Silver?s house and tampered with her bipolar medication, which eventually caused Silver to act erratically. Silver then had mental breakdown and was checked into a mental hospital by Navid and Dixon.

1.Liam almost gets shipped to Mexico in a crate (season 5)

In what is arguably one of the most outlandish plot lines in ?90210? history, Liam was kidnapped by Ashley, a crazed fan who pretends to be a police escort sent over from his movie studio to protect him. Fearful that Liam is rekindling his old flame with Vanessa (Arielle Kebbel), Ashley told a tied-up Liam that she was going to ship him to Mexico in a crate. Luckily, Annie and Vanessa came looking for Liam and found him before Ashley can carry out her plan, but Annie ends up getting shot in the chest while attempting to free him.

What do you think was the craziest plot line of the show? Tell us in the comments!

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/90210s-7-craziest-story-lines-1C9873131

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Attacks against Lebanese Alawites deepen fears

TRIPOLI, Lebanon (AP) ? Lebanese members of the Syrian leader's Alawite sect fear their tiny community will be a casualty of the civil war raging in the neighboring country.

Already, Sunni Muslim extremists have stoned a school bus, vandalized stores and beaten or stabbed a number of men in a wave of attacks against Lebanese Alawites, stoking fears of even more violence should Syrian President Bashar Assad be removed from power.

In one particularly humiliating case, angry Sunnis tied a rope around an Alawite man's neck and dragged him around the streets of Tripoli.

"The Alawites are being subjected to an organized campaign that aims to eliminate them on all levels," said Ali Feddah, a prominent member of Lebanon's Arab Democratic Party, which is mainly Alawite.

Feddah spoke to The Associated Press in his office in Tripoli's predominantly Alawite neighborhood of Jabal Mohsen. Sitting next to a picture of Assad, he said the Alawites face an "existential threat," mainly because of extremist Sunni incitement against them.

His words echo the sentiments of many Alawites, who have long enjoyed privileges in Syria under Assad family rule and now fear for their future. The tiny community in Lebanon, which has long been a Syrian client state, has also benefited from Assad's rule, particularly during Syria's three-decade hold on its smaller neighbor that ended in 2005.

The Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, represents little more than 10 percent of the population in Syria and about 2 percent in Lebanon. Before their ascent in the mid-20th century, the Alawites were impoverished and marginalized, largely confined to the lmountains of the province of Latakia on the Mediterranean coast.

Under the French mandate, the Alawites were granted an autonomous territory stretching in a band along the coast from the Lebanese border to the Turkish border. It lasted a few years until 1937, when their state was incorporated into modern-day Syria.

After the 1963 coup that brought the Baath Party to power in Damascus, Alawites began consolidating their presence in the Syrian government and armed forces.

The uprising against Assad's rule that began in March 2011 quickly became an outlet for long-suppressed grievances, mostly by poor Sunnis from marginalized areas. It has since escalated into an outright civil war.

Many of the rebels trying to overthrow Assad today say they want to replace his government with an Islamic state.

The war, now in its third year, has turned increasingly sectarian with countless cases of tit-for-tat slayings between Sunnis and Alawites. Sunni rebels are often seen in videos posted online referring to Alawites as dogs and heretics.

Abu Bilal al-Homsi, an activist in the central Syrian city of Homs who has links with several rebel groups, said the Assad regime has carried out massacres against Sunnis. He points to waves of sectarian killings this month, allegedly carried out by pro-government Alawite gunmen in the coastal towns of Banias and Bayda. More than 100 civilians were killed in the attacks.

"We will completely wipe out the Alawite sect," said al-Homsi, who does not use his real name because of fear of government reprisals. "There will be no Alawites in Syria. The young and the old will be punished."

Bassam al-Dada, an official in the rebels' Free Syrian Army, disagrees with al-Homsi. "The Alawites have nothing to do with Bashar's crimes," he said.

The U.N. estimates that more than 70,000 people have been killed in the war. Human Rights activists say most of them are Sunnis, but Alawites have also paid a heavy price. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Tuesday the group has documented the names of more than 35,000 Alawites who have died, most of them soldiers and pro-Assad militiamen.

"Their losses statistically are very high. There is a lot of resentment in Alawite regions," said Hilal Khashan, political science professor at the American University in Beirut.

The tensions in Syria are playing out in Lebanon, which is sharply split along sectarian lines and has recently seen repeated bouts of street fighting related to the war across the border.

Northern Lebanon, in particular, is a potential powder keg. It has a strong Sunni population but also has pockets of Alawites.

The Alawites live mainly in Jabal Mohsen, a hilly district where posters of Assad and his father and predecessor, the late Hafez Assad, decorate the streets.

For years, residents of Jabal Mohsen have traded short bouts of automatic weapons fire and volleys of rocket-propelled grenades with residents of the mainly Sunni Bab Tabbaneh neighborhood.

The two districts in Tripoli are separated by a roadway named Syria Street.

The clashes have become more frequent since Syria's uprising began ? and so have the targeted attacks.

Ali, an unemployed 25-year-old Alawite from Jabal Mohsen, says he has not been to Sunni neighborhoods of Tripoli for more than a year after he was beaten up in the central Tal neighborhood.

Ali, who declined to give his full name for fear of reprisals, described how he was intercepted by a man who ran toward him, grabbed him by the neck and tried to choke him as he shouted: "Are you from the Jabal?"

He said he denied he was an Alawite and was eventually saved by a Sunni man who knew him.

Last month, a bus carrying school children was attacked on the edge of Jabal Mohsen by a group of extremists who pelted it with rocks for several minutes before troops intervened.

"Since then, all school buses from Jabal Mohsen are accompanied by troops," Feddah said.

Residents say several men have been stabbed and beaten up in the past few weeks. Several shops in Jabal Mohsen were set on fire, their fronts seen shuttered on a recent visit.

Earlier this month, bearded extremists grabbed a Syrian man in Tripoli, beat him up and stripped him to the waist before tying a rope around his neck and parading him through the streets. "I am an Alawite shabih," they wrote on his bare chest, in reference to widely feared pro-Assad militiamen who fight alongside soldiers in Syria.

In Syria, thousands of Alawites have left their homes in war-shattered cities such as Homs, for the relative safety of the overwhelmingly Alawite provinces of Tartous and Latakia.

Syrian opponents of Assad say Alawite fighters are trying to carve out a breakaway enclave in the country's mountainous Alawite heartland by driving out local Sunnis. They say recent killings in overwhelmingly Sunni villages close to Alawite communities are meant to lay the groundwork.

Earlier this month, regime forces from nearby Alawite areas were blamed for killing dozens of civilians in Banias and Bayda, two Sunni communities in western Syria. The violence bore a closer resemblance to two reported mass killings last year in Houla and Qubeir, Sunni villages surrounded by Alawite towns in central Syria.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told Turkey's Hurriyet newspaper that having failed to control the entire country, Assad was now executing his "plan B" ? which involves opening up an Alawite corridor between central Syria and Lebanon and driving Sunnis away from the area.

"There is an effort to cleanse the region," Davutoglu said in the interview, published last week. "This will cause turmoil in Lebanon too. It could cause a culture of revenge."

___

Bassem Mroue can be reached on twitter at http://twitter.com/bmroue

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/attacks-against-lebanese-alawites-deepen-fears-200257987.html

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Intricate, Ultra-Accurate Blueprints of Botanical Life

Illustration and science have always gone hand in hand. If you want to understand something, drawing it is a good place to start. Macoto Murayama, a 29-year-old botanist and designer, goes even further: he carefully dissects and models flowers using 3D drafting software.

Murayama, who has a degree in spatial design, started buying flowers and plants from roadside stands a few years ago. Back in his studio, he began dissecting the plants and mapping what he found inside. ?When I looked closer into a plant that I thought was organic, I found in its form and inner structure hidden mechanical and inorganic elements,? he said in an interview with The Scientist. ?My perception of a flower was completely changed.?

Since then, Murayama has dissected and modeled dozens of specimens, from the unfurling splendor of Asiatic dayflower to the Poppy-like simplicity of Yellow Cosmos. After drafting the innards of each plant (beginning at a microscopic level), he uses the rendering software 3ds Max to model each piece. Then, he finishes off each drawing by adding architectural call-outs to the details. These images look faked?but they?re actually remarkable thorough scientific illustrations.

According Frantic, his representing gallery, Murayama is the latest participant in a tradition that goes back to the Enlightenment. ?It?s not only an image of a plant, but representation of the intellect?s power and its elaborate tools for scrutinizing nature,? explains the gallery reps. ?The transparency of this work refers not only to the lucid petals of a flower, but to the ambitious, romantic and utopian struggle of science to see and present the world as transparent (completely seen, entirely grasped) object.? Except these days, rather than documenting the natural world with ink and paper, we document it with CAD and Illustrator. [Smithsonian Mag]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/intricate-ultra-accurate-blueprints-of-botanical-life-504591818

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

You probably can't leap over this six-foot homemade Piranha Plant (nor should you try)

You probably can't leap over this sixfoot homemade Piranha Plant nor should you try

We'd probably say something like, "I always thought it would be cool to build a giant fire breathing piranha plant," and then promptly forget about following through. Also, hey, that sounds dangerous! Hack-a-day's Caleb Craft, however, doesn't allow silly things like fear of seared human flesh get between him and his dreams. (This is the same man who created an incredible Portal gun, in case you forgot the name.)

Craft created a six-foot tall, fire-breathing "piranha plant" -- also known as "that bastard plant hiding in Super Mario World's pipes" -- using PVC pipe, butane and a whole mess of other materials. The results are -- well, we can think of a variety of adjectives that'd fit perfectly well here, but you'll likely come up with a few of your own after watching the video of it in action below the break.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/05/10/real-life-piranha-plant/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

Black voters a surprise, especially to GOP

Two months before President Barack Obama won re-election, Secretary of the Commonwealth Carol Aichele embarked on a damage control tour to assure Pennsylvania voters that the Republican-controlled Legislature really wasn't out to suppress anyone's vote, despite all evidence to the contrary.

Too many folks, apparently, had taken too literally House Republican Leader Mike Turzai's quip that the state's voter ID law was "going to allow Gov. [Mitt] Romney to win the state of Pennsylvania."

"We are doing the most aggressive public relations campaign this state has ever seen, to both educate the voters on the election in November and then to make sure they know about photo ID," Ms. Aichele said during a visit to Chartiers Valley High School.

"The message is -- if you care about this country, vote. I'm expecting -- and it would please me to no end if we had -- the biggest voter turnout we've ever had in Pennsylvania," Ms. Aichele said.

It was the kind of hope that stunk of the Corbett administration's usual Pollyanna. Left unexplained by the former math teacher was how a voter ID law considered by many to be one of the most draconian in the nation could possibly result in a larger voter turnout in Pennsylvania.

Fast forward eight months to a headline in The New York Times this week: "For First Time on Record, Black Voting Rate Outpaced Rate for Whites in 2012."

It turns out that Ms. Aichele was on to something, although she couldn't possibly have known that when she made her prediction. It was Republican orthodoxy at the time that black turnout for 2012 would be much smaller than it was in 2008.

Conservative pundits assured the party faithful that black voter disenchantment was widespread and that Mr. Obama's support for gay marriage would further depress enthusiasm among older, more religious blacks who never miss an election. What the pundits never counted on was the level of indignation that voter ID laws would generate, especially among citizens who have a collective memory of what voter disenfranchisement felt like not too long ago.

No one predicted a record African-American voter turnout in 2012. Even the most optimistic Democratic partisan would've been happy with a rate identical to 2008. Republicans were predicting a turnout closer to that of 2004, if not earlier. They were confidently telling each other that 2008 was a fluke and that 2010 was a better indicator of what would happen in 2012.

No one predicted that black turnout nationally would reach 66.2 percent in 2012, compared to 64.1 percent for non-Hispanic whites. On the contrary, we all expected hundreds of thousands of voters to "disappear" from the rolls of key states.

It was concern about the fairness of the election that prompted so many African-Americans to turn out in record numbers in the states that allow early voting and stand in line -- all day, if necessary -- in states that didn't. That's what happens when people get mad and expect the worst. They wanted to see for themselves how far the architects of voter ID laws were willing to take their politically opportunistic assault on the democratic process.

When all of the votes were tallied, 1.8 million more blacks turned out in 2012 than in 2008. Black women led the charge, but black men weren't that far behind. Middle-aged and older blacks voted the most. And as many conservative commentators have pointed out, 90 percent of them voted for President Obama, which may explain why the outreach to blacks by the GOP in the last election cycle was minimal or non-existent.

Ignoring the black vote was a self-fulfilling prophecy by a party that ironically claims to be colorblind. Blacks may represent the highest voting rate in America as of 2012, but it doesn't make us any more visible or relevant to the GOP than we were a decade ago.

There's also the very strange phenomenon of 2 million missing white voters in 2012, compared to 2008. The nation's overall turnout rate dropped to 61.8 percent from 63.6 in 2008. The new political orthodoxy is that having Mr. Obama on the ticket energized the black vote, but expect that to go away once the next white Democrat is nominated for president.

That's a stunningly clueless bit of analysis and wishful thinking. If nothing else, Mr. Obama has taught black Americans -- and everyone else -- that we all have a stake in the system and that the only way to maintain a seat at the table is to pull up a chair and vote.

In two weeks, we'll see how many blacks will factor in this city's future by voting.

Source: http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/opinion/tony-norman/black-voters-a-surprise-especially-to-gop-687059

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Thursday, May 9, 2013

Google Glass Update Adds Google+ Integration

If you're one of the lucky Google Glass "Explorers" wandering the world barking at your augmented-reality headset prototype get very excited about a new software update that'll make talking to nerdy computer spectacles more social.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Ekhz_HJC48c/google-glass-update-adds-google-integration-496008411

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First biological evidence of a supernova

First biological evidence of a supernova [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Dr. Andreas Battenberg
battenberg@zv.tum.de
49-892-891-0510
Technische Universitaet Muenchen

Researchers find hints of supernova iron in bacteria microfossils

Most of the chemical elements have their origin in core collapse supernovae. When a star ends its life in a gigantic starburst, it throws most of its mass into space. The radioactive iron isotope Fe-60 is produced almost exclusively in such supernovae. Because its half-life of 2.62 million years is short compared to the age of our solar system, no supernova iron should be present on Earth. Therefore, any discovery of Fe-60 on Earth would indicate a supernova in our cosmic neighborhood. In the year 2004, Fe-60 was discovered on Earth for the first time in a ferromanganese crust obtained from the floor of the equatorial Pacific Ocean. Its geological dating puts the event around 2.2 million years ago.

So-called magnetotactic bacteria live within the sediments of the Earth's oceans, close to the water-sediment interface. They make within their cells hundreds of tiny crystals of magnetite (Fe3O4), each approximately 80 nanometers in diameter. The magnetotactic bacteria obtain the iron from atmospheric dust that enters the ocean. Nuclear astrophysicist Shawn Bishop, member of the Cluster of Excellence Origin and Structure of the Universe at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen, postulated that Fe-60 should also reside within those magnetite crystals produced by magnetotactic bacteria living at the time of the supernova interaction with our planet. These bacterially produced crystals, when found in sediments long after their host bacteria have died, are called "magnetofossils."

Shawn Bishop and his colleagues analyzed parts of a Pacific Ocean sediment core obtained from the Ocean Drilling Program, dating between about 1.7 million and 3.3 million years ago. They took sediment samples corresponding to intervals of about 100,000 years and treated them chemically to selectively dissolve the magnetofossils thereby extracting any Fe-60 they might contain.

Finally, using the ultrasensitive accelerator mass spectrometry system at the Maier Leibnitz Laboratory in Garching, Munich, they found a tantalizing hint of Iron-60 atoms occurring around 2.2 million years ago, which matches the expected time from the ferromanganese study. "It seems reasonable to suppose that the apparent signal of Fe-60 could be remains of magnetite chains formed by bacteria on the sea floor as a starburst showered on them from the atmosphere", Shawn Bishop says. He and his team are now preparing to analyze a second sediment drill core, containing upwards of 10 times the amount of material as the first drill core, to see if it also holds the Fe-60 signal and, if it does, to map out the shape of the signal as a function of time.

###


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?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


First biological evidence of a supernova [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-May-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Dr. Andreas Battenberg
battenberg@zv.tum.de
49-892-891-0510
Technische Universitaet Muenchen

Researchers find hints of supernova iron in bacteria microfossils

Most of the chemical elements have their origin in core collapse supernovae. When a star ends its life in a gigantic starburst, it throws most of its mass into space. The radioactive iron isotope Fe-60 is produced almost exclusively in such supernovae. Because its half-life of 2.62 million years is short compared to the age of our solar system, no supernova iron should be present on Earth. Therefore, any discovery of Fe-60 on Earth would indicate a supernova in our cosmic neighborhood. In the year 2004, Fe-60 was discovered on Earth for the first time in a ferromanganese crust obtained from the floor of the equatorial Pacific Ocean. Its geological dating puts the event around 2.2 million years ago.

So-called magnetotactic bacteria live within the sediments of the Earth's oceans, close to the water-sediment interface. They make within their cells hundreds of tiny crystals of magnetite (Fe3O4), each approximately 80 nanometers in diameter. The magnetotactic bacteria obtain the iron from atmospheric dust that enters the ocean. Nuclear astrophysicist Shawn Bishop, member of the Cluster of Excellence Origin and Structure of the Universe at the Technische Universitaet Muenchen, postulated that Fe-60 should also reside within those magnetite crystals produced by magnetotactic bacteria living at the time of the supernova interaction with our planet. These bacterially produced crystals, when found in sediments long after their host bacteria have died, are called "magnetofossils."

Shawn Bishop and his colleagues analyzed parts of a Pacific Ocean sediment core obtained from the Ocean Drilling Program, dating between about 1.7 million and 3.3 million years ago. They took sediment samples corresponding to intervals of about 100,000 years and treated them chemically to selectively dissolve the magnetofossils thereby extracting any Fe-60 they might contain.

Finally, using the ultrasensitive accelerator mass spectrometry system at the Maier Leibnitz Laboratory in Garching, Munich, they found a tantalizing hint of Iron-60 atoms occurring around 2.2 million years ago, which matches the expected time from the ferromanganese study. "It seems reasonable to suppose that the apparent signal of Fe-60 could be remains of magnetite chains formed by bacteria on the sea floor as a starburst showered on them from the atmosphere", Shawn Bishop says. He and his team are now preparing to analyze a second sediment drill core, containing upwards of 10 times the amount of material as the first drill core, to see if it also holds the Fe-60 signal and, if it does, to map out the shape of the signal as a function of time.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-05/tum-fbe050813.php

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Lenovo IdeaCentre Horizon hands-on with BlueStacks for Android ...

The Lenovo IdeaCentre Horizon recently began shipping and while this ?table? PC is running Windows 8, those making the purchase will find something Android related. The IdeaCentre Horizon comes pre-installed with a copy of BlueStacks. Basically, this means you can turn your 27-inch Windows 8 PC into an oversized Android tablet. The table PC ships with a wireless keyboard and mouse, however it also has a touchscreen display.

ideacentre_ac

Anyway, given we focus on Android here, the IdeaCentre Horizon coverage will be limited to BlueStacks. By default BlueStacks will offer access to four sections; AppSearch, GetJar, Amazon Appstore and 1Mobile. Users can also sideload the Google Play Store. The one catch with apps coming from the Play Store, you will likely see some mixed results in terms of support for the large display.

appstore_search

Given the setup for the IdeaCentre Horizon, using this as an Android gaming device could be rather interesting. As you will see from the video below, some of the games look rather nice. Alternatively, despite some not looking the best in terms of quality ? the seem to have been made for the larger size. As you will see in our hands-on video below, pinball is an example of an app that seems to be good for a larger display.

The search functionality is also worthy of a mention. With this you can use the search interface to get results from multiple app stores. We used Ironman as the example in the video and from the initial search results, once you pick the item that matches your search, you will be given the option to pick which app store the download actually comes from.

Otherwise, while we wouldn?t expect many people to be walking around with this 27-inch device, Lenovo did put some thought into mobility. Take the kickstand for example. With this, Lenovo has the obvious in that it will prop the computer up for table use. On the flip side though, when that kickstand is pushed in, you will be presented with a touch based interface.

back2

The IdeaCentre Horizon is currently shipping and Lenovo has it priced from $1,699. While we left the focus on the Android side, our friends at SlashGear will be diving in a little deeper and offering a fell review to include both the hardware aspect and Windows 8. This Lenovo table PC aside, those who happen to be curious about BlueStacks, remember that is available as a free download for both Mac and Windows computers.

Source: http://androidcommunity.com/lenovo-ideacentre-horizon-hands-on-with-bluestacks-for-android-gaming-20130507/

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Tuesday, May 7, 2013

92% The Gatekeepers

All Critics (92) | Top Critics (30) | Fresh (85) | Rotten (7)

The film and its talking head participants paint the picture in both broad strokes and fine detail.

Whatever one's political stripe regarding Israel, it's hard to dispute the impressions and perspective of the film's six eyewitnesses.

The level of candor here may not satisfy hard-liners of either stripe, but it can help viewers begin to formulate new questions about the philosophical, strategic and moral challenges of conflict, in particular "wars on terror."

Ultimately the movie feels evasive, and its flashy, digitally animated re-creations of military surveillance footage unpleasantly evoke the Call of Duty video games.

It offers startlingly honest insight into the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from some of those who called the shots.

As a political testament, the result is revealing and important.

Dror Moreh's terrific documentary can stand beside Errol Morris's The Fog of War as a cinematic illustration of how human psyches bend beneath the pressure of terrible actions.

A powerful cautionary tale about the concept of security, and how illusory it really is.

In the end, the accumulated stories in The Gatekeepers offer tremendous insight about the Israeli-Palestinian situation. It feels more like it was prepared as a history document for Shin Bet rookies than a documentary.

...a riveting and sobering documentary about Shin Bet that raises important if unanswerable questions about the morality of state-sanctioned violence in the name of internal security.

[Moreh] asks just the right questions, never prodding these understandably private men too far but getting what he needs.

A riveting but depressing history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

It's a depressing movie, yet there is encouragement to be found in the manifest decency and reasonableness of these six honest, articulate men ...

The former heads of Israel's military anti-terrorism agency Shin Bet break their silence in this unnerving, eye-opening documentary.

The film, though based on the exploits of Shin Bet, gives us reason to think about the drones that take out more than just terrorists.

Makes for truly bracing viewing.

A fascinating film offering a startling look inside one of the most tightlipped intelligence agencies on the planet, and providing powerful resonances with the US and UK's "war on terror".

A compelling overview of a modern security agency - bred in a moral grey area, organising state-sanctioned violence, but uncertain of the strength of its political safety net.

While memorable in sometimes unexpected ways (1980 head Avraham Shalom's long unwashed nails), there is always the nagging feeling that any revelations are being pushed or sold a little too hard.

Dror Moreh's Oscar-nominated documentary is riveting, haunting and depressing in equal measure, offering a sobering assessment of the Israel-Palestine conflict from a unique perspective.

[T]he Oscar-nominated documentary in which the six living former heads of Shin Bet, the ultrasecretive Israeli domestic security agency, talk about their antiterrorism work...

Although The Gatekeepers may not be quite theatrical nor dramatic enough for it to be highly recommended as a cinematic experience, this does feel like a film that really should be seen.

Many secrets are revealed and examined in director Dror Moreh's mind-blowingly fine film. If I have a quibble, it's that he never reveals the most tantalizing secret of all: how the hell he pulled it off.

[An] absorbing documentary, which charts the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from the Six Day War to the presentday.

Insightful, revelatory and profound, Moreh's Oscar-nominated documentary combines riveting interviews, archive footage and - yes - state-of-the-art photographic effects to offer a unique perspective on the Israel-Palestine issue.

Both journalistic coup and unsettling confirmation of the idea that 'you can't make peace using military means.'

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_gatekeepers_2012/

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A Q&A about the TCDCC (Offthekuff)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/303804767?client_source=feed&format=rss

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How an '80s sitcom star turned a Hollywood mogul Into YouTube's newest champion

By Brent Lang and Lucas Shaw

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Brian Robbins first spoke with former Disney chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg after he made "Norbit," one of those Eddie Murphy comedies in which the comedian played several characters at once. Robbins directed the movie, one of ten he has made in his career, and DreamWorks, which Katzenberg co-founded, produced it.

"I remember getting a very nice phone call from him - a congrats on 'Norbit,'" Robbins told TheWrap. "But we didn't know each other." Katzenberg was focused on DreamWorks Animation, which he had spun off as a separate company.

Fast forward six years and the two are now partners in crime. Robbins, known to a certain generation as a star of 1980s sitcom "Head of the Class," just sold his YouTube network, AwesomenessTV to DreamWorks Animation for as much as $117 million.

The deal marked the first time a large media company bought a YouTube channel, and the price could portend a flood of money into the burgeoning world of online video.

TheWrap spoke with Katzenberg and Robbins independently, but put their answers together - as they will now work for the next few years.

It was YouTube's Robert Kyncl who suggested you two get together. Why?

Robbins: I got a call from Robert who said 'I want to introduce you to Jeffrey Katzenberg if that's okay.' I said sure, and he said 'just know that once I do your life is going to change.' He connected us by email and the next morning we were having breakfast and it was very fast moving from there.

Katzenberg: Robert talked about Brian and specifically how impressed he has been with the work that he was doing and that he thought it was, knowing my interest, somebody I would really connect with. He was the matchmaker here and his instincts were spot on and perfect.

Robbins: We spent a lot of time with each other - every day for the next 4 days having meetings, hanging out: he came to Awesomeness, I came to DreamWorks for a whole day with my team. It was pretty clear that we shared a vision for this space and what's happening and where it's going and what it could become.

How do Awesomeness and DreamWorks Animation complement one another?

Robbins: DreamWorks Animation is an incredible global family entertainment brand. That's one. Two, Jeffrey is an amazing mogul who is a brilliant man and been successful over and over and over again. Working side by side with someone like that is enormously appealing. Three, and most importantly, we both do the same thing. We're storytellers.

I would have been scared to get bought by Viacom or one of the media companies. This way I am dealing with Jeffrey one on one and look at him as someone who runs his business from a creative point of view. He's not an ex-lawyer or ex-accountant running a studio. He's a guy who has been in the business and been making movies forever.

People have asked 'aren't you scared?' No, not at all. I'd be scared of all those other people who wanted to acquire me.

Katzenberg: The thing that attracted me so much to Brian is that he is in love with this medium. He is super engaged and excited about creating these bits, bites, and snacks, as he refers to them. He is really unique in that he has had incredible success in more traditional media and has nothing but opportunities in those spaces, but he chooses to be here. He's not there out of default. Most people are there because the barriers to entry are lower. He's there because he likes the form; he's mastered the form.

Brian, were you always planning on selling your company?

Robbins: I was just trying to build something, but when you take on venture capital money obviously in this space everyone talks about valuations and exits. I always thought we'd be acquired, but did I ever think it would happen this fast? Absoutely not.

For months now I have had people come in trying to invest, trying to buy 20 percent, 15 percent and I have not entertained any of them. Jeffrey was different because he offered me a much bigger platform. was just one part of the plan for me and now with Jeffrey there's just an opportunity to do some tremendous things.

What is that larger plan?

Katzenberg: Awesomeness is primarily geared toward teen girls, and we want to run a track parallel to that brand that is to boys, because you don't mix those different tracks. I look at this as really a first step for Brian to build on what he has done incredibly successfully with the first platform that he has in place and very quickly follow with several different platforms that expand into different demographics and eventually start to use the DreamWorks brand for some of his expansion.

Would you consider buying another YouTube channel or is this a unique proposition?

Katzenberg: If other opportunities that are similarly appealing present themselves, we will take them. We're open to anything that we think is a good opportunity.

Both of you have talked about extending the DreamWorks Animation brand onto YouTube. Will DreamWorks and Awesomeness play together?

Robbins: I don't think they play together at all. Awesomeness continues to be Awesomeness. I don't think Jeffrey wants to mess with that at all. I will build it into as big a company as we think and everyone thinks it's' going to be.

On the other hand, on the DreamWorks side, we definitely have some plans to take the DreamWorks brand and so some very innovative and interesting things.

Awesomeness has built a massive network of channels on the creative side, but how about the business side?

Katzenberg: They're in what is commonly referred to as an investment cycle. They're building revenue and investing it back into the company while they build up engagement with users. They're not cash positive today, but they will become cash positive.

Robbins: We're still a very not mature business, but we're seeing that change quickly too. We're seeing these brands really lining up to work with us in big ways ad spend real dollars. That needle is starting to move too and it's moving so quickly. That's what's crazy - where we were six months ago versus now for brands.

So is Brian going to help DreamWorks with TV?

Robbins: I don't know yet. Jeffrey has a lot of plans and we'll see where it goes. It's too early for me to comment.

Katzenberg: What Brian is going to do in terms of his involvement in the larger DreamWorks Animation business is of great value to us. The way that he is going to help us build out our digital footprint and television business.

What happens to your Varsity Pictures (his film and TV production company)?

Robbins: Oh well. My kids get to run it when they graduate from high school. They can reinvent it.

You've had a lot of success as a film and TV producer. So you're just going to say screw it and just do YouTube?

Robbins: There's no 'just' in the word YouTube to me. Any time you've got 1 billion people on a platform, there's no just. If you use it properly you can really build a gigantic business. Last year we were talking this as cable 25 years ago. I'm telling you the ESPNs and CNNs and MTVs and Nickelodeons of tomorrow will come out of this ecosystem even faster than I thought.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/80s-sitcom-star-turned-hollywood-mogul-youtubes-newest-232155763.html

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Monday, May 6, 2013

Malaysians vote to decide fate of world's longest-ruling coalition

By Anuradha Raghu and Niluksi Koswanage

JOHOR BARU, Malaysia (Reuters) - Malaysians voted in record numbers on Sunday in an election that could weaken or even end the rule of the world's longest-ruling coalition, which faces a stiff challenge from an opposition pledging to clean up politics and end race-based policies.

Led by former finance minister Anwar Ibrahim, the opposition is aiming to build on startling electoral gains in 2008, when the Barisan Nasional (BN), or National Front, ruling coalition lost its customary two-thirds parliamentary majority.

The coalition is expected to win, but opinion polls showed a tightening race in recent weeks with Prime Minister Najib Razak struggling to translate strong economic growth and a deluge of social handouts into votes.

With counting in its early stages after polls closed at 5 p.m. (5:00 a.m. EDT), Anwar was quick to claim victory for his Pakatan Rakyat (PR), or People's Alliance, a sign that the opposition is likely to dispute the result if it loses after allegations of widespread voter fraud.

"PR has won," he wrote on his Twitter account, urging the ruling party and the country's Election Commission "not to attempt to hijack the results".

Election officials said voter turnout in the country of 28 million people was about 80 percent, a record high in what could be the most closely contested election in 56 years of rule by the National Front coalition.

"I would like to see some change," said computer engineer Wardina Shafie, 31, after she cast her vote on the outskirts of the capital, Kuala Lumpur. "I think the opposition has a good chance of taking government. I only worry about voter fraud."

Independent news site Malaysiakini was flooded with stories of suspected voter fraud carried out by the ruling coalition.

There were widespread witness accounts that "indelible" ink, introduced by the government in response to demands for electoral reform, could be washed off voters' fingers easily, enabling some to cast ballots more than once.

The campaign heated up in recent days with Anwar accusing the coalition of flying up to 40,000 "dubious" voters, including foreigners, across the country to vote in close races. The government says it was merely helping voters get to home towns.

Officials expect the first results for 222 parliamentary seats and more than 500 state seats to start trickling in from 8.00 p.m. (1200 GMT).

The 2008 result signaled a breakdown in traditional politics as minority ethnic Chinese and ethnic Indians, as well as many majority Malays, rejected the National Front's brand of race-based patronage that has ensured stability in the Southeast Asian nation but led to corruption and widening inequality.

Najib, the blue-blood son of a former leader, the coalition has tried to win over a growing middle class with social reforms and secure traditional voters with a $2.6 billion deluge of cash handouts to poor families.

He can point to robust growth of 5.6 percent last year as evidence that his Economic Transformation Programme to double incomes by 2020 is bearing fruit, while warning that the untested three-party opposition would spark economic ruin.

"The victor or loser of this 13th general election will not be BN or the opposition PR. It will be Malaysia, its people and our children," Najib tweeted on Sunday before casting his ballot in central Pahang state.

Najib, who is more popular than his party, has had some success in steadying the ship since he was installed as head of the dominant United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) in 2009.

Formidable advantages such as the coalition's control of mainstream media, its deep pockets and a skewed electoral system make it the clear favorite.

But a failure to improve on the 2008 performance, when the National Front won 140 seats in the 222-seat parliament, could threaten Najib's position and his reform program. Conservative forces in UMNO, unhappy with his tentative efforts to roll back affirmative action policies favoring ethnic Malays, are waiting in the wings to challenge his leadership.

LAST CHANCE FOR ANWAR?

The election represents possibly the last chance to lead Malaysia for Anwar, a former rising UMNO star who was sacked and jailed for six years in 1998 following a feud with then prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, who remains an influential figure.

The 65-year-old former deputy prime minister says his corruption and sodomy convictions were trumped up. He received a new lease on political life last year when a court acquitted him of a second sodomy charge.

His alliance, which includes an awkward partnership between a secular ethnic Chinese party with an Islamist party, says it presents a viable alternative, given a record of governing in four states it took over in 2008.

It wants to break down a network of patronage that has grown up between UMNO and business tycoons. The alliance also pledges to replace policies favoring ethnic Malays in housing, business and education with needs-based assistance.

The opposition is riding a growing trend of civil-society activism, which has been most evident in a series of big street protests in recent years calling for reform of the electoral system and huge campaign rallies.

Election observers said at least 200,000 people turned up for rallies across the country late on Saturday in a last-minute push to support the opposition.

"One for all, all for one - regardless of color, creed, or religion," veteran politician Lim Kit Siang told a 6,000-strong crowd in southern Johor state, bordering Singapore. "We are all Malaysians, why let racial sentiments provoke us?"

Most people in the crowd were ethnic Chinese, who make up about 25 percent of Malaysians and who abandoned the ruling coalition in 2008. Maintaining momentum among ethnic Malay voters may be more difficult amid warnings from the National Front that they would be at risk from Chinese economic domination if the opposition won.

"I am comfortable with the current situation here," said a 62-year old Malay housewife after she cast her ballot in Johor. "I can't trust the opposition. I don't know them."

(Additional reporting by the Reuters Kuala Lumpur bureau; Writing by Stuart Grudgings and Niluksi Koswanage; Editing by Jason Szep and Robert Birsel)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ruling-coalition-faces-fight-life-malaysian-vote-022019174.html

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