Saturday, November 30, 2013

1 confirmed dead in Scotland chopper crash but toll likely to rise


GLASGOW -- One person has been killed in a helicopter crash at a crowded Glasgow pub, police said Saturday, with the death toll likely to rise.

Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond called it a "black day" for Scotland as he sent his condolences to the bereaved.

Police Scotland Chief Constable Stephen House said 32 people had been taken by ambulance to three Glasgow hospitals following the crash on Friday night.

"Sadly I can also confirm one fatality. We expect that number to increase over the coming hours," he told reporters.

Asked if there were people still alive trapped in The Clutha bar, where more than 100 people were watching a band play, House replied: "We can't say that definitively at this moment in time".

Scotland's police chief was speaking alongside Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, outside the command center in Glasgow, which is coordinating the multi-agency emergency response.

"Our condolences go to those who will be bereaved; our solidarity with those who've been injured," Salmond said.

"All of us have seen over the last few hours the speed and the effectiveness of the mobilization of emergency services in dealing with this tragedy.

"We've also heard of the instinctive courage of ordinary Glaswegians going to assist their fellow citizens in extremity.

"This is a black day for Glasgow and for Scotland. But it's also St. Andrew's Day and it's a day we can take pride and courage in how we respond to adversity and tragedy.

"And that response, from our emergency services and from ordinary citizens, has been exemplary.

"It's a day we can take great pride on how we've responded to this extraordinary tragedy."

source: interaksyon.com

Lucio Co-owned company operating S&R to hike capital


MANILA – Businessman Lucio Co is beefing up the capital of the firm operating S&R Membership Shopping after merging the companies managing a shopping mall in Divisoria, Manila.

In a disclosure to the Philippine Stock Exchange, Puregold Price Club Inc said Kareila Management Corp’s board of directors cleared the increase in its authorized capital stock from P500 million to P3 billion. The shares have a par value of P100 apiece.

Kareila, a wholly owned subsidiary of Puregold, operates eight S&R membership shopping warehouses located at Bonifacio Global City in Taguig; Aseana City in Paranaque; Congressional in Quezon City; San Fernando in Pampanga; Davao City; Alabang, Muntilnupa City; Cebu City; and Shaw Boulevard, Mandaluyong City.

Cosco Capital Inc, another company owned by Co, has consolidated its subsidiaries that operate the 999 Shopping Mall in Divisoria, Manila.

In a separate disclosure, Cosco said the board of directors of Nation Realty Inc, Go Fay & Co Inc, SVF Corp and 999 Shopping Mall Inc agreed to merge these companies with Nation Realty as the surviving entity.

Nation Realty, Go Fay and SVF Corp are wholly owned subsidiaries of Cosco, while 999 Shopping Mall is owned by 118 Holdings Inc, a subsidiary of Cosco.

Cosco has interests in retail through Puregold, real estate, liquor distribution and oil storage.

 source: interaksyon.com

NASA to grow turnips on the Moon by 2015


WASHINGTON -- NASA is planning to grow plants and vegetables - such as turnip and basil - on the Moon, by 2015, to understand whether humans can live and work on the Earth's natural satellite.

The US space agency will deposit plants, on-board a commercial lunar lander, on the Moon's surface within the next two years, NASA said.

The initiative is being driven by the Lunar Plant Growth Habitat team.

source: interaksyon.com

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Kobe confident that Lakers have space to sign free agents despite extension


WASHINGTON – Kobe Bryant says his NBA return from left Achilles tendon surgery is likely weeks away but the Los Angeles Lakers guard is improving and regaining the explosiveness that made him a superstar.

And the 35-year-old American, who signed a two-year deal worth $48.5 million with the Lakers on Monday, says that his new deal does leave the Lakers room to sign new talent and become a title contender again as well as silence critics who doubt his worthiness for such a contract.

“It makes me want to run through a wall for them,” Bryant said Tuesday before the Lakers played at Washington. “It adds more fuel to the fire. It makes me want to come out and prove they were right and everybody else was wrong.

“We have the ability to do something special. We’ll have to see what happens.”

Bryant has not played since being injured last April but has practiced with the Lakers, who split their first 12 games of the new season, and says his return could come in December.

“Much closer. I feel good,” Bryant said. “I’m feeling much stronger, ready to come back.”

Bryant wants to have the same pep in his steps that helped the Lakers win five NBA titles between 2000 and 2010 and helped the US Olympic squad claim gold in 2008 and 2012.

“If it’s not there then I’m ready to adapt to whatever my body is telling me,” Bryant said. “I just want to come out and do what I do best and help this organization get back to where it belongs.

“The goal is to put ourselves in position to win a championship.”

Bryant took less than he could have sought from the Lakers and the difference could be enough to allow Los Angeles to land a top free agent next year such as New York star Carmelo Anthony.

“There was really no negotiation. The Lakers came up with a structure that they thought was a win-win for everyone involved,” Bryant said. “From my perspective it was easy to say yes. It was pretty quick. We had no conversation whatsoever. The only number I saw was the one I agreed to.”

Bryant, whose 31,617 career points rank fourth on the NBA all-time list, dismissed those who say the Lakers overspent on Bryant and will be hurt in bidding for free agents in 2014.

“I don’t think they understand the cap, and what the Lakers are trying to do, better than the Lakers did,” Bryant said. “I think we’ll be fine.”

Bryant has dubbed himself “a Laker for life” and said that after an unprecedented 20 NBA seasons with the same club he would likely call it quits — “probably. That’s a long time.”

Former Lakers owner Jerry Buss said Bryant was worth $60 million to $70 million a season for the team and thus his latest deal might well have been a nod to his past achievements as well as what might be yet to come.

“They stepped up to the plate and took care of me,” Bryant said. “Some of it is from things I had previously done. Some of it was a business decision. Some of it was for what they expect from me when I return.”

Bryant said the new contract gave him “some additional motivation — I’ve got to prove to myself I can do this thing, and to everybody else as well.

“To see what I have left, the drive and competitiveness, to see if I’m still one of the top players in the league, to see if I have any gas in the tank — that’s a challenge I readily accept.”

source: interaksyon.com

What is the world's most expensive book?


NEW YORK - The first book printed in what is today the United States sold for nearly $14.2 million at auction in New York on Tuesday, Sotheby's said, becoming the world's most expensive book.

The translation of Biblical psalms "The Bay Psalm Book" was printed by Puritan settlers in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1640 and was offered at a one-lot auction by Sotheby's.

source: interaksyon.com

CBS News puts '60 Minutes' star on leave over false Benghazi report


WASHINGTON DC - CBS News on Tuesday put a correspondent for flagship program "60 Minutes" on leave over flaws in a critical report about last year's attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

Lara Logan, a South African, also abruptly canceled her scheduled appearance as the host Tuesday of the Committee to Protect Journalists' awards dinner in New York.

In a memo to employees confirmed by AFP, CBS News chairman Jeff Fager said the network had failed in vetting the story on the September 11, 2012 Benghazi attack. The assault killed four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, and President Barack Obama's handling of the incident quickly triggered criticism from his opponents.

"I have asked Lara Logan, who has distinguished herself and has put herself in harm's way many times in the course of covering stories for us, to take a leave of absence, which she has agreed to do," Fager wrote.

"I have asked the same of producer Max McClellan, who also has a distinguished career at CBS News," he wrote.

A spokesman for "60 Minutes" declined to elaborate, saying only that the news magazine has conducted a review and "we are implementing ongoing changes."

Logan earlier apologized to viewers over the October 27 report, in which an ex-security officer named Dylan Davies gave a harrowing account of what he said happened during the attack, including his own supposed confrontation with one of the attackers.

But Davies, who wrote a book published by a division of the CBS Corp., separately told US officials that he did not go to the compound until the day after the attack. Fager, in his memo, said that "60 Minutes" should have known of and been alarmed by the disparity in accounts. The publisher has also since withdrawn Davies' book.

Fager also faulted Logan, who asserted in her report that Al-Qaeda carried out the attack, for earlier publicly accusing the US government of misrepresenting the threat of the extremist network.

"From a CBS News Standards perspective, there is a conflict in taking a public position on the government's handling of Benghazi and Al-Qaeda, while continuing to report on the story," Fager wrote.

The Committee to Protect Journalists said that Scott Pelley, a fellow CBS News journalist who anchors the network's evening broadcast and is a correspondent for "CBS News," was replacing Logan as host of the awards dinner in New York.

"Given the circumstances, Lara Logan did not want the fact that she was hosting the dinner to take attention away from our award winners," said Sandy Rowe, chair of the media rights group.

The organization will present awards to four journalists who are "confronting severe reprisals" for their work including prominent Vietnamese blogger Nguyen Van Hai, who is in prison, and Egyptian satirist Bassem Youssef, whose television program was canceled after his barbs against both the ruling military and the ousted Islamists.

The other recipients are Janet Hinostroza, a television journalist who has reported threats in Ecuador, and Nedim Sener, an investigative journalist in Turkey who faces prison time for allegedly trying to destabilize the government.

source: interaksyon.com

No wires, no mess: an ultra-thin wireless keyboard


The elegant Rapoo E6300 for the iPad is an ultra-slim keyboard with high-performance, tactile keys that’ll make cumbersome typing on the tablet’s touch screen a thing of the past. The compact keyboard slides into your pocket or briefcase for easy access anytime, anywhere.

With full-size alpha-numeric keys, the E6300 allows the user to comfortably and quickly type for longer periods of time. Each key has its own spring mechanism, and it’s arranged in a scissor key structure for a practical layout. The slim keyboard offers 80 keys including 15 iPad Hotkeys such as Homepage, Search, Picture Frame Mode, Play/Pause, Mute, Lock/Unlock, Copy, Paste and more.

Only .22 inches thick, the E6300 is one of the thinnest wireless keyboards on the market; but, thin doesn’t mean flimsy. Rapoo expertly designed the keyboard using brushed stainless steel coupling an elegant form factor with durability to withstand every day bumps. On the back of the keyboard is the lithium battery which also lifts the keyboard into a comfortable typing angle, a power switch, syncing button for Bluetooth-enabled devices, and a microUSB charging port to juice up the rechargeable battery. Small rubber feet ensure that the keyboard won’t slide around on smooth surfaces.

Using advanced Bluetooth 3.0 technology, users can pair and connect their iPad to the keyboard instantly. You can get a stable connection within a 360 degree wide range and transmission distance up to 30 feet. You only need to pair the keyboard to your iPad once because the iPad will remember the device pairing for future use.

The battery lasts up to one month before it needs to be recharged with the included cable, and it is compatible with any Bluetooth-enabled device.

source: interaksyon.com

The Marshall Stanmore


Small in size, but not in subtle in sound, the Stanmore is a compact active stereo speaker that yields clean and precise sound even at high levels.

Stanmore’s classic design is a throwback to the golden days of rock n’ roll, and its analog interaction knobs give you custom control of your music.

With a vintage-looking fret, gold details, iconic gold piping and script logo, the Stanmore is right at home with the rest of the Marshall collection. Hook it up wirelessly via Bluetooth, use the RCA input to plug in your vinyl player or simply connect the coil cord that’s included to your phone using the 3.5mm auxiliary input.

The Stanmore is also compatible with devices with optical output.

source: interaksyon.com

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Indian dentist couple given life in prison for daughter's murder


GHAZIABAD - A prosperous Indian dentist couple were sentenced to life in prison on Tuesday for slitting the throats of their teenage daughter and domestic servant in a case that transfixed the nation.

Rajesh and Nupur Talwar had been convicted on Monday of murdering Aarushi, 14, and Nepalese employee Hemraj Banjade at their home in an affluent New Delhi suburb in 2008, following a trial whose every detail was scrutinized by the media.

Judge Shyam Lal rejected prosecution requests for the death penalty during a hearing on Tuesday, instead giving the couple life in jail for the killings that investigators allege were carried out with "clinical precision".

"Life imprisonment is the basic sentence. We are satisfied with the judgement. The case has come to an end," prosecutor R.K. Saini told a horde of reporters outside the court in Ghaziabad, a satellite city just outside the capital.

The couple's jailing was the latest twist in the long-running case that has been awash with sexual rumors and allegations of police bungling and media bias.

Investigators said the Talwars killed Aarushi in a fit of rage after finding her with the 45-year-old servant in an "objectionable position", suggesting the double murder was a so-called honor killing.

The couple, successful, middle-class dentists, vowed to appeal the conviction, while their lawyers launched a scathing attack on India's Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

"The battle is not over, it has only begun. We will file an appeal and we are convinced that the conviction will be overturned," defense lawyer Tanvir Ahmed Mir told AFP.

The trial came as India increasingly focuses on violent crime against women following the fatal gang-rape of a student in Delhi last year that sparked outrage over the country's treatment of women.

The case has also raised awkward questions about the relationship between wealthy Indian families and the poor, often-migrant servants who cook, clean and look after their every need.

Top criminal lawyer Rebecca John accused the CBI of incompetence and abuse of power. It first closed the investigation, citing lack of evidence -- only to later reopen the case at the parents' request and charge them with murder.

"For an agency that asked for a closure of the case to then ask for the death sentence, I think it is a grotesque abuse of power and it raises fundamental issues about our society in the administration of justice," John told CNN-IBN.

"I think this very demand of the CBI (seeking the death penalty) is indicative of the witch-hunt that has taken place in this case."

Aarushi, whom friends described as a chirpy, high-achieving student, was found on her bed with her throat cut one morning in May 2008.

Police initially blamed the missing domestic servant Hemraj -- only to find his decomposing body on the roof a day later with a similar cut throat and head wounds.

Officers then arrested Rajesh Talwar's dental assistant and two other local servants -- Hemraj's friends -- but they were freed for lack of evidence.

The botched probe -- police failed to seal the crime scene or to find the second body for over 24 hours -- prompted investigators to close the case in 2010, citing "critical and substantial gaps" in the evidence.

The Talwars insisted they wanted the killers found and petitioned the court to reopen the case -- only to be charged themselves with murder.

The prosecution has conceded there was no forensic or material evidence against the couple, and based its case on the "last-seen theory" -- which holds that the victims were last seen with the accused.

The case has spawned a nation of armchair detectives debating every twist and turn of the investigation, has turned the Talwars into household names and has polarized public opinion.

Salacious news reports, based often on claims by unnamed police sources, have appeared about their lives, demonizing them as decadent -- even allegedly as part of a wife-swapping club.

source: interaksyon.com

Monday, November 25, 2013

Apple acquires Israel’s PrimeSense in a $350 million deal: report


Apple Inc agreed to buy Israel-based PrimeSense Ltd, a developer of chips that enable three-dimensional machine vision, for about $350 million, Bloomberg reported on Sunday citing a source.

PrimeSense’s sensing technology, which gives digital devices the ability to observe a scene in three dimensions, was used to help power Microsoft’s Xbox Kinect.

Apple’s interest in PrimeSense was first reported in July by the Israel-based Calacist news website.

Technology companies from time to time, and we generally do not discuss our purpose or plans,” a company spokeswoman Kristin Huguet told Reuters via email.

PrimeSense could not be immediately reached for comment outside regular U.S. business hours.

The PrimeSense deal makes it Apple’s second purchase of an Israeli company. It bought flash storage chip maker Anobit in January 2012.

PrimeSense’s investors include Canaan Partners, Silver Lake, Gemini Israel Funds and Genesis Partners, Bloomberg reported.

source: interaksyon.com

Thai protesters occupy finance ministry


Hundreds of Thai opposition protesters on Monday forced their way into the foreign ministry compound in Bangkok, occupying a second major government building, a ministry spokesman said.

The move came hours after demonstrators stormed the finance ministry in a dramatic escalation of their efforts to topple embattled Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

"Several hundred protesters broke down the gate and entered the compound of the foreign ministry," said the spokesman, Sek Wannamethee.

"There were many civil servants working there at the time and they (the protesters) asked them to leave and not to return to work tomorrow."

The demonstrators were occupying the foreign ministry compound but did not enter the buildings, he said.

The mass protests against Yingluck and her brother, ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra, are the biggest since 2010 when the kingdom was rocked by its worst political bloodshed in decades with more than 90 civilians killed.

The turmoil has raised fears of a fresh bout of street violence in a country that has been convulsed by several episodes of political unrest since royalist generals overthrew Thaksin in a coup in 2006.

Police said around 30,000 protesters opposed to Yingluck's elected government marched on more than a dozen state agencies across the capital on Monday including military and police bases, as well as several television stations.

Hundreds of demonstrators, spurred on by protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban, occupied buildings in the compound of the finance ministry, waving flags and dancing, according to AFP correspondents at the scene.

"Tomorrow we will seize all ministries to show to the Thaksin system that they have no legitimacy to run the country," Suthep said, addressing the crowd through a loud speaker.

Chanting "Thaksin get out, army come in," some of the demonstrators had earlier called for the intervention of the military in a country that has seen 18 actual or attempted coups since it became a constitutional monarchy in 1932.

The move comes after a boisterous rally on Sunday brought up to 180,000 anti-government demonstrators on to the streets of Bangkok, according to a revised estimate Monday from National Security Council chief Paradorn Pattanatabut.

Around 50,000 pro-government "Red Shirts" met overnight in a suburban football stadium in Bangkok in support of Yingluck and Thaksin, who remains a hugely divisive figure in Thailand.

The rallies are the biggest challenge yet for Yingluck, who swept to power in elections in 2011 on a wave of support from the "Red Shirts," whose protests in 2010 were crushed by the previous government.

Yingluck on Monday told reporters she would neither resign nor dissolve parliament despite the mounting pressure.

But experts said she is running out of room to maneuver.

"Yingluck's options are very limited. Something has to give this week. It will be very difficult for Yingluck to stay in office, let alone get anything done," said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, director of the Institute of Security and International Studies at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University.

The Thai capital has faced weeks of opposition-backed rallies sparked by an amnesty bill that could have allowed the return of Thaksin from self-imposed exile.

The amnesty bill -- which was rejected by the upper house of parliament -- also angered Thaksin's supporters because it would have pardoned those responsible for the 2010 military crackdown on their rallies.

Former premier Abhisit Vejjajiva -- now the opposition leader -- and his deputy Suthep face murder charges for overseeing the military operation, which involved soldiers firing live rounds and backed by armored vehicles.

In another blow to the government, the Constitutional Court last week blocked the ruling party's plans for a fully elected Senate.

The opposition Democrat Party is seeking to raise the pressure on Yingluck with a no-confidence debate on Tuesday -- although her party dominates the lower house and should comfortably defeat a move against her.

Thaksin, a billionaire telecoms tycoon-turned-politician, draws strong support from many of the country's rural and urban working class, but is loathed by the elite and the middle classes, who accuse him of being corrupt and a threat to the monarchy.

"Yingluck, Thaksin, their party and their corrupt system must go this week," demonstrator Thanabhum Prompraphan, 50, told AFP.

"This is real people power. We will stay peaceful ... whistles are our weapons," he said.

A series of protests by the royalist "Yellow Shirts" helped to trigger the coup that toppled Thaksin, who now lives in self-imposed exile in Dubai to avoid a prison term for corruption that he contends was politically motivated.

King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 85, is widely revered in Thailand but has been in ill health for several years and the palace has been silent over the organization of his eventual succession.

source: interaksyon.com

Otterbox unveils smartphone casing-cum-wallet


MANILA, Philippines — Filipinos are in for a treat, as an industry-leading expert in protective casing recently came out with a convenient wallet that should make commuting a breeze in a country where one gets around via MRT, jeep, tricycle, and the like.

What makes this particular Commuter Wallet by Otterbox different is its storage capabilities; one can store cash, as well as important cards, even folded to-do lists at the back of the case itself via the sliding drawer, making it into a virtual wallet and phone protector all in one.

The Commuter Wallet has an interior slipcover as well as sturdy polycarbonate that can protect mobile phones from bump and shock. The self-adhering protector also protects the screens from getting scratches, and of course, the sliding drawer contains cash and cards in slim convenience.

“[It] combines convenience, security, and trusted Otterbox protection into pocket-friendly designs,” said Jay Tengco, president of Tenkiebox, official Otterbox distributor in the Philippines.

Users said that it is very incognito, and it is not obvious that the case is being used as a wallet as well.

The Otterbox Commuter Wallet is compatible with the iPhone 5/5s and Samsung GALAXY S4. Avialable colors for the iPhone 5/5s are black, glacier, and primrose, while for the Sangsung GALAXY S4, are black and glacier, and priced locally at P2,500.

source: interaksyon.com

Asus unveils ‘detachable laptop’ Transformer Book T-100


MANILA, Philippines — ASUS recently introduced its new Transformer Book T-100 in the Philippine market, as the Taiwan-based hardware maker expects high demand for detachable laptops before the year ends.

During the launch, Armelle Baylen, deputy channel manager at Asus Technology Philippines told Interaksyon.com the introduction of T100 in the Philippine market would boost its sales during the Christmas season this year.

Asus is targeting to sell 6,000 units of T-100 for the months of November and December in the local market, she said, as the company is focusing as its main product during the Holiday season.

“The T100 will create a new product for the IT industry,” she said.


T100 is a two-in-one ultraportable laptop with a detachable 10.1 inch tablet HD display.

It has an Intel Atom ‘Bay Trail’ Z3740 quad-core processor and a detachable 1366 x 768 IPS display that can be used as a standalone Windows 8.1 tablet.

“It has slim design and durable finish and one of the lightest and 10-inch tablets around,” Baylen said.

The 10.5 mm thin tablet has a display that features IPS technology for a wide 178-degreee viewing angle.

Its lightweight keyboard dock has precision-engineered keys for comfortable extended use, plus a large multi-touch touchpad with full Windows 8 gesture support.

Bundled with Microsoft Office Home & Student 2013 and an unlimited Asus webstorage, the T100 is available in the market for P23,995 with 64GB internal storage.

At the same event, Asus introduced newest offerings in the new N series, the world’s first notebook with a Quad-Speaker Array and Subwoofer powererd by 4th generation Intel core processors, equipped with NVIDIA GeForce graphics for outstanding visual performance. While the introduction of the G750 gaming notebook comes as a full desktop replacement in a sleek notebook form factor without comprimisng performance.

For multitasking and entertainment, on the other hand, Asus unveiled the X550 notebook, which also powered by 4th generation Intel Core processor; together with its spun-circle finish and patterned palm rests, the X-series adds a touch of elegance to everyday computing.

source: interaksyon.com

JFK rocking chair, flags fetch $500,000 at auction


NEW YORK - A rocking chair used by president John F. Kennedy at the White House and two flags from his office drew more than $500,000 from a collector, Heritage Auctions said Sunday.

They were among some 228 items linked to the former president put under the hammer late Saturday in Dallas, Texas, on the 50th anniversary of JFK's assassination in that city.

The two flags -- an American flag and one with the presidential seal -- were sold for $425,000, four times their pre-auction estimate, Heritage said in a statement.

The rocking chair sold for $87,500, also well above the pre-auction estimate of $50,000.

The items were owned by Dean William Rudoy, a volunteer in Kennedy's 1960 presidential campaign who collected memorabilia of the slain president over the past 50 years.

The flags and rocking chair were bought by a collector from the US Southwest who "thought it important that these two lots stay together," said Tom Slater, historical auctions director at Heritage.

He attributed the high price to the "affection and regard" people hold for JFK and to the fact that "presidential flags of any kind are tremendously sought after by collectors."

The cushioned rocking chair was stationed in the office of Kennedy's personal secretary, Evelyn Lincoln.

But it was often brought into the Oval Office so that Kennedy, who suffered from chronic back pain, could use it during his meetings and long hours at work.

The two flags, which were positioned behind his desk, were given to Kennedy's secretary five days after the president's death, at the request of his widow, Jacqueline Kennedy.

Kennedy was assassinated at the age of 46 on November 22, 1963, less than three years after taking office.

The 50th anniversary of his death prompted numerous events in the US in recent weeks, including a relatively modest ceremony in Dallas on Friday.

His killer, 24-year-old Lee Harvey Oswald, was arrested less than three hours after the shooting.

He was shot to death on live television two days later as he was being transferred to the county jail.

source: interaksyon.com

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Poetry breaks through fog of Alzheimer's sufferers


STRATFORD-UPON-AVON - The teenager's voice breaks the silence that hangs over the dozing, grey-haired figures. "If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs and blaming it on you," she recites -- "you'll be a man, my son," finishes one of the pensioners, with a burst of recognition.

Alzheimer's has stolen most of Margaret's memories, but she can still remember the line from Rudyard Kipling's famous poem that she learnt years ago, a rare moment of clarity in the fog of the cruel disease.

This retirement home in central England is one of many institutions and hospitals across the country turning to poetry to provide some respite from the symptoms of dementia, such as the loss of memory, communication and basic skills.

While it provides no cure, the rhythm and pace of well-known verse can act as a trigger for memories and speech, according to Jill Fraser, whose charity "Kissing it Better" organizes reading sessions for the elderly.

If patients "hear one word that they can remember from poetry, it brightens their day up," adds Elaine Gibbs, who runs the Hylands House retirement home in Stratford-upon-Avon -- fittingly, the home of William Shakespeare.

Miriam Cowley, elegant in a flowered dress and her grey hair tied up into a bun, listens attentively as a teenager reads her "Daffodils" by William Wordsworth.

"I did know the poem but I've forgotten it. I learnt it when I was a kid at school, a long time ago," said the retired teacher, who suffers from short-term memory loss.

"It brings back good memories. I will have some good dreams after that, dreams of daffodils, of trees."

'The poetry broke open the dam'

The home can be a sombre place because of the prevalence of residents with Alzheimer's, dubbed "the long good-bye" because of the way it slowly steals away everything that makes a person who they are.

But as a woman bashes a plate incessantly against a table at one end of the room, seemingly oblivious to her surroundings, one of the teenage volunteer readers says spending time there "gives you a real buzz."

"You come in here and everyone is sitting there by themselves," says Hannah Ciotkowski, 15. Then when someone starts reading a poem aloud "you can immediately see life in them, they are smiling."

"It's wonderful when suddenly they join in with a line," adds Anita Wright, an 81-year-old former actress with the Royal Shakespeare Company who also reads poetry at Hylands.

She recalls how one patient with advanced dementia broke down in tears when she heard a poem about a man bidding farewell to his lover, and started recounting how her fiance had died.

"She had not said a single word since she had been to this home and the poem just broke open the dam," Wright said.

Lyn Darnley, head of voice at the RSC, says poetry can be very powerful.

"These rhythms run deeply inside of us and poetry can touch and spark memories of not just emotions but the deep senses of language," she told AFP.

Experts caution that poetry will not halt the onslaught of dementia, which affects 800,000 people in Britain.

"Poetry does not cure dementia," says Dave Bell, a specialist nurse with Dementia UK, a charity which works to improve the quality of life for people affected by the disease.

"But there is a sense of achievement and self-esteem for the person because they can remember something," he says, adding that it also helps them connect with other people.

Fifteen-year-old Hannah is certainly convinced: "I hope that when I am old, people will come visit me, read to me, and sing to me."

source: interaksyon.com

Quiet Sun prompts questions about impact on Earth


WASHINGTON DC - The surface of the sun has been surprisingly calm of late -- with fewer sunspots than anytime in in the last century -- prompting curious scientists to wonder just what it might mean here on Earth.

Sunspots have been observed for millennia -- first by Chinese astronomers and then, for the first time with a telescope, by Galileo in 1610.

The sunspots appear in roughly 11-year cycles -- increasing to a daily flurry and then subsiding drastically, before amping up again.


But this cycle -- dubbed cycle 24 -- has surprised scientists with its sluggishness.

The number of spots counted since it kicked off in December 2008 is well below the average observed over the last 250 years. In fact, it's less than half.

"It is the weakest cycle the sun has been in for all the space age, for 50 years," National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association physicist Doug Biesecker told AFP.

The intense electromagnetic energy from sunspots has a significant impact on the sun's ultraviolet and X-ray emissions as well as on solar storms.

Solar storms can interrupt telecommunications and electronic networks on Earth. Sunspot activity can also have an impact on the Earth's climate.

Cycle 23 hit its maximum in April 2000 with an average of 120 solar spots a day. The cycle then wound down, hitting bottom around December 2008, the point at which scientists marked the start of the current cycle.

The minimal solar activity at the end of cycle 23 led astronomers to predict a slow cycle 24. But the reality fell even below expectations.

In the first year of the cycle, during which solar activity should have risen, astronomers counted 266 days without a single sun spot.

"The forecast peak was 90 sunspots," Biesecker said, noting that even though the activity has risen over the past year, "it's very clear it is not going to be close to 90."

"The sunspots number peaked last year at 67, almost half a typical cycle," he added.

The last time a sunspot cycle was this slow was in February 1906, the peak of cycle 14, with just 64 spots a day.

The "very long minimum: three years, three times more than the previous three cycles of the space age" was a major surprise, said University of Montana physicist Andres Munoz-Jamillio.

A magnetic switch

Cycle 24 has also diverged from the norm in another surprising way.

Typically, around the end of each 11-year sunspot cycle, the sun's magnetic fields switch direction. The northern and southern hemispheres change polarity, usually simultaneously.

During the swap, the strength of the magnetic fields drops to near zero and reappears when the polarity is reversed, scientists explain.

But this time, something different seems to be happening. The north pole already reversed its polarity several months ago -- and so it's now the same polarity as the south pole.

According to the most recent satellite measurements, "the south hemisphere should flip on the near future," said Todd Hoeksema, director of the Wilcox Solar Observatory at Stanford University.

He didn't seem concerned about the phenomenon.

But scientists are watching the sun carefully to see whether cycle 24 is going to be an aberration -- or if this solar calmness is going to stretch through the next cycle as well.

"We won't know that for another good three or four years," said Biesecker.

Some researchers speculate this could be the start of a prolonged period of weak solar activity.

The last time that happened, during the so-called "Maunder Minimum" between 1650 and 1715, almost no sunspots were observed. During the same period, temperatures dropped sharply on Earth, sparking what is called the "Little Ice Age" in Europe and North America.

As the sunspot numbers continue to stay low, it's possible the Earth's climate is being affected again.

But thanks to global warming, we're unlikely to see another ice age. "Things have not started to cooling, they just have not risen as quickly," Biesecker said.

source: interaksyon.com

Manny Pacquiao puts on boxing clinic against Brandon Rios in comeback fight


Manny Pacquiao completely outclassed Brandon Rios on Sunday, marking a triumphant return for the Filipino fight icon in his first bout in 11 months.

The 35-year-old Pacquiao, eight years Rios’ senior, put on a boxing clinic against his younger opponent winning by unanimous decision, 120-108, 119-109, 118-110.

Coming into the fight, Rios had the advantage in height, weight, and reach. But that hardly mattered as Pacquiao dominated the fight with his superior speed and boxing skills.



Pacquiao said he had two goals coming into the fight.

“Recovering from the knockout and give a good show, like the young Manny Pacquiao,” he said.

He certainly put on a good show, but did not go all out to get a knockout against his overmatched opponent.

“I’m very careful. I learned (from) the last fight,” said Pacquiao, who was knocked out by Juan Manuel Marquez in shocking fashion last December.

After the fourth round, Pacquiao’s trainer Freddie Roach complimented his fighter: “Beautiful boxing. Easy night for you so far.”

Rios could hardly connect all fight long, as Pacquiao kept him at bay with his quick feet and even quicker hands. Pacquiao opened up a cut above Rios’ left eyebrow in the sixth round, underscoring the Filipino’s dominance.

Pacquiao, however, paid tribute to Rios’ resolve to stay on his feet despite getting some heavy blows.

“He is one of the toughest opponents of my career,” said Pacquiao. “He took a lot of punches, a solid punch, the left hand, but he’s still standing.”

It was Pacquiao’s first win since 2011 after losing his last two fights in contrasting fashion — a controversial split decision defeat to Timothy Bradley and the loss to Marquez.

With the victory, Pacquiao improved his record to 55 wins against five losses and a draw.

source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, November 23, 2013

UN talks approve climate pact principles


WARSAW - UN negotiators reached consensus Saturday on some of the cornerstones of an ambitious, global climate pact to be signed in 2015 in a bid to stave off dangerous warming.

Nearly 24 hours into extra time, a plenary meeting approved a modified text, thrashed out during an hour-long emergency huddle in the Warsaw National Stadium hosting the annual round of notoriously fractious talks.

Later, in a closing plenary session of the conference, delegates applauded as the text was given the green light.

Notably, negotiators had replaced the word "commitments" for nationally-determined greenhouse gas emissions cuts, with "contributions".

Developed and developing nations have clashed in the Polish capital ever since negotiations opened on November 11 to lay the groundwork for the new pact to be signed in Paris by December 2015.

It will be the first to bind all the world's nations to curbing Earth-warming greenhouse gas emissions from burning coal, oil and gas.

A key point of contention in Warsaw was the opposition of emerging economies like China and India to any "commitments" that were equally binding to rich and poor states and did not take into account their history of greenhouse gas emissions.

The issue is a fundamental one that has bedevilled the UN climate process since its inception 18 years ago.

Developing nations, their growth largely powered by fossil fuel combustion, blame the West's long emissions history for the peril facing the planet, and insist their wealthier counterparts carry a larger responsibility to fix the problem.

"Only developed countries should have commitments," Chinese negotiator Su Wei earlier told fellow negotiators. Emerging economies could merely be expected to "enhance action", he said.

The West, though, insists emerging economies must do their fair share, considering that China is now the world's biggest emitter of CO2, with India in fourth place after the United States and Europe.

Delegates had also reached a consensus agreement on financing to help poor countries deal with climate change effects.

But early Saturday evening, no agreement had yet been struck on creating a "loss and damage" mechanism for future climate harm that vulnerable countries say is no longer avoidable.

source: interaksyon.com

17-year old Fil-Am clinches lead role in London restaging of ‘Miss Saigon’


The much-awaited 25th anniversary West End revival of “Miss Saigon” is finally put into motion as producer Cameron Mackintosh has announced the casting of 17-year-old Filipino-American singer named Eva Noblezada in the coveted lead role.

According to a report by DailyMail.co.uk, Eva is a native of Charlotte, North Carolina who was discovered by casting director Tara Rubin at the 2013 Jimmy Awards in New York City.

“Tara said: ‘This girl’s fantastic!’ She filmed her and sent the footage to me and a few weeks ago I went to meet with Eva. She’s performed in shows at her school, but she has never done a big professional musical before,” Mackintosh told the Daily Mail. Watch Eva perform in this video from the Blumey Awards in Charlotte, NC last June:

Noblezada joins a long line of famous Filipinas who have essayed the role of the Vietnamese bar girl who fell in love with an American GI at the tailend of the Vietnam War. These include Monique Wilson, Joanna Ampil, Ima Castro, Jennifer Paz, Ivy Rose Padilla, Ma-Anne Dionisio, Cezarah Campos and Lea Salonga, who originated the role.

Salonga’s starmaking performance of Kim won her a Tony Award and a Laurence Olivier Award and is, hands down, considered by many as her finest hour in theater.

The report said Noblezada reminded Mackintosh of Salonga, who was also 17 when she bagged the role. It added that Noblezada’s aunt, Annette Calud, who initially played a bar girl in the Broadway production of the show will reprise the same role when “Miss Saigon” starts performances at the Prince Edward Theatre on May 3 next year.

So whatever happened to the Manila auditions last year that yielded seven shortlisted aspirants for the musical?

One of them, namely pop singer Rachelle Ann Go, has been cast in the supporting role of Gigi, the hardened stripper initially voted Miss Saigon who gets to sing one of the most popular songs in the musical, “Movie in My Mind”. The role was played by Isay Alvarez in the musical’s original West End production in 1989.

A recording star who started her singing career as the grand champion of the GMA singing contest “Search for a Star” in 2004, Rachelle made her theater debut last year in the lead role of Princess Ariel in Atlantis Productions’ staging of Disney’s “The Little Mermaid”.

The role won Rachelle a Best Actress in a Musical award from Broadway World Philippine Awards and paved the way for flourishing new career as a theatre actress. This year, she is once again nominated for a Best Actress in a Musical award for her performance as Jane Potter in Viva Atlantis Theatricals’ “Tarzan”.

The other announced cast members of the West End restaging of“Miss Saigon” so far are Jon Jon Briones as the Engineer, Alistair Brammer as Chris, Hugh Maynard as John and Tamsin Carroll as Ellen. Understudies for the roles of Kim and Gigi are not yet known.

source: interaksyon.com

As rich, poor nations butt heads, troubled UN climate talks run into extra time


WARSAW -- UN climate talks were blocked in Warsaw Saturday more than 12 hours after they were to have delivered a roadmap towards a global pact to stave of dangerous global warming.

The belligerent negotiations were to have closed at 1700 GMT on Friday, but by breakfast time Saturday, diplomats were still shuttling to and fro in a last-ditch bid to find consensus.

"There will be no forcing of decisions against the will of parties," conference president Marcin Korolec of Poland told a brief stock-taking meeting at 0600 GMT -- and said it was "premature" to set a time for the closing plenary meeting.

"We will reconvene here in a formal setting at 9am (0800 GMT) to address the situation and find a way forward to conclude the conference," he said.

The Warsaw round of the notoriously fractious annual talks have seen rich and poor nations butting heads since November 11 about their respective contributions to the UN-backed goal of limiting average global warming to 2.0 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial levels.

UN nations had agreed to sign a global deal by 2015 to meet this goal with binding targets for all countries to curb climate-altering greenhouse gas emissions.

The pact must be inked in Paris in two years' time, and will enter into effect in 2020.

Negotiators from over 190 countries argued in the Polish capital over apportioning targets for carbon emissions cuts between rich and poor states, and over funding for climate-vulnerable countries.

On current emissions trends, scientists warn the Earth could face warming of 4.0 C or higher over pre-industrial levels -- a recipe for catastrophic storms, droughts, floods and land-gobbling sea-level rise that would hit poor countries disproportionally hard.

A major sticking point was the insistence of some developing nations like China and India, their growth fuelled by fossil fuel combustion, to be guaranteed less onerous emissions curbs compared to wealthy nations.

In hotly disputed language, some wanted the new deal to impose "commitments" on developed countries, whose long history of emissions they blame for the current state of affairs, and seek only "efforts" from emerging economies.

The West, though, insists emerging economies must do their fair share, considering that China is now the world's biggest emitter of CO2, with India in fourth place after the United States and Europe.

A draft text that negotiators mulled over on Saturday underlined that the pact would be "applicable to all parties".

And it invited the world's nations to announce their emissions-curbing commitments "well in advance" of the Paris gathering.

Money was also a bone of contention.

Developing nations insist that wealthy nations must show how they intend to keep a promise to ramp up climate aid to $100 billion (74 billion euros) by 2020, up from $10 billion a year from 2010-12.

Still struggling with an economic crisis, however, the developed world is wary of unveiling a detailed long-term funding plan at this stage.

A separate draft text on finance "urges" parties to mobilise funds "at increasing levels".

"We came here for a finance COP (Conference of Parties). What we got was peanuts," Bangladeshi negotiator Qamrul Chowdhury told AFP of the text on Saturday.

The funding crunch lies at the heart of another issue which bedevilled the talks: demands by developing countries for a "loss and damage" mechanism to help them deal with future harm from climate impacts they say are too late to avoid.

Rich nations feared this would amount to signing a blank cheque for never-ending liability.

Observers said a compromise on this point may be announced soon.

On Thursday, environment and developmental observer groups stormed out of the conference, saying the talks had produced little more than hot air and were "on track to deliver virtually nothing".

source: interaksyon.com

Actor Hugh Jackman reveals skin cancer scare on Instagram


LOS ANGELES | Australian actor Hugh Jackman said on Thursday that he had a skin cancer scare when doctors diagnosed a mark on his nose as cancerous cells.

Jackman, 45, posted a photo of his face and a bandage on his nose on his Instagram page, saying his wife, Deborra-Lee Furness, told him to get his nose checked, and he was diagnosed with basal cell carcinoma, cancerous cells that grow on the surface of the skin.

“Please don’t be foolish like me. Get yourself checked. And USE sunscreen!!!” the “Les Miserables” actor said in the Instagram caption.

Representatives for Jackman had no updates on the actor’s condition beyond his Instagram post.

The online medical site WebMD.com said basal cell carcinoma is the most common form of skin cancer and accounts for more than 90 percent of U.S. skin cancer patients. The basal cell carcinomas rarely spread but if not removed can damage and disfigure surrounding tissue.

Jackman is one of Hollywood’s leading action stars, best known as superhero Wolverine in the “X-Men” films.

He was nominated for a best actor Oscar this year for his role as prisoner-turned-businessman Jean Valjean in the film adaptation of “Les Miserables.” He also starred alongside Jake Gyllenhaal in this fall’s gritty drama “Prisoners.”

source: interaksyon.com

Microsoft sells over a million Xbox Ones in under 24 hours


Microsoft Corp sold over 1 million of its new Xbox One game consoles within 24 hours of their hitting store shelves on Friday, on par with Sony Corp’s PlayStation 4 despite launching in far more countries.

The new console, which launched in 13 countries, set a record for first-day Xbox sales and is currently sold out at most retailers, Microsoft said in a statement.

Sony said it sold 1 million PS4 units in 24 hours after launching last Friday in just the United States and Canada. The PS4 expands to other regions, including Europe, Australia and South America, from November 29. It then hits Japan in February.

Microsoft is locked in a console war with Sony this holiday season. The software giant hopes the Xbox One not only entices gamers but attracts a broader consumer base of TV fans and music lovers with its interactive entertainment features and media apps.

“We are working hard to create more Xbox One consoles,” said Yusuf Mehdi, corporate vice president of marketing and strategy at Xbox.

Robert W. Baird & Co analyst Colin Sebastian has said he expects shipments of 2.5 million to 3 million units for both the Xbox One and PS4 in the fourth quarter.

Both the PS4, priced at $399 in the United States, and the Xbox One, with a price tag of $499, offer improved graphics for realistic effects, processors that allow faster game play and a slew of exclusive video games.

source: interaksyon.com

Manny Pacquiao confident, Freddie Roach sees fourth round KO against Brandon Rios


MACAU – Filipino boxing great Manny Pacquiao declared he was back to his best as he weighed in comfortably under the 147 pound limit on Saturday ahead of his comeback fight against American Brandon Rios.

Asked if his army of fans in Asia would see the Pacquiao that lost both his last two fights in 2012 or the ferocious destroying force of 2006, his last ring appearance on the continent, “Pac-Man” oozed confidence and said it would definitely be the latter on Sunday morning.




“This fight is going to be different,” he told HBO television immediately after tipping the scales at 145 pounds.

Pacquiao, who will be 35 next month, has put himself though two months of intense physical preparation, “like when I was young”, in General Santos City in the lead-up to the World Boxing Organisation International welterweight championship bout.

“This is one of the longest training camps I had in my boxing career,” a smiling Pacquiao said. “We did our best training and we did it like when I was young,” added the only man to have world titles at eight different weights.

His Hall of Fame trainer Freddie Roach agreed. “This was the happiest and most productive camp I have had with Manny in years,” Roach said.

“Based on our last workout, I don’t see how Rios makes it past the fourth round.”

Pacquiao, a Filipino congressman, had to deal during training camp with the tragic distraction of Super Typhoon Haiyan tearing through his country on November 8, leaving more than 5,000 people dead or missing.

“I cried when I saw what had happened,” he admitted earlier this week. “To all the people and the families who have been affected by this storm, the typhoon: This fight is for you.”

Pacquiao enjoyed huge support from a large Filipino presence at the Cotai Arena for the 7:30 am (2330 GMT, Friday) weigh-in as chants of “Manny, Manny” rang around the auditorium.

“I’m so happy that the fight is in Asia and very close to the Philippines,” he said and paraded a T-shirt on stage reading “WBO Rescue Team – Yolanda (Haiyan) Relief”.

Rios came in just under the welterweight limit at 146 1/2 pounds, a pound and a half heavier than Pacquiao who is two inches shorter than the American.

The former lightweight world champion has never fought at welterweight but said the step up was no problem.

“I feel I’m 100 per cent of my weight now. I didn’t have to take any off,” said Rios after stepping on the scales.

“How am I going to beat him?” he said. “My heart and my balls. I’m hungry. I want that title.

“Here’s a message to Freddie Roach: Supposedly I’m a bum. I can’t make the weight. I’m a fat loser — you’ll see in the ring tomorrow.”

Fight promoter Bob Arum told AFP that it had been 38 years since his Top Rank organisation had held such an oddly-timed weigh-in, designed to cater to TV audiences in the US.

“The last time we did something like this early in the morning was Muhammad Ali v Joe Frazier in 1975,” said Arum, referring to the “Thriller in Manila” which has gone down in history as one of the greatest heavyweight contests of all time.

“And what a fight that turned out to be.”

source: interaksyon.com

S&P 500 ends above 1,800 for first time


NEW YORK - Stocks rose on Friday, with the S&P 500 closing above 1,800 for the first time and healthcare names leading the way higher.

The Dow industrials ended at another record high above 16,000.

Both the Dow and the S&P 500 recorded their seventh straight week of gains in what has been a very strong year for stocks. The seven-week advance comes just ahead of December, which since 1950 has been the best month for both the Dow and the S&P.

"We're advising our clients to take this ride until the end of the year," said Drew Nordlicht, managing director and partner at Hightower San Diego.

The Nasdaq Biotech Index jumped 3 percent, driven by a surge in Biogen Idec.

Shares of Biogen shot up 13.2 percent on heavy volume to $285.62 after the company won 10 years of exclusivity protection for its multiple sclerosis drug, Tecfidera, from regulators in Europe.

"Healthcare is the place to be. It's a hot area. People want stocks in healthcare, industrials and consumer discretionary. That's where tactical investors have been focused, and that's where the money has been flowing," said Michael Matousek, head trader at U.S. Global Investors Inc, in San Antonio, Texas.

European regulators also recommended approval of a new drug for hepatitis C from Gilead Sciences, which pushed its shares up 3.7 percent to $74.27.

The S&P 500 healthcare sector index has gained 37.5 percent so far in 2013, making it the S&P 500's best-performing sector this year.

Such moves give investors who have enjoyed some of the 26.5 percent surge in the S&P 500 this year an opportunity to reduce their positions ahead of an eventual market correction.

The CBOE Volatility Index fell 3.2 percent to close at 12.86.

With volatility low and the price of options cheap, "you can lighten your stock position, but replace it with a derivative. This way, if the market were to tank, you would lose a lot less on the derivative than you would lose on the stock," Matousek said.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 54.78 points, or 0.34 percent, to end at a record 16,064.77. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index gained 8.91 points, or 0.50 percent, to finish at 1,804.76. The Nasdaq Composite Index climbed 22.50 points, or 0.57 percent, to close at 3,991.65.

Dennis Lockhart, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said on CNBC that reducing the pace of the central bank's bond-buying program will be on the table at its December policy meeting. He added that monetary policy is likely to be very accommodative for some time.

"In the meantime, $85 billion a month keeps swirling into investor hands, and some of that finds its way out into the financial markets, including the stock market," said Fred Dickson, chief market strategist at D.A. Davidson & Co., in Lake Oswego, Oregon.

Intel fell 5.4 percent to $23.87 and was the biggest drag on the S&P 500 after analysts questioned whether the chipmaker can get higher-margin chips into tablets and smartphones, which are eroding sales of traditional PCs.

source: interaksyon.com

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Singer Chris Brown ordered by Los Angeles judge into 90 days of rehab


LOS ANGELES | A Los Angeles judge on Wednesday ordered R&B singer Chris Brown to complete a 90-day substance abuse and anger management program, capping a probation hearing that followed the Grammy winner’s assault charge in Washington, D.C., last month.

The judge also requested more information about the arrest to determine whether the 24-year-old singer had violated the terms of his probation.

Brown was placed on five years’ probation as part of his 2009 sentence for assaulting fellow R&B singer and girlfriend Rihanna. He also was ordered then to perform 180 days of community service and undergo domestic violence counseling.

In addition to the latest order for rehab, Brown will have to serve at least 24 hours of community service a week, submit to periodic drug testing and take prescribed medication, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge James Brandlin ordered.

The singer responded “yes” when the judge asked if he accepted the modified terms of probation.

While Brown is to remain in Los Angeles County, the judge said the performer would be allowed to travel to Washington for court dates related to the assault charge, the next of which is set for Monday.

Brown pleaded not guilty in October to misdemeanor assault stemming from an incident in which police said both he and his bodyguard both punched a man in the face outside a Washington hotel, where Brown had a nightclub appearance.

The singer served a voluntary two-week stay in a rehabilitation facility for anger management after his arrest.

Brown has had several highly publicized altercations in recent years, including a brawl between his entourage and that of rapper Drake at a New York night club and a parking lot fracas with R&B singer Frank Ocean in January in West Hollywood.

Brown’s probation was revoked in May in relation to a hit-and-run traffic accident. It was reinstated in August after he agreed to complete 1,000 additional hours of community service.

In February, he was accused by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office of cutting corners in this community service sentence, which he was allowed to complete in his home state of Virginia.

Prosecutors alleged that Brown was not at the recorded location of his community service but was instead performing or traveling, once on a private jet bound for Cancun, Mexico.

Judge Brandlin set the next probation hearing for December 16.

source: interaksyon.com

Discovery World dives on stock market debut after 'Yolanda' triggers cancellations


Shares of Discovery World Corp fell sharply on its trading debut today, mirroring the weakness in the broader market.

Shares of the luxury resort developer dropped 11.59 percent to a session low of P2.90 per share from its listing price of P3.28 apiece. The stock price did not break past its listing price throughout the session.

"I guess it's a case of bad timing. People were cutting exposure on equities. Discovery World was no exception," said Jose Vistan of AB Capital Securities Inc.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index was down 32.45 points or 0.53 percent to close at 6,122.89 today.

On the sidelines of its listing ceremony, Discovery World president John Y. Tiu told reporters that the company expects the onslaught of Typhoon 'Yolanda' to make a slight dent on sales and profit.

"Calamities will always happen. We believe strongly in the growth of the Philippine tourism industry. While the country is currently experiencing some slowness in growth because of the typhoon, we believe moving forward, the prospects for the tourism industry is extremely bright," Tiu said.

Discovery Shores Boracay experienced "minimal" cancellations at the peak of the typhoon's onslaught, but its waiting list of clients can "more than absorb" the cancellations, Tiu said.

Discovery World was forced to shut down operations of newly acquired Club Paradise in Coron, Palawan. The renovation of the resort will be finished in a month just in time for the peak season, Tiu said.

"There might be a slight reduction in revenues. We expect some cancellations from guests because of the initial impact of ‘Yolanda.’ In the medium term, we don't see any effect as long as we get the generators online," he said, adding that facilities at Club Paradise are insured.

Discovery World is purchasing more generator sets to support the close to 1-megawatt requirement of Discovery Shores Boracay. The firm's reliance on gensets will hike its power costs by about 15-20 percent, Tiu said.

"In Boracay, the main issue there is the power situation. We have over 150 percent back-up power and we're purchasing generators to make sure we have continuous power that's why we're fully operational," he said.

"About 12-15 hours would be tapped to the grid then we use the gensets for the balance of 12 or 19 hours that's left," he said.

Discovery World may spend as much as P1 billion to expand Club Paradise and Discovery Shores. It plans to start developing the beach properties owned by Palawan Cove Corp in San Vicente, Palawan next year -- a venture that has been delayed following the acquisition of Club Paradise.

Discovery World, the eighth company to go public this year, raised P551 million from the public offering of 168 million shares.

Net proceeds of P516.46 million from the share sale will be used to retire debts incurred for the acquisition of Club Paradise and to bankroll investments in Palawan Cove and in Discovery Fleet Corp, which offers full diving and non-diving programs.

The company plans to start the development of the San Vicente property next year. It has been delayed following the acquisition of Club Paradise.

Discovery World doubled its net income to P30.53 million in the first half from P15.59 billion in the same period last year following a slight uptick in revenues and lower operating expenses.

source: interaksyon.com

Illinois becomes 16th US state to legalize gay marriage


CHICAGO - Illinois became the 16th US state to legalize gay marriage Wednesday, just days after Hawaii passed marriage equality legislation.

"What we're celebrating today is the triumph of democracy, the triumph of liberty," Governor Pat Quinn said as he prepared to sign the bill into law on a desk used by President Abraham Lincoln, who hailed from Illinois.

"Part of our unfinished business is to help the rest of America achieve marriage equality," Quinn said at an hour-long bill signing ceremony attended by around 3,000 cheering people.


Marriage laws are governed by individual US states, 29 of which have amended their constitutions to ban same-sex marriage.

Efforts to give same-sex couples the same rights as heterosexuals have gathered steam in recent years.

Perhaps one of the most important victories was when the US Supreme Court in June struck down the Defense of Marriage Act, which defined marriage as between one man and one woman.

As a result, the federal government was allowed to recognize same-sex couples in all federal matters, such as sharing pension benefits.

Courts have also overturned state bans on gay marriage, most recently in New Jersey.

The 2012 elections were considered a sea change for the matter.

Voters in three states -- Maine, Maryland, and Washington -- endorsed ballot measures aimed at legalizing gay marriage while Minnesota voters rejected an effort to enshrine a gay marriage ban in the state constitution.

The Illinois bill is set to go in effect on June 1, 2014. The Midwestern state is the 5th largest state in the nation with a population of 13 million people.

source: interaksyon.com

Media mogul Rupert Murdoch seals 'amicable' divorce from third wife


NEW YORK CITY - Media mogul Rupert Murdoch and his estranged third wife Wendi Deng have agreed on an "amicable" divorce settlement, the couple announced in New York Wednesday.

Murdoch, 82, and Deng, 44, issued the statement after attending a brief hearing before New York judge Ellen Gesmer.

The couple, who were married in 1999, made no comment after the 10-minute hearing, and the terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

"We are pleased to announce that we have reached an amicable settlement of all matters relating to our divorce," the statement said.

"We move forward with mutual respect and a shared interest in the health and happiness of our two daughters. We will not comment on this any further."

The couple has 60 days to implement the settlement before the divorce is final, US media reports said.

"I am glad you've been able to resolve these matters amicably," Judge Gesmer was quoted as saying in US media reports.

"Good luck to both of you."

Murdoch had filed for divorce in June, saying his marriage with Deng, nearly 40 years his junior, was "irretrievably broken."

The couple have two daughters, Grace Helen, 12, and Chloe, 10.

Several US media reports said that as part of the settlement Deng would keep her luxury apartment on 5th Avenue in New York, valued at $44 million.

The couple had signed a pre-nuptial agreement ensuring that Murdoch's grip on his media empire would not be affected by any possible break-up.

The Australian-American tycoon's media empire was split into two in June: News Corp, for print media, and 21st Century Fox, for television and cinema.

Deng and the couple's two daughters have no voting rights in the company, in contrast to Murdoch's four other children from his two previous marriages.

Murdoch, whose fortune is estimated by Forbes at around $13.4 billion, owns some of the most famous newspaper titles in the world, including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Post and British dailies The Times and The Sun.

His British newspaper arm was embroiled in a phone-hacking scandal which erupted in 2011, ultimately leading to the closure of Sunday tabloid The News of the World.

Deng met Murdoch while she worked at his Star Television company in Hong Kong, where former colleagues have described her as an expert networker with big ambitions.

Born in the eastern Chinese city of Xuzhou in 1968 -- at the height of the Cultural Revolution -- she left China at 19 to study in the United States. She graduated from the Yale School of Management in 1996.

Last year, she famously leapt out of her seat to counter-attack a protester who hit Murdoch with a cream pie during testimony before a British parliamentary committee over the hacking of cellphone voice mails by his now-defunct News of the World tabloid.

source: interaksyon.com

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Warnings of 'sudden' cardiac death may come weeks early - study


Signs of approaching "sudden" cardiac arrest, an electrical malfunction that stops the heart, usually appear at least a month ahead of time, according to a study of middle-age men in Portland, Oregon.

"We're looking at how to identify the Tim Russerts and Jim Gandolfinis -- middle aged men in their 50s who drop dead and we don't have enough information why," said Sumeet Chugh, senior author of the study and associate director for genomic cardiology at the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute in Los Angeles.

Some 360,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests occur each year in the United States, largely involving middle-aged men, with only 9.5 percent surviving, according to the American Heart Association.

Patients can survive if they are given cardiopulmonary resuscitation or CPR immediately and their hearts are jolted back into normal rhythm with a defibrillator.

Earlier clinical trials have focused only on symptoms or warnings signs within an hour of such attacks.

But Chugh's study set out to determine whether signs and symptoms occurred as much as a month before sudden cardiac arrests.

Researchers went back and examined medical records of men 35 to 65 years old after they had out-of-hospital attacks. In addition, paramedics reaching the scene of fatal attacks asked family members what signs and symptoms the patient may have had in preceding weeks.

Among 567 men who had "sudden" arrests, researchers determined 53 percent had symptoms beforehand. Among those with symptoms, 56 had chest pain, 13 percent had shortness of breath and 4 percent had dizziness, fainting or palpitations.

About 80 percent of symptoms happened between four weeks and one hour before the cardiac arrest, researchers said. And although most men had coronary artery disease, just half had been tested for it before their attacks.

"The findings were entirely unexpected," Chugh said. "We never thought more than half of these middle-aged men would have had warning signs so long before their cardiac arrests. Previously we thought most people don't have symptoms so we can't do anything about it."

Chugh said most people who have the same kinds of symptoms don't go on to have cardiac arrests.

"Even so, they should seek medical care," he said. "The message here is, if you have these signs or symptoms, please don't ignore them: seek healthcare."

Chugh said he and his colleagues are also attempting to identify people at risk by comparing biologies of those that have had sudden cardiac arrests with sample populations in Portland that have never had cardiac arrests.

The new findings, from the 11-year-old "Oregon Sudden Unexpected Death Study," were presented on Tuesday at the annual scientific sessions of the American Heart Association being held in Dallas.

The researchers are conducting similar studies among women. The ongoing study is being funded by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, AHA and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.

source: interaksyon.com

Singer Kelly Clarkson pregnant with first child


LOS ANGELES | Pop singer Kelly Clarkson is pregnant with her first child, the 31-year-old Grammy winner announced on Twitter on Tuesday.

“I’m pregnant!!! Brandon and I are so excited! Best early Christmas present ever :) ,” Clarkson tweeted.

Clarkson, the first contestant to win the Fox singing competition “American Idol,” married talent manager Brandon Blackstock in October.

The Texas-born singer is one of the most successful winners of the show, having crossed over from country to pop music with hits such as “Since U Been Gone” and “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You).”

Clarkson is the stepmother to Blackstock’s two children from a prior marriage.

source: interaksyon.com

Car, tech firms must work together to provide Internet, ‘apps’ — Ford


Automakers and technology companies need to cooperate more closely to ensure the rapid and smooth development of cars that are fully connected to the Internet, a top Ford Motor Co (F.N) executive said on Tuesday.

Ford global marketing chief Jim Farley told reporters at the Los Angeles Auto Show that the automotive and technology sectors are “at a tipping point” where they need to work together better than they have to speed the roll-out of the services in cars that allow consumers to drive safely and interact with their favorite apps or other technologies.

“The car companies have to change and the tech companies have to change,” he said to industry officials at the auto show. “For the car companies, it’s pretty clear that the mobile digital economy is not in our hands.”

Farley said automakers must acknowledge that the real value for consumers comes from outside the auto industry and they must create an open architecture that allows outside providers. Meanwhile, tech companies need to stop imposing their user interfaces on drivers in a way that makes driving unsafe.

For example, Google Inc’s (GOOG.O) Tarun Bhatnagar, director of Google Maps for Business, speaking after Farley, described using the navigation app on his smartphone that sat in his lap as he drove a rental car in Los Angeles.

“I can’t help but wonder why is it that beautiful screen in the instrument cluster of my rental car can’t provide me with a connected and safer driving experience? That needs to change,” he said.

Farley said he had no new deals with technology firms to announce, but he expected significant agreements over the next few years as the two sides work more closely together.

He said the navigation system is a natural place to start. “If the navigation system works so well on the phone, who’s going to pay for it in the car?” Farley said. “But it’s unsafe using them in a car and that’s the reality.”

Farley said automakers will have to innovate around how data is used in the car and that Ford is betting first on “brought in,” which refers to people bringing their mobile devices into the vehicle.

The other options are building the services into the car or beaming them in.

Calling the car “the ultimate mobile device,” Farley said certain apps like navigation are endemic to the car experience and automakers will need to incorporate them really well.

Ford’s Sync technology has already had a major impact on consumers’ purchasing decisions and the company has sold 10 million Sync-equipped vehicles, he said. Ninety-four percent of Ford’s 2014 model-year vehicles will be sold with the Sync technology.

source: interaksyon.com

In muted fashion, new iPhones make Philippine debut


MANILA, Philippines — Unlike in the last two years when they tried to outdo each other in terms of the grandiosity of their launches, fierce rivals Smart Communications and Globe Telecom chose to quietly introduce Apple’s new iPhones in the country and just channel the money intended for staging the events in assisting the survivors of Typhoon Yolanda.

Both Smart and Globe decided to scale down the public unveiling of the iPhone 5s and the iPhone 5c, although the PLDT-owned mobile operator held a mid-day press briefing at Fullybooked in Bonifacio Global City to formally announce the post-paid plans for the units.

The iPhone 5s (16GB, 32GB, 64GB) and iPhone 5c (16GB, 32GB) will be offered under Smart Postpaid’s Freedom Plan, All-In Plans 500, 800, 1200, 1800, and 2500; iPhone Plans 999 and 2499; and UnliData Plans 1500, 2000, and 3000.

Subscribers can enjoy premium perks and services when they avail of the iPhone 5s and iPhone 5c with Smart Infinity Plans 3500, 5000, and 8000.

Subscribers can get any color of the iPhone 5c (16 GB) for P1,499 a month with the iPhone Plan 999 (P999 monthly service fee plus P500 device amortization via credit card). iPhone Plan 999 already comes with 40 free call minutes, 100 free SMS, and unlimited data connection.

For those who need more free voice and text credits, the iPhone 5c (16 GB) can be availed with an UnliData Plan 1500 with a P2,500 cash-out. The UnliData Plan 1500 comes with unlimited data connection plus 60 free all-net minutes and 120 free all-net SMS.

Meanwhile, those interested in the iPhone 5s can get the 16GB model for only P1,799 a month with the iPhone Plan 999 (P999 monthly service fee plus P800 device amortization via credit card).

The iPhone 5s (16GB) is also available at UnliData Plan 2000 with a P2,500 cash-out. UnliData Plan 2000 comes with unlimited data connection plus 150 free all-net minutes and 200 free all-net SMS.

For Smart Infinity subscribers, the iPhone 5s (16GB) at Plan 5000 comes with 2 VIP tickets to Wicked or P14,000 worth of gift certificates. Plan 8000 subscribers meanwhile get both the iPhone 5s (32GB) and iPhone 5C (16GB).

Kathy Carag, head of Smart’s postpaid business group, said existing Smart Postpaid subscribers who wish to subscribe to an iPhone 5s or iPhone 5c package but are still under contract may opt for Smart’s WipeOut program where they can upgrade to an iPhone without waiting for their active contract to expire.

At the event, Smart also launched its online reservation and service application page.

Globe, meanwhile, also launched its iPhone postpaid plans, including an upgrade program dubbed as Globe iPhone Forever that allows new and existing subscribers to swap their current devices with an iPhone 5s or iPhone 5c, allowing them to get a new iPhone every year for free or with minimal cashout.

source: interaksyon.com