Sunday, March 31, 2013

Mark Kelly: Gun control bills need better background checks

Giffords and Kelly appear at a hearing on Capitol Hill, Jan. 30, 2013. (AP/File)

Mark Kelly, retired astronaut and husband of former Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, told "Fox News Sunday" that gun control legislation currently being discussed in Congress needs to include a background check that carries better mental health screening.

Kelly argued that a recent poll showing 90 percent of Americans support a universal background check should be a signal to Congress to take action, and that mental health records need to be considered when selling someone a gun.

?I would love to work with leadership of [the National Rifle Association] to make sure we get those records in the system," Kelly said Sunday.

Had such a system been in place in January 2011, Kelly said, his wife would not have been shot in the head and six people would not have been killed in a mass shooting in Tucson.

Jared Loughner, who pleaded guilty to the killings, passed a background check "despite evidence of his agitated mental state," the Associated Press reported.

The NRA has argued that additional legislation for background checks punish law-abiding gun owners. On Sunday, Kelly said a recent video showing a 5-minute background check proves it is ?not the burden that the NRA leadership says it is."

On NBC's "Meet The Press," Sen. Chuck Schumer called the proposed universal background check bill a ?sweet spot? because it ?would do a whole lot of good and had a good chance of passing."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/kelly-giffords-gun-control-background-checks-nra-161223691.html

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Exclusive: Indonesia's CT Corp proposes all-cash deal for Bakrie's media unit

By Janeman Latul and Randy Fabi

TANJUNG BENOA, Indonesia (Reuters) - Indonesia's fifth-richest man has proposed to buy a controlling stake in PT Visi Media Asia, valued at up to $1.8 billion, in an all-cash deal that would give him the lion's share of the TV advertising market in Southeast Asia's biggest economy.

Chairul Tanjung, the billionaire founder and chairman of CT Corp, a conglomerate with banking and media interests, told Reuters that his company wanted to buy the stake in the media unit of Indonesia's powerful Bakrie family without any partners.

The purchase would add Visi Media's two television stations to the two that CT Corp already owns, giving Tanjung's company a market share of more than 40 percent by TV ad revenue. Media companies are eyeing growth in the overall advertising market - worth $1.7 billion in 2011, according to the latest government data - on the back of Indonesia's rapid economic expansion.

"We are one of the preferred bidders. Our proposal is we want to buy it all ... my pocket is still deep," the 51-year-old Tanjung said in his hotel room on the resort island of Bali, shortly after meeting with the president and cabinet ministers in his role as head of the president's economic advisory body.

"(It is) only us that can pay cash one hundred percent ... but the deal is not done yet."

Tanjung said CT Corp would take out a new loan to buy the Visi Media stake. He declined to say how much the company would borrow for the deal.

Indonesia's politically influential Bakrie family has been in talks to sell around a 51 percent stake in Visi Media to help finance a plan to buy back coal assets from London-listed Bumi Plc , sources with direct knowledge have told Reuters.

The Bakries had originally been looking for a valuation of $1.2 billion to $2 billion for the unit, but the sources said it would be worth up to $1.8 billion. The talks have been going on for the past three months with local bidders including CT Corp and MNC Group, the sources said.

Currently, MNC group is the TV sector leader with a 38 percent share by ad revenue. CT Corp's Trans Media Group has a 24.8 percent share and the Sariaatmadja family's Elang Mahkota media group has 23.8 percent, government data shows.

Tanjung's comments marked the first time any bidder has publicly announced that it was offering to buy the company.

MNC was not immediately available for comment.

Shares of Visi, which has a market value of around $800 million, did not trade on Friday because of a public holiday.

'BUILD A CITY'

Tanjung, who trained as a dentist before becoming a businessman, has a net worth of around $3.4 billion, according to Forbes.

He started his company in 1987, building it from a maker of footwear and roof tiles to a conglomerate with interests from financial firms like PT Bank Mega Tbk to the CT Agro palm oil company.

Targeting strong growth in the local consumer industry, CT Corp has bought a 60 percent stake in the Indonesian supermarket operations of European retailer Carrefour for $673 million.

CT Corp also plans to build a $3 billion theme park on Indonesia's Java island and make it one of the biggest theme parks in Southeast Asia when it opens in 2016, Tanjung said.

He said the land for the park would be around 200 hectares and that construction would start by the end of this year.

The group currently operates two theme parks and has plans to add another 20 theme parks across Indonesia over the next few years.

"We will build a city, not only a theme park, as I want to make many Indonesians feel happy," Tanjung said.

(Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Chris Gallagher)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-indonesias-ct-corp-proposes-cash-deal-bakries-041447140--finance.html

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Saturday, March 30, 2013

Oklahoma to allow horses to be slaughtered for meat

By Steve Olafson, Barbara Goldberg and Philip Barbara, Reuters

OKLAHOMA CITY -- Oklahoma took a step toward allowing livestock owners to slaughter horses for food on Friday when the governor signed a bill that permits the practice, but processing plants must first be authorized by the federal government.

Governor Mary Fallin's action legalized the slaughter of horses so that their meat may be prepared and packaged for export. But slaughterhouses must get U.S. Department of Agriculture authorization, Fallin said.

The slaughter of horses for food had been illegal in Oklahoma since 1963 and was carried out only in Texas and Illinois until Congress stopped it in 2006. The congressional ban was lifted in 2011.

Fallin said horse slaughterhouses in Oklahoma would use more humane practices than those in Mexico because they would be inspected by federal authorities.

Horse meat was at the center of a scandal that erupted in Europe in January, when testing in Ireland revealed that some beef products also contained equine DNA.

The United States Humane Society and animal rights activists opposed the new law in Oklahoma, while livestock interests said the change preserves their private property rights and will benefit horse owners.

Related:

'Fraud on a massive scale': Europe's horse meat scandal keeps on growing

Why we don't eat horse meat: It's economics

Horse meat in the US? Unlikely, but tests are rare

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2a28c5d4/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C30A0C1752910A50Eoklahoma0Eto0Eallow0Ehorses0Eto0Ebe0Eslaughtered0Efor0Emeat0Dlite/story01.htm

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Slingbox 500 firmware update adds SlingSync support for remote photo viewing and USB drive uploads

Slingbox 500 firmware update adds SlingSync support for remote photo viewing and USB drive uploads

Your Slingbox isn't just for streaming realtime television content anymore. SlingSync, which we first heard about during CES, is now available as part of this week's firmware update, letting you upload photos and videos captured with an Android or iOS device directly to a USB drive connected to a Slingbox 500. Using SlingPlayer Mobile on your handset or tablet, you can opt for either automatic or manual transfers, enabling you to offload captured content for safekeeping. And, assuming the Slingbox 500 is connected to your television, you can then view photos and videos on your TV. Your device will need firmware number 1.3.462 in order to take advantage of SlingSync, while mobile gadgets should be using SlingPlayer Mobile version 2.4.2 for Android or 3.4.1 on iOS. Though the above feature only applies to the 500, the update also marks the return of Audio-Only mode on the Solo, Pro-HD and 500 -- the Slingbox 350 will receive that last feature in a future update.

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Source: Slingbox Support (1), (2)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/03/29/slingbox-500-slingsync-update/

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HBT NL East preview: Can Braves pace Nats?

For the past few days?we?ve been previewing the 2013 season. Here, in handy one-stop-shopping form, is our package of previews from the National League East.

The Washington Nationals; 2012 season ended with a fall-from-ahead playoff loss, but let?s not forget that they won more games than anyone last year and seem loaded for bear once again. Are they the best team in baseball right now?

The Braves got the Upton brothers but they lost Chipper Jones and Martin Prado. Does that translate to the playoffs once again?

The squad the Phillies assembled a couple of years ago seemed like it?d be poised to compete for a good long while. But last year injury and age caught up with them. Was that a bump in the road or the beginning of the end of the Halladay-Lee-Hamels-Howard-Utley-Rollins core?

The Mets are coming out of years of financial misery. How long until their on-the-field fortunes turn as well?

The Marlins introduced a whole new look in 2012 then, in gutting payroll and trading away half the roster, they reverted to old form rather abruptly. What, if anything, is worth watching in Miami?

Below are our team-by-team previews for the NL East as well as our HBT Extra feature on the division. Enjoy.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/29/2013-preview-the-national-league-east/related/

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Audioair Wants To Unlock Audio From Muted TVs Everywhere And Give Your Local Bar A New Way To Advertise

Screen Shot 2013-03-19 at 2.14.12 PMIf you've ever been in a sports bar with your friends to watch a big game, you've likely run into the "muting" problem. While the bar may have two dozen TVs, each might be playing a different game, and there's either too much sound or none at all. At most local restaurants, bars, airports and health clubs, you'll find TVs muted for this very reason.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/sIzZccJFbM4/

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Fringe therapy may help heart patients, study finds

A treatment that removes heavy metals from the body has long been touted as an alternative therapy to combat hardening arteries. Now a 10-year, $31-million clinical trial has found that chelation therapy does help heart attack patients slightly reduce their risk of serious heart problems ? but not enough for the researchers to encourage mainstream cardiologists to offer it to their patients.

The trial revealed a very modest benefit for patients who took chelation therapy rather than a placebo, according to results published Wednesday in the Journal of the American Medical Assn.

The findings came in for harsh criticism by other experts who worried that the results might encourage patients to take up a still unproven and potentially dangerous treatment.

"It's a type of medical quackery that has been around for many decades," said Dr. Steven Nissen, chair of cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.

Chelation therapy was introduced around World War II as an antidote against an arsenic-based poison gas called Lewisite. The drug tested in the JAMA study ? called ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid, or EDTA ? was used to treat lead poisoning in Navy personnel who repainted ships' hulls.

About 50 years ago, it came into vogue as an apparent way to remove mineral-rich deposits of plaque that can cause arteries to harden in a condition known as atherosclerosis.

Though still on the fringe, chelation therapy has been gaining traction: A National Center for Health Statistics report estimated that 111,000 patients had the expensive, time-consuming therapy in 2007 ? a 68% jump from 2002. Patients clearly needed more information about this unproven treatment, said Dr. Judith Hochman, a cardiologist at New York University who was not involved in the study.

"There was an imperative to study it," Hochman said.

The National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine and the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute ? two branches of the National Institutes of Health ? agreed to fund it. Researchers from 134 facilities agreed to administer a cocktail comprising disodium EDTA, vitamins and electrolytes or a placebo to 1,708 patients who were at least 50 years old and had suffered a heart attack at least six weeks earlier. The 40 infusions were spread out over more than a year.

The researchers found that chelation did reduce patients' overall risk of heart problems, such as stroke and angina requiring hospitalization. Chelation patients' heart attack rate was 6%, compared with 8% for those on the placebo.

The strongest effect was seen with procedures to reopen the coronary artery: 15% of chelation patients needed them, compared with 18% of patients who got the placebo treatment. The difference was small, but it was just enough to be statistically significant, said Dr. Gervasio Lamas, the Columbia University cardiologist who led the study.

"I can't overemphasize how unexpected these results were," he said.

But the clinical trial was beset by a host of problems, said Nissen, who wrote an editorial in JAMA that was deeply critical of the study. Many of the patients dropped out of the trial, thus weakening the results, he said. What's more, some of the patients were treated in alternative medicine centers that sold unproven remedies such as aromatherapy and crystal therapy.

"How do you get good research done at places like that?" Nissen said. "I think you don't."

In addition, the Office for Human Research Protections in the Department of Health and Human Services launched an investigation, mentioning ? among several other concerns ? that a few researchers had been involved in insurance fraud and three were convicted felons.

Lamas said all researchers were thoroughly trained for their duties, whether they were doctors experienced in clinical trials or alternative medicine practitioners with expertise in chelation treatments. He also said some patients were bound to drop out of a study that was so time-consuming. (Each infusion lasted several hours.)

JAMA Editor in Chief Howard Bauchner said the study was put through the wringer before it was published, with the results vetted by a team of cardiologists, statisticians and other researchers. It deserved to be published regardless of negative attitudes toward the paper, he said.

But the findings are far from definitive, Hochman said: "The therapy's not ready for prime time."

Dr. Harlan Krumholz, a Yale University cardiologist who was not involved in the study, said that any apparent benefits to chelation would be hard for physicians to swallow.

"A lot of people thought this would be a good study because it would be a chance to disprove a therapy that had little support among mainstream academics," Krumholz explained. "It's a terrific group of investigators who've addressed an interesting question, who've come up with a surprising result that nobody knows what to do with."

amina.khan@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/X0_KpIDveug/la-sci-chelation-heart-attacks-20130327,0,5208499.story

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PlayStation 4 lead looked at x86 chips in 2007, wants polished games on day one

PlayStation 4 lead looked at x86 chips in 2007, made developers number one

Many game developers will tell you that the PlayStation 3's Cell processor was a real bear to support. What they can't tell you: the PlayStation 4's lead architect, Mark Cerny, was already thinking of a solution as far back as 2007. He just revealed to Gamasutra that he'd been researching x86-based processors for the PS4 merely a year after the PS3 launch, knowing that there were "some issues" with realizing the Cell's potential. The new console's unified memory and eight-core CPU were the ultimate results of Cerny's talks with game creators shortly after he took the reins in 2008. We've already seen the shift in attitudes through a very developer-centric PlayStation Meeting, but Cerny wants to underscore just how different the PS4's holiday launch should be versus what we remember from 2006 -- even the first wave of PS4 games should benefit from a healthy toolset, he says. We'll know his long-term planning paid off if the initial PS4 library shows the level of refinement that took years to manifest on the PS3.

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Via: Eurogamer

Source: Gamasutra

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/jg0m_MWS078/

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Analysis: Supreme Court seems poised to avoid same-sex marriage tide (reuters)

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/294788360?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Swedish scientist to head U.N. Syria chemical weapons probe

By Louis Charbonneau and Michelle Nichols

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has named Swedish scientist Ake Sellstrom to head a U.N. investigation into allegations that chemical weapons were used in Syria, Ban's spokesman said on Tuesday.

"He is an accomplished scientist with a solid background in disarmament and international security," U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky said.

The United Nations said last week it would investigate Syrian allegations that rebels used chemical arms in an attack near the northern city of Aleppo, but Western countries sought a probe of all claims about the use of such arms, including rebel charges that the government forces used them.

If an investigation adds credibility to the rebels' claims that the government has used chemical weapons, it would represent another blow to Bashar al-Assad's efforts to retain power. If it turned out the rebels have used them, it could make countries even more reluctant to support the opposition.

It was not immediately clear who else would be on Sellstrom's team. Russia said on Monday that Russian and Chinese experts should be part of the investigation, but Moscow's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said on Tuesday that Russia would "most likely not" be represented.

Sellstrom was a chief inspector for UNSCOM, the U.N. inspection team that investigated and dismantled Iraq's biological and chemical weapons programs in the 1990s.

Sellstrom also worked with UNMOVIC, the U.N. group that returned to Iraq in 2002 and found no solid evidence that Baghdad had revived its weapons-of-mass-destruction programs before the 2003 U.S.-led invasion as Washington and London alleged at the time.

Nesirky said Sellstrom's investigation would be technical, not a criminal investigation, looking at whether chemical weapons were used and not at who may have used them.

France and Britain wrote to Ban on Thursday to draw his attention to an alleged attack near Damascus, as well as one in Homs in late December. The rebels blame Syria's government for those incidents as well as the Aleppo attack.

EXPANDING THE INVESTIGATION?

Ban made clear on Thursday that the investigation would initially focus on the Aleppo incident, in which the government and rebels accuse each other of firing a missile laden with chemicals, killing 26 people.

But he has left open the possibility that the investigation could be broadened. In a letter to the Security Council on Friday, Ban said he asked Britain, France and Syria for further information on the other alleged chemical attacks "with a view to verifying any alleged use of chemical weapons in Syria."

The suggestion that the investigation may go beyond the Aleppo attack has infuriated Russia. Security Council diplomats told Reuters on condition of anonymity that the Russian U.N. mission went so far as to ask Ban to withdraw his Friday letter.

Russia's U.N. mission had no response on Monday when asked to comment on the alleged request that Ban withdraw his letter. Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said on Monday that the Anglo-French call for a broader investigation was an attempt to "delay and possibly derail" the U.N. probe.

Russia has criticized Western and Arab calls for Assad to leave power and, together with China, has blocked three U.N. Security Council resolutions meant to pressure him to end violence. It has also differed with the West over which side was to blame for alleged massacres and other atrocities in Syria.

A member of the Syrian opposition said Sellstrom's investigation would not be hindered by the rebels.

"We can guarantee him (Sellstrom) safe passage in the areas where the incidents took place in northern Syria," Wael Merza, an adviser to the Syrian coalition's new interim Prime Minister Ghassan Hitto, told Reuters on sidelines of Arab summit in Doha.

Merza said there were at least two known cases where they suspect chemical weapons were used by forces loyal to Assad.

U.S. and European officials say there is no evidence of a chemical weapons attack, though uncovering such evidence is the goal of Sellstrom's investigation. If one is confirmed, it would be the first use of such weapons in the two-year-old Syrian conflict, which the United Nations says has cost 70,000 lives.

(Additional reporting by Yara Bayoumy in Doha; Editing by Cynthia Osterman and Vicki Allen)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/swedish-scientist-head-u-n-syria-chemical-weapons-170502319.html

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Interior designers at HBA | Dezeenjobs architecture and design ...

Design studio Hirsch Bedner Associates is looking for middleweight and senior interior designers to work in Singapore.

Interior designers?
Singapore

?Rated Number 1 in hospitality design by Interior Design magazine for 20 consecutive years. Seeking talented, enthusiastic designers for decoration and interior architecture. Come join the BEST in hospitality design.?

Our regional headquarters in Singapore is now hiring intermediate and senior designers to meet an unprecedented demand for our specialised design services.

We are looking for motivated and articulate individuals who have a passion to excel.

If you have a desire to challenge yourself with high-end design and beyond, we would like to hear from you.

Intermediate/senior interior designers

Candidates should ideally possess the following:

  • a recognised interior or architectural qualification
  • a minimum of two to three years working experience in interior design
  • a keen sense of creativity and initiative
  • FF&E and/or AutoCAD skills are required
  • knowledge of Adobe Photoshop is advantageous
  • must be a team player and possess good time management skills to meet multiple deadlines

If you are seeking a rewarding career with the world?s leading hospitality design consultancy firm, please send your resume with photograph to HRSG@HBAdesign.com

HBA selected #1 hospitality giant by interior design magazine.

Application deadline: 30/04/2013

www.hbadesign.com

Please mention that you saw this position on?Dezeen Jobs

Newsletter?|?Twitter?|?Facebook?|?Info and rates?|?Contact us

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Source: http://www.dezeenjobs.com/2013/03/26/interior-designers-at-hba/

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Syrian activists say senior rebel leader wounded

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) ? A rebel military leader who was among the first to call openly for armed insurrection against President Bashar Assad was wounded by a bomb planted in his car in eastern Syria, anti-regime activists said Monday.

Col. Riad al-Asaad, leader of a now-sidelined rebel umbrella group known as the Free Syrian Army, had his right foot amputated following the blast late on Sunday, according to an activist in the town of Mayadeen where the attack took place.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also reported the attack, saying some said al-Asaad had been killed while others said he lost a leg.

Calls to al-Asaad's cell phone went unanswered, and one of his aides reached in Turkey said he had no details.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

Al-Asaad, a former colonel in the Syrian air force who defected and fled to Turkey in 2011, became the head of the Free Syrian Army, a group of army defectors who were among the first to declare armed struggle the only way to topple the regime.

"They will soon discover that armed rebellion is the only way to break the Syrian regime," al-Asaad told The Associated Press in October 2011, soon after his group was formed.

At the time, most Syrian activists were inspired by the uprisings that had successfully toppled dictators in Tunisia and Egypt and thought popular protests would bring about the same result in Syria. But the Syrian government's vast, violent crackdown on opposition caused many to resort to arms.

Today, hundreds of independent rebel groups are fighting a civil war against Assad's forces across the country and many activists no longer bother to stage unarmed protests. The U.N. says more than 70,000 people have been killed since the first protests in March, 2011.

During that transition, al-Asaad, who spent most of his time in a refugee camp in Turkey, never managed to build effective links with most rebel groups or provide the support that would have made them recognize him as their leader. While most fighters in Syria refer to themselves as part of the "Free Army," those who say they follow al-Asaad are rare.

More recently, al-Asaad's group has been superseded by the Office of the Chiefs of Staff, which is associated with the opposition Syrian National Coalition and led by Gen. Salim Idris. That body, too, has failed to project widespread authority inside Syria, where most groups still cobble together their own funding and arms.

The Mayadeen activist said via Skype that a bomb planted in the seat of the car al-Asaad was riding in blew up as he toured the town.

The activist said rebels now control the town and most of the surrounding areas, although President Assad still has supporters, whom the activist blamed for the attack. He spoke on condition of anonymity out of concern for his safety.

Al-Asaad was traveling with an aide and a local activist, Barakat al-Haweish, both of whom were slightly injured, the activist said. Al-Asaad was taken to a local field hospital, where doctors amputated his right foot before transporting him to Turkey.

Also Monday, the opposition's exile political leadership, the Syrian National Coalition, said a delegation was heading to Doha, where the Gulf state of Qatar will host a two-day Arab League summit starting Tuesday.

Foreign ministers of the League's member states decided Monday to grant Syria's seat in the body to the opposition. The Syria government's membership was suspended earlier in the uprising.

Heading the delegation is Mouaz al-Khatib, the Coalition said in a statement on its Facebook page. He is going despite having resigned his position as Coalition leader on Sunday, citing restriction on his work inside the group and frustration with the level of international aid for the opposition.

Al-Khatib, a respected Muslim preacher before being chosen last year to head the Coalition, said in a post on his own Facebook page that he would address the summit "in the name of the Syrian people." He said the move had nothing to do with his resignation, "which will be discussed later."

The Coalition refused his resignation and has asked him to keep his job.

Also in the delegation is Ghassan Hitto, whom the coalition elected last week to head a planned interim government to govern rebel-held areas.

In Damascus, a series of mortar strikes near a downtown traffic circle on Monday killed one person and wounded several others, the government-run Ikhbariyeh TV station reported.

Umayyad Square, at the center of a large intersection west of downtown, sits near the government TV headquarters, the Sheraton hotel and a number of faculties of the University of Damascus.

Syria's state news agency reported no dead and at least six wounded in the strikes, which it said hit near the Opera House.

It was unclear who was behind that attack as well, reflecting the often chaotic nature of Syria's two-year-old civil war pitting hundreds of independent rebel groups against the forces of Assad. The U.N. says more than 70,000 people have been killed since the conflict began with political protests in March, 2011.

Such sporadic strikes on Damascus have grown more common in recent weeks and often appear to target government buildings. Most cause only material damage, but spread fear in Damascus that the capital, which has so far managed to avoid the widespread clashes that have destroyed other cities, could soon face the same fate.

Damascus residents reported hearing intensive shelling on Monday, though it was hard to tell where it was coming from.

____

Associated Press writer Albert Aji contributed reporting from Damascus, Syria.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-activists-senior-rebel-leader-wounded-084932608.html

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US eyes anti-piracy effort along west Africa coast

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The U.S. and some of its allies are considering plans to increase anti-piracy operations along Africa's west coast, spurred on by concerns that money from the attacks is funding a Nigerian-based insurgent group that is linked to one of al-Qaida's most dangerous affiliates.

Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea has escalated over the past year, and senior U.S. defense and counter-piracy officials say allied leaders are weighing whether beefed up enforcement efforts that worked against pirates off the Somalia coast might also be needed in the waters off Nigeria.

There has been growing coordination between Nigeria-based Boko Haram and al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), which was linked to the attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, last September that killed four Americans, including the ambassador. Military leaders say AQIM has become the wealthiest al-Qaida offshoot and an increasing terrorist threat to the region.

It has long been difficult to track whether there are terrorist ties to piracy in the waters off Africa. But officials are worried that even if Boko Haram insurgents aren't directly involved in the attacks off Nigeria and Cameroon, they may be reaping some of the profits and using the money for ongoing terrorist training or weapons.

No final decisions have been made on how counter-piracy operations could be increased in that region, and budget restrictions could hamper that effort, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk about emerging discussions between senior U.S. military commanders and other international leaders.

But officials say the solution could include continued work and counter-piracy training with African nations. The U.S. participated last month in a maritime exercise with European and African partners in the Gulf of Guinea.

"Maritime partnerships and maritime security and safety are increasingly important in the Gulf of Guinea region to combat a variety of challenges including maritime crime, illicit trafficking and piracy," said Gen. Carter Ham, head of U.S. Africa Command.

In recent weeks, Ham and other U.S. military commanders have bluntly warned Congress that the terrorist threat from northern Africa has become far more worrisome.

"If the threat that is present in Africa is left unaddressed, it will over time grow to an increasingly dangerous and imminent threat to U.S. interests, and certainly could develop into a threat that threatens us in other places," Ham told Congress earlier this month. "We've already seen from some places in Africa, individuals that ? from Nigeria, for example ? attempt to enter our country with explosives."

Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea has escalated from low-level armed robberies to hijackings and cargo thefts and kidnappings. Last year, London-based Lloyd's Market Association ? an umbrella group of insurers ? listed oil-rich Nigeria, neighboring Benin and nearby waters in the same risk category as Somalia.

Pirates have been more willing to use violence in their robberies, at times targeting the crew for ransom. And experts suggest that many of the pirates come from Nigeria, where corrupt law enforcement allows criminality to thrive and there's a bustling black market for stolen crude oil.

Typically, foreign companies operating in Nigeria's Niger Delta pay cash ransoms to free their employees after negotiating down kidnappers' demands. Foreign hostages can fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars apiece.

Lately, however, the attacks, which had traditionally focused on the Nigerian coast, have spread, hitting ships carrying fuel from an Ivory Coast port. In January pirates made off with about $5 million in cargo from a fuel-laden tanker near the port of Abidjan, and two weeks later a French-owned fuel tanker was hijacked in the same area.

Just days after that, three sailors were kidnapped off a U.K.-flagged ship off the coast of Nigeria, and late in February six foreigners were taken off an energy company vessel in that same region.

The International Maritime Bureau has raised alarms about the Ivory Coast attacks, calling the first January incident a "potential game changer" in piracy in the region because was the farthest ever from Nigeria in the Gulf of Guinea. And U.S. Navy Capt. Dave Rollo, who directed the recent naval exercise in the Gulf of Guinea that involved as many as 15 nations, said piracy in that area is not just a regional crime issue, it's "a global problem."

Meanwhile, over the past year, piracy off Somalia's coast has plummeted, as the U.S.-led enforcement effort beefed up patrols and encouraged increased security measures on ships transiting the region. After repeated urgings from military commanders and other officials, shipping companies increased the use of armed guards and took steps to better avoid and deter pirates.

According to data from the combined maritime force, nearly 50 ships were taken by pirates in 2010 in the Gulf of Aden and Somali Basin and there were another close to 200 unsuccessful attempts. Last year, just seven ships were pirated there along with 36 failed attacks.

Even as defense officials warn about the growing threat, they acknowledge that increasing counter-piracy operations around the Gulf of Guinea presents a number of challenges.

In recent weeks, the U.S. Navy has had to postpone or cancel a number of ship deployments because of budget cuts, including a decision not to send the aircraft carrier USS Harry S Truman to the Persian Gulf. The U.S. has maintained two carrier groups in the Gulf for much of the past two years, as tensions with Iran have escalated.

U.S. Africa Command has no ships of its own, so any U.S. vessels needed for operations would have to come from other places, such as Europe or America.

And defense officials also note that it may be difficult to build as much international interest in the Gulf of Guinea attacks as those in the more heavily traveled shipping lanes on the northeastern side of the continent.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-eyes-anti-piracy-effort-along-west-africa-151649714--politics.html

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How To Get Out Of $40K Credit Card Debt | Bankrate.com

Steve BucciDear Debt Adviser,
I was reading an article on debt and found your column. I need help. I have about $40,000 in credit card debt, and I'm one month behind on my mortgage. I'm probably a few months behind on some of my credit card debt and not sure what to do. Is bankruptcy an option? Should I sell my house and work on correcting my financial problems? Or should I just pay what I can? Thank you, Ronald.
-- Ronald

Dear Ronald,
I'm glad you found me. If you're willing to work at this problem, I'm sure I can help. Let's start with the good news -- you're back to work! A regular income is important when trying to take control of your finances. Now you just need to decide what to do.

Because you use the word "probably" to describe how far behind you are on your credit card accounts, it's clear you don't have a good handle on how much you owe, how late you are or how close you are to a foreclosure. To set you straight, I want you to begin your comeback by speaking with a counselor at a nonprofit credit counseling agency. You can find one through the National Foundation for Credit Counseling or the Association of Independent Consumer Credit Counseling Agencies.

Your counselor will make sure you don't fall into foreclosure by mistake. Most mortgage payments have a 15-day grace period. However, once a payment is late, the next month's payment is considered late if not received by the first of the month. So, by the time you think you're two weeks late, you may actually be two months late and on the verge of a foreclosure action. Most creditors do want to help, but only on their terms and terms that their regulators approve. Your counselor can help you take advantage of any assistance programs that might help.

Once you have your options laid out from your housing and credit counseling, you will have some decisions to make. Some things to consider are:

  • Are you better off renting or owning? You need to live somewhere.
  • If you need to get out of your mortgage, the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act will run out Dec. 31, 2013. This shields you from a huge tax bill in a foreclosure or short sale. So if you are going to get out of your home, this may be the year to do it.
  • Can you catch up on your missed mortgage payments? If you don't have the money, and if your lender is unwilling to work with you, you may need to sell your home.

Your next decision will be how to handle your $40,000 in credit card debt. If you have the income and the desire, a debt management plan through the credit counseling agency may work for you. You would pay off your balances in five years or so with your creditors' help in the form of lower interest charges and waived late fees. Debt settlement may also be an option for you. But I rarely recommend it, and then only if you either do it on your own (not easy) or through an attorney (expensive). Either way, it's no fun!

Bankruptcy may be an option, but from what you have said, I think you can get out of this mess without the years of damage to credit, higher insurance bills, reduced job and promotion prospects, and more. Bankruptcy is a last resort. But, if you don't have the income to both live and repay your debt, bankruptcy may be necessary. After you've explored your other options, you may want to contact an attorney for a consultation.

Good luck!

Source: http://www.bankrate.com/finance/credit-cards/get-out-40k-credit-card-debt.aspx

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Ravenmark: Mercenaries promises deep strategic warfare on iPad

We got a sneak peek at the sequel to the hugely popular warfare strategy game, Ravenmark, at PAX East 2013, and it's looking solid. The main thing in Ravenmark: Mercenaries is asynchronous multiplayer, but there's a lot going on here. Loyal Ravenmark players will also get access to an exclusive unit, which is a nice touch.

Players create their own banners and hire out their swords to warring nations in a richly-historied fantasy world. You can always engage in simple skirmish missions for your coin, over time upgrading your regiments and capitalizing on their experience, or you can take the challenge to your friends for fame and fortune.The units you can hire range from the usual infantry, cavalry, and archers, to more fantastic monsters and machines of war. On the battlefield grid, players have a wide array of tactical options imposed by mobility, terrain, and positioning.

I've spent a fair bit of time in miniatures wargaming, so it was great to see something with equal tactical depth coming to iPad with full multiplayer capabilities. Besides that, fantasy geeks will really be able to sink their teeth into the game's storyline, especially if they've been following closely since the lsat game. If you fancy yourself a cunning military genius, be sure to download Ravenmark: Mercenaries when it launches in about two months.?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/6sEoUkkAG2U/story01.htm

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Investors ask to withdraw from Chesapeake bond dispute

By Bernard Vaughan

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hedge fund investors challenging Chesapeake Energy Corp's plan to redeem $1.3 billion of notes without paying a $400 million make-whole payment have asked to withdraw from a lawsuit over the matter, allowing a bond trustee to argue on their behalf, according to court papers filed on Monday.

A withdrawal will "reduce the number of parties involved in the litigation and avoid potentially duplicative discovery efforts," Steven Bierman, a partner at Sidley Austin representing the investors, wrote in a letter to U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer in Manhattan federal court on Monday.

The embattled company sued this month to block bond trustee Bank of New York Mellon Corp from interfering with its proposed redemption of the debt at 100 cents on the dollar, or par.

The dispute is separate from other legal fights that Chesapeake, the second-largest natural gas producer in the United States, is facing. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is probing a perk that granted outgoing chief executive Aubrey McClendon a stake in company wells and the U.S. Department of Justice is investigating possible antitrust violations in Michigan land deals.

Chesapeake believed it had until March 15 to notify noteholders of its intention to redeem the notes, which have an interest rate of 6.775 percent and mature in 2019.

But the bank and owners of roughly $250 million of the notes disagreed, arguing that Chesapeake would owe an additional $400 million make-whole payment.

On Saturday, Bank of New York Mellon hired Sidley Austin to represent it alongside its existing law firm, Emmet, Marvin & Martin, according to Bierman's letter.

A trial is scheduled for April 23.

Chesapeake has said it wants to redeem the notes early as part of a broader plan to refinance debt.

Neither Chesapeake nor Bierman immediately responded to requests for comment. Bank of New York Mellon declined to comment.

The case is Chesapeake Energy Corp v. Bank of New York Mellon Trust Co, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 13-01582.

(Reporting By Bernard Vaughan. Editing by Andre Grenon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/investors-ask-withdraw-chesapeake-bond-dispute-005555729--sector.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

Burgher Recreation Club 328/10 v Sri Lanka Army Sports Club 350 ...

Cricket highlights

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Source: http://www.freecricket.tv/2013/03/24/burgher-recreation-club-v-sri-lanka-army-sports-club-2/

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Claire's Stores Family Embroiled In Blackmail Drama With Former Maid's Family: Report

She said she had damaging information about a wealthy South Florida family. The trim man in a blue suit claimed to represent the family.

"What do you feel is fair to get the correspondence back?" he asked. They sat in a hotel lobby, smooth jazz piped in from the speakers above them.

"I feel fair-market value is fair," answered the younger woman, wearing a blouse typically worn by home healthcare workers. She unzipped her purse, pulled out a yellow index card and passed it to him. He looked at the number written on the card.

"I'm sorry. That ... three million dollars?" he asked.

"That's the minimum. That's the minimum," she said.

By the following week, the woman -- who authorities say is the daughter of the family's former housekeeper -- would be in jail. She would be accused of a blackmail plot that seems scripted for a television drama.

Audiotapes and police records recently obtained by the Sun Sentinel detail how the investigation and arrest went down.

--

Bonnie Schaefer is hardly a household name, but the company her family built is well known to pre-teen and teenage girls, and their parents. Her father, Rowland Schaefer, founded Claire's, the accessory and jewelry retailer often found in shopping malls. With more than 3,000 stores worldwide, it's where girls can buy Justin Bieber T-shirts and macrame bracelets.

Bonnie Schaefer and her sister, Marla, took over running the company in 2002 after their father had a stroke. Five years later, Claire's sold for $3.1 billion to a private equity firm. Total value of the family's holdings: more than $239 million, according to published reports.

The sale didn't affect where the parents -- Rowland, 96, and Sylvia, 89 -- lived. They stayed in the same Hollywood home they had been in for years.

And for about 15 of those years, their housekeeper was the same woman -- Coleen Parkes, according to police reports.

But the Schaefer family's attorney wrote in court documents that Parkes began threatening her co-workers, refusing to do her job and failing to prepare food to meet the Schaefers' medical needs.

She was fired on Sept. 22.

Three days later, an email arrived in Bonnie Schaefer's in-box just before midnight. It came from an email account in the name of Parkes' daughter, police records show.

The subject: "Letters from home."

--

"My name is Camille Brown," the message began. "I hope this e-mail finds you in the best of spirits."

The writer accused Rowland Schaefer of mistreating Parkes and of threatening the housekeeper to maintain her silence.

Conditions on the job got so bad that Brown accompanied her mother to work for two weeks, according to the email. During that time, Sylvia Schaefer gave Brown letters she wrote detailing family secrets, the email states.

The email went on to offer glimpses of what allegedly are in Sylvia Schaefer's letters. The Sun Sentinel is not publishing those deeply personal accusations, which the newspaper could not verify. The family's lawyer said neither he nor the family will be discussing the case.

The letter writer claimed that Forbes often would come home crying from the Schaefers' house.

"I have watched my mother cry as she comes home from working in your family's home and your family didn't even have the decency to terminate her with dignity. I have retired my mother in a foreign country so that she can live out the rest of her life with the peace that she deserves. Now Bonnie, how would you feel about the world knowing about the darker side of 'The Incredible Rowland Shaefer' [sic]."

The message warned that details of the family's personal life would be spilled to the media, unless they acted:

"The original copies of the letters I own are in a safety deposit box with instructions in the hands of my attorney to make them public in the event of my untimely demise. I often wondered why your mother gave these documents to me. God works in mysterious ways. Promptly respond with a show of commitment to protecting your family's name and the reputation of your father. Otherwise the letters will go to the highest bidder -- CNN, Time, Forbes, etc. etc. Attached are samples of some of your mother's 50 plus letters for your convenience. They make for excellent reading."

--

Bonnie Schaefer answered three days later, police records show.

"Ms. Brown,

I have received your message. I am in North Carolina and ask that in my absence you coordinate the transaction with my attorney. Any transaction between us would have to involve all of mother's letters/diaries and not just a few. I will also require assurances that you have not already disclosed this to the media. Please send me a phone number where he may contact you as soon as he can.

Bonnie Schaefer"

--

A few days later, Brown, 32, received a call from James O'Neal, according to police records. O'Neal said he represented Bonnie Schaefer. He arranged to meet Brown on Oct. 2 at 1 p.m., in the lobby of the Hampton Inn & Suites in Boynton Beach.

"It would be easier if Ms. Schaefer were down here, but she's not coming back over here for a month and she doesn't want to be involved," he said on the phone. "And I don't blame her. This is the kind of stuff we handle all the time, not for her, but for other people."

The conversation was being recorded by O'Neal.

--

If someone searches the name "James O'Neal" in Google, the second result that comes up is a website dedicated to an author who writes futuristic police thrillers under the pen name "James O' Neal."

That author is James O. Born, a Florida crime writer who consulted on the short-lived television drama "Karen Sisco" about a female U.S. Marshal.

Born has excellent credentials for writing crime novels: He is a special agent with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

It turned out that Bonnie Schaefer had wasted little time alerting authorities to the threatening e-mail.

--

Born wore a wire to the hotel meeting, recording the conversation. After the woman in the caretaker's blouse presented the $3 million figure, he said it was too much. She got up to leave.

"Ma'am, can we discuss this at all?" he asked.

"That's the minimum. I can go higher, but nothing lower," she said.

"Let me ask you this -- could we do this in installments?" he asked.

"That's a possibility," she said.

Born eventually agreed to wire the money and had her sign a confidentiality agreement. He asked her where he could wire the money.

That's when she reached into her purse and pulled out a second yellow index card bearing the name "Camille Brown" and bank account and routing numbers, according to FDLE reports.

--

A phone call the next week set up a final meeting at the Hampton Inn. The woman agreed to bring a third of the letters if the Schaefers would wire $1 million, with the rest of the money coming in 30 days, according to the audiotape of the conversation.

The woman came into the lobby with a stack of the letters and handed them to the undercover agent, who was wearing a wire again. The conversation was recorded.

"Those are the originals," she said. "I have copies for my records."

"OK, we're going to insist there are no copies," the undercover agent said.

"You'll get copies of everything along with the other originals upon final," she said.

The undercover agent pretended to call a bank official to wire the money. He also asked her to sign a second agreement.

"For the total payment of $3,000,000 in US currency demanded by Camille Brown, all efforts to coerce, control, blackmail or extort the Schaefer family or any associated businesses will end and not be resumed," it said. The woman signed.

When she left the lobby, she found three FDLE agents waiting to arrest her. She declined to talk with the agents after she was read her constitutional rights.

"Just take me to where you are going to take me," she said, according to police reports.

--

Brown was taken to the Palm Beach County Jail and booked. She has pleaded not guilty to an extortion charge.

She's now living with her mother in Plantation while free on a $75,000 bond. Court records indicate she is a school curriculum coordinator, but do not detail where she works.

Brown declined to comment last week to a reporter about the case.

Her attorney, Guy Fronstin, said she wants her day in court to clear her name.

"From our perspective, Ms. Brown is not guilty," Fronstin said. "We are going to be defending her case in court and proving it was a misunderstanding and clearly not a situation of bribery, blackmail or extortion."

He declined to elaborate about her possible defenses.

--

There is still the matter of what happened to the other letters.

The Schaefer family's attorney, William N. Shepherd, filed a lawsuit last month against Brown and her mother to get them back.

"Instead of making arrangements for the immediate return of the property, plaintiff [Bonnie Schaefer] has information and belief that the defendants [Brown and Parkes] seek to return the property only if final resolution of Ms. Brown's criminal litigation results in a probation sentence," Shepherd wrote.

"The value of the property cannot be numerically quantified."

Brown is scheduled to go to trial June 24 in Palm Beach County Circuit Court. If convicted, she could face up to 15 years in prison.

jburstein@tribune.com, 954-356-4491 or Twitter @jkburstein ___

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/24/woman-sought-3-million-t_n_2943110.html

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Sunday, March 24, 2013

5 Ways To Avoid Outliving Your Retirement Savings

One of the biggest challenges of retirement is making sure your money will last the rest of your life?however long that might be. You can only estimate how many years you will live, and you have to manage your finances so your savings will last for that unknown number of years. Here are some ways to make sure you will have money coming in, no matter how long you live:

Social Security. Social Security is your first line of defense against outliving your savings because these payments will continue for the rest of your life and are adjusted for inflation each year. Anyone who qualifies for Social Security will never completely run out of money, but could have to cut their standard of living to survive on their Social Security payment if they exhaust all other sources of income. Since this is the only guaranteed source of income most retirees have, it's a good idea to try to increase the amount you will get. Common strategies for boosting your Social Security payments include making sure you have at least 35 years of covered earnings, claiming spousal payments, and delaying claiming up until age 70. "Get your [online] Social Security statement from the Social Security Administration and then go through that information and use it to decide when to claim Social Security," advises Troy Von Haefen, a certified financial planner for Von Haefen Financial Management in Nashville.

[Read: 12 Ways to Increase Your Social Security Payments.]

A pension. Workers fortunate enough to get a traditional pension through their jobs generally have a second guaranteed source of monthly retirement income. Most private-sector pension plans are insured by the PBGC, which guarantees pension benefits up to certain annual limits and will pay out benefits if your former employer goes out of business. However, workers with traditional pensions are increasingly being offered lump-sum pension payouts, which do not come with the same protections. If you don't manage a lump sum prudently or you live longer than you expected, you could end up spending that money too quickly.

[Read: The Best Tax Breaks for Retirement Savers.]

An annuity. Immediate annuities allow you to hand over a chunk of your retirement savings to an insurance company in exchange for guaranteed monthly payments for the rest of your life. The costs and fees of some annuities can be high, and you generally won't be able to pass the money you use to purchase an annuity on to heirs. But you gain a predictable monthly income, even if you live past age 100 or the stock market takes another dive, as long as the insurance company stays in business. "With the insurance company annuity, the insurance company guarantees that the money will last the rest of your life no matter how long you live," says Steve Vernon, a fellow of the Society of Actuaries and author of "Money for Life: Turn Your IRA and 401(k) into a Lifetime Retirement Paycheck." "If you want that lifetime guarantee, you are going to have to trade off access to your money. With most annuities, once you give your money over to the insurance company, you can't get it back other than the monthly paycheck."

Systematic withdrawals. Disciplined investors may be able to gradually draw down their savings in such a way that it is likely to last as long as they live. Many financial advisers recommend withdrawing no more than about 3 or 4 percent of your retirement savings, perhaps adjusted for inflation, each year. This strategy carries the risks that your investments could perform poorly, that you will live longer than expected, or that you will simply fail to stick to the plan and spend more than you should. However, that money will be available to you to use for emergencies, such as medical bills or home repairs. And if you end up dying sooner than expected, your heirs will get the money. If you are an especially gifted investor, you'll also get to keep your investment gains. "With a systematic withdrawal scheme, if you live a long time or have a poor investment experience, you might run out of money or you might pass away before you run out of money and have a lot of money left to leave to your heirs or charity," says Vernon. "Looking forward, we may not have the interest rates to support the 4 percent rule. We're moving toward 3.5 or 3 percent as a safer withdrawal rate."

[Read: How to Take 401(k) Withdrawals.]

Pay off your house. Paying off your mortgage eliminates one of your biggest monthly bills and allows you to use your savings for other expenses besides housing. The equity in your home could also be tapped for extreme emergencies, via a second mortgage or reverse mortgage. "If you pay off your house, that's a guaranteed return of 3 to 4 percent," says Stephen Curley, a certified financial planner and director at Water Oak Advisors in Winter Park, Fla. "If you go into retirement debt-free and owning your house outright and you are able to take out 4 percent of your portfolio along with Social Security and meet your retirement needs, that is the best-case scenario. And if you can't stand the capital market, you should maybe buy a fixed immediate annuity."

Read more on U.S. News

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7 Mutual Funds That Make Huge Bets
Meet the New ?White Hat? Activist Investors: Not Just Raiders Anymore

Earlier on Huff/Post50:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/23/retirement-savings-retirement-planning_n_2932788.html

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'We're brothers': Pope meets ex-pope for historic lunch

AP

Pope Francis, left, and Pope emeritus Benedict XVI pray together in Castel Gandolfo Saturday, in this photo provided by the Vatican paper L'Osservatore Romano.

By Claudio Lavanga and Emma Ong, NBC News

Pope Francis and his predecessor Benedict prayed together before having lunch in a historic meeting Saturday.

The new pontiff flew to the papal residence at Castel Gandolfo in the Alban Hills outside of Rome by helicopter Saturday. Pope Benedict XVI has been living there since he resigned Feb. 28, becoming the first pope to step down in 600 years.

Both men wore white papal outfits.

Father Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman, said that Benedict and Francis had embraced at the helipad, then went to a private chapel to pray.

Pope Francis and his predecessor Benedict prayed together before having lunch in a historic meeting Saturday. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

Benedict, who looked frail and walked with a cane, told Francis to kneel in front of the altar, but Francis said, "let's kneel together" and they did so, Lombardi said.

"We're brothers," Francis reportedly told the former pope as the two prayed together on the same prie dieu.

They then had a private conversation for about 40 minutes in the library, before going to lunch.

Francis presented Benedict with a gift of an icon of the Virgin Mary.

?When I saw this picture of the Madonna of Humility, my thoughts turned immediately to you,? Francis told his predecessor, according to Eurovision News.


The Associated Press reported that crowds gathered near then villa in the hope of catching a glimpse of history.

The news agency speculated about what the two men would discuss:

The two popes might discuss the big issues facing the church: The rise of secularism in the world, the drop in priestly vocations in Europe, the competition that the Catholic Church faces in Latin America and Africa from evangelical Pentecostal movements.

They might also discuss pressing issues concerning Francis' new job: Benedict left a host of unfinished business on Francis' plate, including the outcome of a top-secret investigation into the leaks of papal documents last year.

Francis might want to sound Benedict out on his ideas for management changes in the Holy See administration, a priority given the complete dysfunctional government he has inherited.

They might also discuss the future of Monsignor Georg Gaenswein, Benedict's trusted aide who has had the difficult task of escorting his old pope into retirement and then returning to the Vatican to serve his successor.

Gaenswein has appeared visibly upset and withdrawn at times as he has been by Francis' side. The Vatican has said Francis' primary secretary will be Monsignor Alfred Xuereb, who had been the No. 2 secretary under Benedict.

NBC News' Ian Johnston and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Related:

Pope Francis spoke of being 'dazzled' by girl, possible change of celibacy rule

Pope stuns newsstand owner by calling to cancel home delivery

Pope's personal touch with crowds a 'nightmare' for security, expert says

This story was originally published on

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