Sunday, March 31, 2013

George Heymont: Opting Out of Reality for Jesus

The simple act of questioning whether organized religion makes people stupid is bound to provoke a heated response. On one hand, there are people who claim to live in faith-based communities who attribute every event in their lives to the will of God. On the other hand, there are those (like my family) who are confirmed atheists.

The fact that my father was a high school science teacher has a lot to do with that. One of our family's first encounters with crazy Christians came shortly after Daddy received a grant from the National Science Foundation to attend one of its summer institutes at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Shortly after settling into our dorm, a young girl from Oklahoma asked my sister if she would be joining her family at church on Sunday. When Alice explained that we didn't go to church because we were Jewish, Brenda gasped in awe and excitedly asked "Really? Can I see your horns?"

A retired school librarian who recently moved from New Jersey to Reno, Alice was co-hosting a TED Talk event for seniors last month when one of the attendees mentioned how much she would like to be able to watch one of the TED talks again. My sister casually mentioned that the woman could easily do so by going to the URL listed on the handout sheet.

When asked what a URL was, Alice explained to the woman that she would need to do this on a computer. "I won't touch those things," the woman replied. "They're Satan driven!"

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Louisiana's Governor Bobby Jindal recently told a gathering of Republican big shots that "We have to stop being the stupid party."

  • Revered astrophysicist and scientific celebrity, Neil deGrasse Tyson, likes to remind people that "The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it."
  • Jon Stewart notes that "They always throw around this term 'the liberal elite' and I kept thinking to myself about the Christian right. What's more elite than believing that only you will go to heaven?"
  • In Rhode Island, several florists refused to deliver bouquets to 16-year-old Jessica Ahlquist, an atheist who had successfully fought to have a prayer banner removed from Cranston West High School.

When people complain about the dumbing down of our educational system, they rarely point to religion as one of the reasons why they have stupid children. And yet:


Is religion merely an enabling device which allows people to justify their bad behavior?

  • During the 2012 Presidential campaign, Americans listening to Mitt Romney's endless stream of falsehoods got a taste of the Mormon practice known as "Lying for the Lord."
  • Retired Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony (whose misdeeds lie at the core of one of the Catholic Church's major pedophilic priest scandals) claims that "in two years (1962-1964) spent in graduate school earning a Masters Degree in Social Work, no textbook and no lecture ever referred to the sexual abuse of children. While there was some information dealing with child neglect, sexual abuse was never discussed."
  • In 2012, Colorado pastor Kevin Swanson (who is home schooling his five children) announced on his radio show that the famed Muppet characters Kermit the Frog and Miss Piggy (whom he suggested might support the North American Man/Boy Love Association [NAMBLA]) deserved the death penalty for breaking with Chick-fil-A over the company's opposition to LGBT rights. "A Christian perspective ultimately brought the death penalty upon homosexuality between roughly 350 AD and roughly 1850 or so. For about 1,500 years that form of life had pretty much been eliminated except here and there, it was in the closet, but it was almost unheard of for over 1,000 years until recently. Of course, now you have a massive, massive increase in this kind of thing. You know that Sesame Street and the Muppets are going to take the sodomy route," Swanson told his radio audience.
  • A recent article posted on Daily Kos entitled For Mormons Wealth Generation is Driven By Cultural Righteousness described the strong ties stressed between Mormonism and wealth. Pastors at numerous American megachurches now preach the gospel of "prosperity theology."

  • On numerous occasions, people who have murdered their husbands, wives, and/or children, have confessed to police that "God told me to do it."


Long after the deaths of such hypocritical televangelists as Jerry ("AIDS is not just God's punishment for homosexuals, it is God's punishment for the society that tolerates homosexuals") Falwell, Oral Roberts (who told his followers that unless he raised $8 million by March 1987, God would "call him home"), and Jimmy Swaggart (whose fondness for prostitutes proved to be his undoing) -- all of whom were little more than religious con men -- there is plenty of evidence to show how insidiously organized religion has worked to abolish the separation of church and state. All one needs to do is listen to Arkansas State Senator Jason Rapert (a proud Evangelical Christian, birther, and founder of Holy Ghost Ministries) to get a taste of the religious right's holier-than-thou sense of moral superiority.


Karl Marx famously labeled religion as "the opiate of the masses." As a life-long atheist, I've come to believe that many well-intentioned Christians -- who have no idea how thoroughly they have been brainwashed by their religion -- are now acting and speaking like addicts. In their craven lust for power and their insatiable hunger to control the conversation, they have become hell-bent on forcing their religious delusions on the public at large.

* * * * * * * * * *

According to a new report from the Texas Freedom Network entitled Reading, Writing, and Religion II:

  • Many courses teach students to interpret the Bible and even Judaism through a distinctly Christian lens. Whether or not it is intentional, anti-Jewish bias is not uncommon.
  • A number of courses and their instructional materials incorporate pseudo-scholarship, including claims that the Bible provides scientific proof of a 6,000-year-old Earth (young Earth creationism) and that the United States was founded as a Christian nation based on biblical Christian principles.
  • At least one Texas school district's Bible course includes materials suggesting that the origins of racial diversity among humans today can be traced back to a curse placed on Noah's son in the biblical story of the flood. Such claims have long been a foundational component of some forms of racism.
  • Astronauts have discovered "a day missing in space" that corroborates biblical stories of the sun standing still.
  • More than half of the state's public school Bible courses taught students to read the book from a specifically Christian theological perspective (a clear violation of rules governing the separation of church and state).
  • Some Bible classes in Texas public schools appear to double as science classes, circumventing limits placed on teaching creationism. The Eastland Independent School District (located outside Fort Worth) shows videos produced by the Creation Evidence Museum, which claims to possess a fossil of a dinosaur footprint atop "a pristine human footprint."
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Don McLeroy


Scott Thurman's blood-chilling documentary, The Revisionaries, shows how a group of well-meaning Christians have diligently worked to alter the textbooks read by Texan schoolchildren in order to reflect their severely misguided religious beliefs about history and science. Led by Don McLeroy, a proselytizing dentist from Bryan, Texas (who has serious doubts about evolution and honestly believes that humans coexisted with dinosaurs), the Texas State Board of Education clearly favors the Bible over scientific method. In his director's statement, Thurman writes:

"A few years ago I was inspired by an article by physicist Brian Greene called "Put a Little Science in Your Life." The article encouraged educators to communicate science in ways that capture the drama and excitement of new discoveries mixed in with the standard technical details. My fifth grade science teacher created this energy, sparking my imagination and interest in science and so I sought to produce a short portrait of a science teacher in Texas that's also moving minds with an intense and electrifying message. At the time, I discovered a survey stating that half of the American public did not accept the theory of evolution and so I decided to focus my film on a biology teacher and the lessons on evolution. Not long after I started following these classroom discussions, I learned about the political debate on the State Board of Education in Texas over how evolution would be taught in science and later how the concept of "separation between church and state" would be understood in social studies, among other controversial topics. I became more interested in the political issue over time, but remained focused on having a character-driven story.

As I continued to seek intimate access to a few people that were heavily involved, I was drawn to the magnetic personality of Don McLeroy, chairman of the board, and outspoken creationist on a mission to convince the public and next generation of students that evolution is not sound science and that America is exceptional in part because it was founded on Christian principles. After a year of efforts to gain access, Don slowly opened up to me, eventually allowing me full access to his personal life at work, in his fourth grade Sunday school class and in his home. I'm grateful for Don's willingness to have shared such exclusive aspects of his life for the documentary and my goal is for the compassion and complexities of Don's character to be appreciated and understood beyond the stereotypical persona that's been given to this small town dentist in the past."


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Poster art for The Revisionaries


In her book entitled Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, author Hannah Arendt opined that, throughout history, many of the great evils have not been committed by madmen, sociopaths, or tyrants but by well-intentioned, ordinary people who felt that their beliefs were normal. Because much of The Revisionaries involves talking heads (as well as footage of discussions and votes during school board meetings), Thurman's documentary resembles watching frogs and lobsters being lulled to sleep by the rising temperature of the water around them as they are boiled before being served as dinner.

The Revisionaries once again sadly and irrefutably proves that "You can't fix stupid." Here's the trailer:


To read more of George Heymont go to My Cultural Landscape

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Follow George Heymont on Twitter: www.twitter.com/geoheymont

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/george-heymont/opting-out-of-reality-for_b_2985708.html

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India's top court to deliver Novartis judgment

NEW DELHI (AP) ? India's Supreme Court is to rule Monday on a landmark patent case involving Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG that focuses on demands by major companies that their investments be protected, against Indian companies that say they should be allowed to continue producing cheaper generic versions of many lifesaving medicines.

A decision in the seven-year legal battle is keenly awaited by the two most interested parties? big pharma companies and health aid groups ? with both sides saying the outcome will set a precedent with far-reaching consequences for the future availability of the drugs.

"Across the world, people rely on India for supplies of affordable versions of expensive patented medicines," said Leena Menghaney of Doctors Without Borders. "This case will have fundamental consequences."

The case goes back to 2006 when Novartis' application for a fresh patent in India for its cancer drug imatinib mesylate was rejected by the Indian patent office.

The patent authority cited a legal provision in India's 2005 patent law aimed at preventing companies from getting fresh patents for making only minor changes to existing medicines ? a practice known as "evergreening."

The drugmaker has argued that its leukemia drug Gleevec, known in Europe and India as Glivec, was a newer, more easily absorbed version that qualified for a fresh patent.

The company filed an appeal, but India's patent appeals office turned it down in 2009 on the grounds the company was unable to show significant increase in efficacy of the drug.

Novartis then approached the Supreme Court in August 2009, which heard arguments seeking to challenge the interpretation and application of India's patent law in the case.

Gleevec, used in treating chronic myeloid leukemia and some other cancers, costs a patient about $2,600 a month. Its generic version was available in India for around $175 per month.

"The difference in price was huge. The generic version makes it affordable to so many more poor people, not just in India, but across the world," said Y.K. Sapru, of the Mumbai-based Cancer Patients Aid Association.

The case once again pits big pharmaceutical companies against health activists and aid groups with both sections arguing that the judgment would be an important milestone for the future of the pharmaceutical industry worldwide.

"The Novartis verdict is important because it will determine whether India gets to limit patents to genuine new drugs, or whether drug companies get to "evergreen" their patents until eternity, simply by re-patenting a slightly modified version of a known substance," said Ellen 't Hoen, a pharmaceutical law and policy consultant.

Western pharmaceutical companies have warned that a rejection of Novartis' application would discourage investment in research and innovation, and would hobble drugmakers' efforts to refine and improve their products.

The international drug majors have been pushing for stronger patent protection in India to regulate the country's $26 billion generic drug industry, which they say often flouts intellectual property rights.

In a statement sent to The Associated Press late last year, Novartis said patent protection was important to ensure effective protection for innovation.

"Knowing we can rely on patents in India benefits government, industry and patients because research-based organizations will know if investing in the development of better medicines for India is a viable long-term option," the company said.

Groups such as Doctors Without Borders say cheaply made Indian generics are a lifesaver for millions of patients in poor countries who cannot afford to pay Western prices to treat diseases such as cancer, malaria and HIV.

India, which has emerged as the world's pharmacy for the poor, has come under intense scrutiny from pharmaceutical giants who say India's 2005 Patent Act fails to guarantee the rights of investors who finance drug research and development.

The country's recent decision to allow a local manufacturer to produce a generic version of Bayer's patented cancer drug Nexavar, to make the drug available to the public at a reasonably affordable price, has also not gone down well with Western pharmaceutical companies.

Health and aid groups were clearly nervous before the top court rules on the Novartis case.

"Generic companies depend on the freedom to operate. If there are too many intellectual property-related challenges, then the companies very quickly withdraw from making that drug," said Menghaney.

The groups fear that a ruling in favor of Novartis would lead to a proliferation of patents ? some based on a minor tweaking of formulation and dosages ?on dozens of other generic medicines that Indian companies have been producing and supplying to needy nations at far lower costs than those charged by Western drug manufacturers.

And the fallout of the judgment will be felt across the world, says Menghaney. "It's not just about India."

"If generic competition on many crucial medicines ends, then prices for these medicines will increase, both in India and across the developing world. This would be devastating for millions who rely on India for affordable medicines."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/indias-top-court-deliver-novartis-judgment-074548556.html

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Hamas Gaza ruler meets Egypt intelligence chief

CAIRO (AP) ? Egypt's state news agency says the Gaza Strip's Hamas ruler has met with Egypt's intelligence chief to discuss Palestinian reconciliation and the cease-fire between the militant group and Israel.

Ismail Haniyeh's met with Rafaat Shehata on Sunday, a day after arriving in Egypt. Egypt's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi mediated a cease-fire between Hamas and Israel last year.

Relations between Egypt and Hamas are high on the agenda. Hamas, a Palestinian offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood ? the group from which Morsi hails ? has come under attack by some in Egypt who accuse it of harboring militants that operate in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.

Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal is also in Egypt, where the group is expected to choose its next leader. Mashaal is a top candidate for the post.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hamas-gaza-ruler-meets-egypt-intelligence-chief-190516638.html

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Saturday, March 30, 2013

Why 98 Degrees? New Song Creeps Us Out

98 Degrees has released their first single since 2000, and trust us: It's not what you're expecting. In "Microphone," Nick Lachey, Jeff Timmons, Drew Lachey and Justin Jeffre try out a new dance-pop sound, and a really embarrassing sexual metaphor. (Hint: "grab the microphone" does not refer to karaoke.) Listen below!

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Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell Welcome Baby Girl!

Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell Welcome Baby Girl!

Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell picsAdorable couple Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard have welcomed their first child. The “Parenthood” actor, 38, announced his “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” fiance, 32, had given birth to a baby girl on his Twitter page. Dax revealed the very presidential name they gave their daughter, Lincoln Bell Shepard. Shepard joked around, writing, “She has her mom’s ...

Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell Welcome Baby Girl! Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News

Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2013/03/dax-shepard-kristen-bell-welcome-baby-girl/

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Friday, March 29, 2013

Exclusive 'Trance' Featurette Explores The Cast, None Of Whom You Should Trust

Danny Boyle's latest film "Trance," which opens in limited release on April 5, tells the story of three characters, one that wouldn't be so complicated if it wasn't for the painting heist, hypnosis, and amnesia. In this exclusive behind-the-scenes featurette from the film, Boyle and his cast talk a bit about the confusing nature of [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2013/03/28/exclusive-trance-featurette/

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Gay marriage at high court: How a case can fizzle

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Late in the oral argument over same-sex marriage in California, Justice Anthony Kennedy made a startling comment, given the months of buildup and mountain of legal briefs that have descended on the justices.

"You might address why you think we should take and decide this case," Kennedy said to lawyer Charles Cooper, representing opponents of same-sex marriage.

One might have thought the court had already crossed that bridge.

But now the justices were openly discussing essentially walking away from the case over California's Proposition 8, a voter-approved ban on gay marriage, without deciding anything at all about such unions.

Indeed, this case offers a rare glimpse at the court's opaque internal workings, in which justices make cold political calculations about what to do and Kennedy's often-decisive vote can never be far from his colleagues' minds.

The court on Wednesday concluded two days of arguments involving gay marriage. In the second case, a constitutional challenge to a portion of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, a majority of the court appeared likely to rule that legally married gay couples should be able to receive a range of benefits that the law currently reserves for straight married couples.

The decision to hear the DOMA case was easy. The Supreme Court almost always has the final word when lower courts strike down a federal law, as they did in this case.

Proposition 8's route to the Supreme Court was not as obvious. The appeals court ruling under review by the justices seems to have been written to discourage the high court from ever taking up the case because it applies only to California and limited a much broader opinion that had emerged earlier from the trial court.

And yet in December, the court decided it would hear the case. It takes a majority of five to decide a case a particular way, but just four justices can vote to add a case to the calendar. And the court does not disclose how the justices vote at this stage.

It seems apparent after the argument, though, that it was the conservative justices who opted to hear Proposition 8. It also seems that one factor in their decision was that this could be their last, best opportunity to slow the nation's march toward recognition of gay marriage at a time when only nine states and the District of Columbia allow gays and lesbians to marry ? despite a rapid swing in public opinion in favor of gay marriage.

From their comments and questions Tuesday, Justices Samuel Alito and Antonin Scalia indicated they preferred what they called the cautious approach: allowing the debate over gay marriage to play out in the states and not overturning by judicial fiat the will of California voters who approved Proposition 8 in 2008. Justice Clarence Thomas, as is his custom, said nothing during the argument, but he and Scalia were dissenters in the court's earlier two gay rights cases in 1996 and 2003.

Chief Justice John Roberts also had tough questions for lawyers for the same-sex couples who sued for the right to marry, and for the Obama administration.

Scalia sought to counter Kennedy's comment, and a similar one from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, that maybe the court should get rid of the case.

"It's too late for that, too late for that now, isn't it? I mean, we granted cert," Scalia said, using the legal shorthand for the court's decision to hear a case. "We have crossed that river, I think."

Once or twice a term, occasionally more often, the justices do dismiss cases after they have been argued, without rendering opinions and establishing a rule for the whole nation. The language they use is the wonderfully vague "dismissed as improvidently granted." Roughly translated, it means "sorry for wasting everyone's time."

That is one potential outcome, discussed publicly by Kennedy and Sotomayor.

Another possibility would be a decision limited to the technical legal question of whether the Proposition 8 supporters have the right to defend the measure in court. If they don't, the court can't reach the broader issues in the case.

On this point, Roberts' view seemed more in line with questions from some of the liberal justices.

So why would a justice who appeared favorably inclined to California's ban on gay marriage want to rule that the case should not even be in front of the court?

The answer is that Roberts might want to dispose of the case in this narrow way if he saw a decision in support of gay marriage emerging and wanted to block it. Or, he might choose this route if the justices appeared unable to reach a decisive ruling of any kind.

Narrowly based decisions sometimes seem more attractive to the justices than fractured rulings.

One example is the court's 2009 decision in a voting rights case in which eight of the justices agreed to sidestep the looming and major constitutional issue in the case after an argument in which the court appeared sharply split along ideological lines.

___

Follow Mark Sherman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/shermancourt

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gay-marriage-high-court-case-fizzle-065952825--politics.html

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Cypriot businesses rue cost of rescue

By Karolina Tagaris

NICOSIA (Reuters) - Christakis Petsas counts the cost of the turmoil in Cyprus in terms of cars - 40 of them, stuck at the port in the coastal town of Limassol and costing him 800 euros a day in lost earnings.

That's 12,000 euros ($15,000) since banks in Cyprus closed their doors almost two weeks ago and refused to transfer the import tax payment on the new fleet of vehicles for Petsas Rent-A-Car of Nicosia.

Banks reopened on Thursday, but the ripple effect of their closure and the tough terms of a rescue deal that saved Cyprus from bankruptcy will strangle business on the island for a long time to come.

"The situation is tragic," said Petsas, a veteran of the 1974 Cypriot war that left the island divided between Greeks and Turks.

"I lived through the war as a soldier and I've never seen people so anxious. Back then you knew who the enemy was. These days you don't know whom you're fighting, or what tomorrow will bring."

Cyprus imposed strict restrictions on banking on Thursday to avert a run on banks by panicked depositors - Cypriots and wealthy foreigners - in the wake of a bailout deal struck with the European Union to save the island from bankruptcy.

The deal will close Cyprus Popular Bank, known as Laiki, the country's second biggest bank and one of Petsas' biggest clients.

It will hurt the country's reputation as a haven for offshore financing, shrink its outsize banking sector and likely condemn the island to a prolonged economic slump - all as the price of staying part of the 17-nation euro currency bloc.

The bank shutdown has starved the economy of cash, meaning Petsas has to pay his 56 employees by cheque, which they will be unable to cash under the capital controls imposed by the government.

They, in turn, will rein in spending.

"This whole situation has caused a chain reaction in the economy," said Petsas, a stocky Greek Cypriot in his late 50s whose father started Petsas Rent-A-Car in 1963.

CAPITAL FLIGHT

Imports have ground to a halt since the banks closed and businesses have suffered as customers hoard cash.

Bank transfers ceased and suppliers demanded cash. One restaurant owner on the Nicosia's main pedestrian thoroughfare, Ledra Street, apologized that sparkling mineral water was off the menu. The bottles were stuck at customs.

"We've had no sales, it's dead," said Haralambos Kaldelis, who owns a clothing boutique in the capital, Nicosia. "We have to pay rent, and there's no money. The VAT (sales tax) needs to be paid, and there's no money."

"Before, the banks would let you go over your limit, but what about now?"

Cyprus's banks were crippled by their exposure to Greece, where Europe's debt crisis began.

Fearing a massive flight of capital, the government says it will keep the capital controls in place for a month, but economists say they will likely remain for much longer until at least the shoots of a recovery emerge.

The Central Bank says it will scrutinize all major commercial transactions, limit transfers abroad and demand proof that businesses are paying for imports, not funneling funds out of the country. Banks will not cash cheques, and customs officers will stop anyone trying to take more than 1,000 euros out of the country.

Many foreign depositors, who took advantage of Cyprus's generous offshore banking industry, have already voted with their feet.

Figures published by the island's Central Bank on Thursday showed that savers from other countries using the euro withdrew 18 percent of their deposits in February, as talk of a tax on bank accounts gained ground.

Big depositors with over 100,000 euros in Cypriot banks stand to take a big hit under the terms of the bailout, an unprecedented step in Europe's handling of a debt crisis that has spread from Greece, to Ireland, Spain, Portugal and Italy.

Cypriots have been stunned by the pace of the unfolding drama, having elected conservative President Nicos Anastasiades barely a month ago on a mandate to secure the bailout.

Many say they feel little relief to have sealed the rescue package, seeing in the capital controls the emergence of a two-tier euro zone and a brake on any potential recovery.

"I was expecting a rise in revenue this year from tourists, maybe about five percent, mainly Russians," said Petsas. "But the situation has hurt our image and many will think twice about visiting," he said.

Cyprus, he said, will have to muddle through.

"We Cypriots are survivors by nature," he said. "We'll get through this."

(Additional reporting by Costas Pitas; Writing by Matt Robinson; Editing by Giles Elgood)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cypriot-businesses-rue-cost-rescue-171907661--finance.html

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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Private food markets gradually see the light of day in Cuba

Desmond Boylan / Reuters

Men unload vegetables from a truck for wholesale at a market before dawn in Havana on Feb. 14. Communist-run Cuba is gradually dismantling its monopoly on the purchase and sale of food in favor of private vendors, as part of efforts to reform the Soviet-style economy. With the country importing around 60 percent of its food and private farmers outperforming state farms on a fraction of the land, the government is systematically deregulating the sector, leasing fallow land to would-be farmers and encouraging private transportation and sales.

Desmond Boylan / Reuters

A man sits in a car loaded with carrots at a wholesale market on the outskirts of Havana on March 26.

Desmond Boylan / Reuters

A man arranges vegetables for sale on a tricycle in the village of Sagua La Grande in central Cuba, around 149 miles east of Havana on March 10.

Desmond Boylan / Reuters

A woman holds money to pay a farmer in the village of Sagua La Grande in central Cuba, around 149 miles east of Havana on March 2.

By Marc Frank, Reuters

Cubans are building private food distribution networks from the farm through to retail outlets as communist authorities gradually dismantle the state's monopoly on the purchase and sale of agricultural products.

The country's first wholesale produce market is up and running on the outskirts of Havana and across the island farmers report they are selling more of their goods directly to customers, ranging from hotels to individual vendors.

Those involved say the change is speeding the flow of food to market, helping end longstanding inefficiencies that often left crops to rot in fields and putting more money in the pockets of producers. Continue reading.

Enrique De La Osa / Reuters

Tomatoes are displayed for sale at a private wholesale market in Havana on March 26.

Previously on PhotoBlog:

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Good Reads: US-China relations, 'Lean In,' ballet's whodunit, Ireland's Downton

This week's round-up of Good Reads includes a look at the complex Chinese-US relationship, a response to Sheryl Sandberg's 'Lean In,' an acid attack linked to the Bolshoi Ballet, and a memoir about an ancestral home in Ireland.

By Gregory M. Lamb,?Staff writer / March 21, 2013

Bolshoi dancer Pavel Dmitrichenko is accused of plotting an acid attack.

Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP/File

Enlarge

The United States has two clear choices in dealing with China: Engage or isolate the world?s most populous nation. ?You cannot have it both ways,? argues Lee Kuan Yew, prime minister of Singapore for more than three decades, who led his tiny Asian nation to Western-style prosperity despite being in the shadow of its giant communist neighbor. ?You cannot say you will engage China on some issues and isolate her over others. You cannot mix your signals.?

Skip to next paragraph Gregory M. Lamb

Senior editor

Gregory M. Lamb is a senior editor and writer.

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Competition between the US and China is inevitable, but conflict is not, Mr. Lee argues in an excerpt from his new book in The Atlantic.

?This is not the Cold War. The Soviet Union was contesting with the United States for global supremacy. China is acting purely in its own national interests. It is not interested in changing the world.?

The complex Chinese-US relationship is underpinned by an essential truth: Each side needs the other.

?Chinese leaders know that U.S. military superiority is overwhelming and will remain so for the next few decades,? he writes. ?[T]he Chinese do not want to clash with anyone ? at least not for the next 15 to 20 years.?

The best outcome, he writes, would be for China and the US to arrive at ?a new understanding that when they cannot cooperate, they will coexist and allow all countries in the Pacific to grow and thrive.?

Get back to feminism?s roots

Women have risen to prominence in business and academia, but don?t look for private enterprise to finish the job of ensuring equal rights between the sexes.
In a new book called ?Lean In,? Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg says women are responsible for their own lack of progress in the workplace, notes Judith Shulevitz, writing in the New Republic. But the recent directive from Yahoo chief executive officer Marissa Mayer that bans telecommuting shows that women executives hold business success above feminist goals. ?Yahoo employees now understand that, when unregulated market forces go head-to-head with policies that facilitate gender equality, the policies stand down,? Ms. Shulevitz writes. ?It doesn?t matter who runs the company.... Competent female executives run better companies than incompetent male executives, but they?re no more likely to make universal day care the law of the land.?

Where lies progress in gender equality, which seemed to halt three decades ago with the defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment? It?s time to get back to changing laws, she says. ?What we are not talking about in nearly enough detail, or agitating for with enough passion, are the government policies, such as mandatory paid maternity leave, that would truly equalize opportunity. We are still thinking individually, not collectively.?

The Bolshoi?s dark side

The bizarre acid-tossing attack on Sergei Yurevich Filin, the artistic director of the Bolshoi Ballet, would seem to have come only from the fetid mind of a writer for a fictitious ?CSI: Moscow.? Mr. Filin was severely injured when an assailant confronted him at the door of his Moscow apartment building late one evening and splashed sulfuric acid in his face.

Who did it? As David Remnick unravels the tale in The New Yorker, the suspect list grows and grows into a confusion worthy of Agatha Christie. Did an angry ballerina or danseur or, more likely, one of their wealthy oligarch patrons, order it? Or maybe a bitter rival eager to replace him?

Mr. Remnick takes his time to reveal the not altogether conclusive answer, first weaving his way through the history of the celebrated ballet company from its charter in 1776 under Catherine the Great. (Stalin loved the Bolshoi, but President Vladimir Putin is indifferent.)

Perhaps no result would satisfy a jaundiced Russian public. ?Russians, in the contemporary version of their fatalism, see their country as a landscape of endless bespredel, lawlessness, a world devoid of order or justice or restraint...,? he says. ?After witnessing so many phony trials ? most recently of [the feminist rock band] Pussy Riot ? the Russian public has developed a general distrust of the country?s legal system.?

Saving the Irish manor

?Downton Abbey? has nothing on the autobiographical tale of Selina Guinness and her sometime desperate efforts to hang on to her ancestral home in Ireland.

?Houses for the middle classes are just places to live in, but for the gentry they are evolving organisms, repositories of cherished memories, full of treasured knick-knacks and wrinkled old retainers, as much living subjects as physical sites,? writes Terry Eagleton in the Dublin Review of Books. ?Individuals come and go, but the grange or manor house lives on, more like a transnational corporation than a bungalow.?

He continues: ?Like a slightly dotty but much-loved relative, the house has its own quirky ways, its distinctive aura and personality. One almost expects to encounter it settled on one of its own sofas, granny glasses perched on its nose, knitting and crooning.... Such houses are more sacred texts than bricks and mortar.?

The home Ms. Guinness is trying to keep in the family is known as ?The Crocodile? for the stuffed animal that greets visitors at the front door. Like Lady Mary Crawley in ?Downton Abbey,? she confronts the problem of how to save her beloved estate without ruining its essence and character. All she can do is muddle on and hope for the best.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/jQyyFyAlzCQ/Good-Reads-US-China-relations-Lean-In-ballet-s-whodunit-Ireland-s-Downton

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Flipboard Update Lets You Create Your Own Magazines

Flipboard takes the news you want to read and organizes it into a wonderfully designed magazine format. And now, with an update to its iOS apps, it lets you create your own magazines for specific themes, topics, events, and so on. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/AJG3Rcago3c/flipboard-update-lets-you-create-your-own-magazines

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Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Soccer-Vilanova to ease himself back in after returning home

BARCELONA, March 26 (Reuters) - Barcelona coach Tito Vilanova will gradually ease himself back into his job after arriving back in Spain on Tuesday following two months of cancer treatment in New York, the La Liga club said.

The 44-year-old needed a second round of surgery in December following an initial operation to remove a tumour from his saliva glands in November 2011 and his assistant Jordi Roura took charge while he relocated to the United States for a course of chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

Vilanova arrived in Barcelona early on Tuesday and returned home to rest, Barca said in a statement on their website (www.fcbarcelona.es).

Roura would take charge of Tuesday evening's training session, when most of the squad will be absent due to the international break, and Vilanova would "gradually" rejoin the first team, they added.

Barca's next match is at Celta Vigo on Saturday and they play at Paris St Germain in their Champions League last eight, first leg on April 2. (Writing by Iain Rogers, editing by Justin Palmer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/soccer-vilanova-ease-himself-back-returning-home-133348151--sow.html

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Gotcha! A NYC art show for George W. Bush is a hoax

Mar 26 (Reuters) - Leading money winners on the 2013 PGATour on Monday (U.S. unless stated): 1. Tiger Woods $3,787,600 2. Brandt Snedeker $2,859,920 3. Matt Kuchar $2,154,500 4. Steve Stricker $1,820,000 5. Phil Mickelson $1,650,260 6. Hunter Mahan $1,553,965 7. John Merrick $1,343,514 8. Dustin Johnson $1,330,507 9. Russell Henley $1,313,280 10. Kevin Streelman $1,310,343 11. Keegan Bradley $1,274,593 12. Charles Howell III $1,256,373 13. Michael Thompson $1,254,669 14. Brian Gay $1,171,721 15. Justin Rose $1,155,550 16. Jason Day $1,115,565 17. Chris Kirk $1,097,053 18. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/art-show-george-w-bush-not-exactly-171521393--politics.html

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The faces behind gay marriage case

Prop. 8 Plaintiffs Kris Perry and Sandy Stier speak at the Human Rights Campaign Los Angeles Gala Dinner. (Gabriel??

On Tuesday morning, the Supreme Court hears oral arguments in the first gay marriage case to ever reach the court, Hollingsworth v. Perry.

The legal battle over California's gay marriage ban began more than four years ago, when a majority of voters backed ballot Proposition 8, which rescinded the right to marry from same-sex couples.

Since then, Prop 8 has been struck down by both a district and federal appeals court as discriminatory, and along the way lost its main legal defender: the government of California. After the district court decision, then-Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declined to appeal the case further, leaving a coalition of Prop 8 supporters led by a a former state senator to take up the cause.

The Supreme Court could use the case to issue a broad ruling guaranteeing the right to marriage to same-sex couples--or to shut down gay rights advocates' claims of wrongful exclusion from the institution of marriage altogether. The court also may issue a ruling in between these extremes.

As both sides prepare to argue their cause, we take a look at some of the major faces behind the high-profile case.

The plaintiffs:

Two unmarried same-sex couples in California were handpicked by the well-financed campaign against Prop 8 to challenge the gay marriage ban as discriminatory.

Kris Perry, whose last name is featured in the Hollingsworth v Perry case name, and Sandy Stier married in 2004 in San Francisco, but the state Supreme Court invalidated that marriage only six months later.

They have been together for 13 years, and raised four sons together from previous relationships. Perry, 48, told the Associated Press that ?we've lived our lives in this hurry-up-and-wait, pins-and-needles way,? since the case began four years ago.

Paul Katami and Jeff Zarrillo of Burbank, Calif., also were chosen as plaintiffs after gay rights advocates noticed a YouTube video Katami helped make to respond to gay marriage critics called, ?Weathering the Storm.? A lawyer involved in the case told The Washington Post that they approached ?several couples? about whether they would be interested in in being plaintiffs in the high profile challenge to Prop 8, warning them that their lives could face extra scrutiny if they accepted.

"We honestly think of ourselves as kind of regular, everyday guys," Katami told USA Today. "We're not asking for a special right."

Katami and Zarrillo have been together for 12 years, and hope to get married and have children if their case is successful.

Their attorneys:

The two same-sex couples are represented by Theodore Olson, the former Solicitor General under George W. Bush, and David Boies, a high profile Democratic lawyer. The pair faced off against each other in front of the Supreme Court in Bush v. Gore, but are now teaming up to try to convince the justices that Prop 8 and gay marriage bans in general are discriminatory. The attorneys have made the broader argument that the government has no reason to exclude people from marriage based on sexual orientation. Olson has 20 minutes to argue their case on Tuesday.

The Prop 8 defenders:

Dennis Hollingsworth, a former Republican state senator from the Temecula area, and other supporters of Proposition 8 took responsibility for defending the ban on gay marriage after the California attorney general declined to appeal the district court?s decision striking it down.

Hollingsworth is a leader of Protect Marriage, a group of supporters of Prop 8 who raise money for its legal defense now that the state has bowed out. The group says it is defending the millions of Californians who voted for Prop 8 from having their voices overruled by the courts.

Their attorney:

Charles Cooper, a former Justice Department official under President Ronald Reagan, has been the lead attorney for Proposition 8 since it was first challenged by gay marriage supporters. Hollingsworth reportedly chose Cooper because he thought his skills as an attorney were on par with Olson?s. Cooper has stressed in his briefs that the Supreme Court should not interfere with states? wishes on gay marriage and argues that the government has legitimate reasons to discourage same-sex couples from marrying. Cooper will have 30 minutes to make his arguments and answer the justices' questions on Tuesday.

?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/prop-8-gay-marriage-case-085022722--election.html

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Violins can mimic the human voice

Mar. 25, 2013 ? For many years, some musical experts have wondered if the sound of the Stradivari and Guarneri violins might incorporate such elements of speech as vowels and consonants. A Texas A&M University researcher has now provided the first evidence that the Italian violin masters tried to impart specific vowel sounds to their violins.

Joseph Nagyvary, professor emeritus in biochemistry at Texas A&M, says of the various vowels he identified in their violins, only two were Italian -- the "i" and "e," while the others were more of French and English origin.

His findings published in the current issue of Savart Journal, a scientific journal of musical instrument acoustics, have the potential to change the way violins are made and how they are priced.

"I expected to find more Italian vowels, what experts call the 'Old Italian' sound actually has the mark of foreign languages," Nagyvary confirms.

Nagyvary has held for decades that the great Italian violin makers, Stradivari and Guarneri del Ges?, produced instruments with a more human-like tonal quality than any others made at the time. To prove his theory, he persuaded the famed violinist Itzhak Perlman to record a scale on his violin, a 1743-dated Guarneri, during a 1987 concert appearance in San Antonio.

For the required comparison, Nagyvary asked Metropolitan Opera soprano Emily Pulley, a former College Station resident, to record her voice singing vowels in an operatic style.

"It has been widely held that violins 'sing' with a female soprano voice. Emily's voice is lustrous and she has the required expertise to sing all vowels of the European languages in a musical scale," Nagyvary explains.

"I analyzed her sound samples by computer for harmonic content and then using state-of-the art phonetic analysis to obtain a 2-D map of the female soprano vowels. Each note of a musical scale on the violin underwent the same analysis, and the results were plotted and mapped against the soprano vowels."

Nagyvary's 25 years of research on the project proved that the sounds of Pulley's voice and the violin's could be located on the same map for identification purposes, and their respective graphic images can be directly compared.

His discoveries are significant for two reasons.

"For 400 years, violin prices have been based almost exclusively on the reputation of the maker -- the label inside of the violin determined the price tag," Nagyvary says. "The sound quality rarely entered into price consideration because it was deemed inaccessible. These findings could change how violins may be valued."

The new graphic images of the violin sound could also become an asset in teaching students to improve the quality of their tone production, he adds.

He says that in recent years, the violins of Guarneri del Ges? have surpassed those made by Stradivari: certain Guarneri violins now sell for something between $10 million to $20 million each.

Nagyvary was the first to prove that Stradivari and Guarneri soaked their instruments in chemicals such as borax and brine to protect them from a worm infestation that was sweeping through Italy in the 1700s. By pure accident, the chemicals used to protect the wood had the unintended result of producing the unique sounds that have been almost impossible to duplicate in the past 400 years, and his findings were supported and verified by the American Chemical Society, the world's largest scientific organization.

The retired Texas A&M professor has himself made violins that included carefully crafted woods soaked in a variety of chemicals.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Texas A&M University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Joseph Nagyvary. A Comparative Study of Power Spectra and Vowels in Guarneri Violins and Operatic Singing. Savart Journal, Vol 1, No 3 (2013)

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/YODBOwxZoxM/130325135302.htm

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Falcons 'rapidly evolved hunter skill'

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The Note's Must-Reads for Monday, March 25, 2013

The Note's Must-Reads are a round-up of today's political headlines and stories from ABC News and the top U.S. newspapers. Posted Monday through Friday right here at www.abcnews.com

Compiled by ABC News' Jayce Henderson, Amanda VanAllen and Carrie Halperin

GUN CONTROL: ABC News' Arlette Saenz: " Bloomberg, NRA Brace for Senate Showdown on Guns" With the U.S. Senate slated to consider comprehensive gun legislation next month, two powerful voices on different sides of the gun debate - New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and the National Rifle Association's Wayne LaPierre - are bracing for the upcoming legislative showdown on guns. Bloomberg's gun group, Mayors Against Illegal Guns, announced this weekend that it will pour $12 million into advertising in 13 key states to convince potentially persuadable Democratic and Republican senators to vote in favor of gun legislation, specifically focusing on the controversial universal background checks; a measure that an ABC News-Washington Post poll found is supported by 91 percent of the public. LINK

FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The New York Times' C.J. Chivers and Eric Schmitt: " Arms Airlift to Syria Rebels Expands, With C.I.A. Aid" With help from the C.I.A., Arab governments and Turkey have sharply increased their military aid to Syria's opposition fighters in recent months, expanding a secret airlift of arms and equipment for the uprising against PresidentBashar al-Assad, according to air traffic data, interviews with officials in several countries and the accounts of rebel commanders. LINK

The Washington Post's Greg Miller, Joby Warrick and Karen DeYoung: " Backing up Obama's warnings to Syria creates tough challenges on two fronts" The suspicious attack that killed 26 people in northern Syria last week exposed the difficulty of determining whether the Syrian regime has resorted to using chemical weapons as well as the lingering uncertainty over how President Obama would respond if what he has called a "red line" is crossed. LINK

Bloomberg's Rebecca Christie, James G. Neuger & Svenja O'Donnel: " Cyprus Salvaged After EU Deal Shuts Bank to Get $13B" Cyprus dodged a disorderly default and unprecedented exit from the euro currency by bowing to demands to shrink its banking system in exchange for a 10 billion-euro ($13 billion) bailout. Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades agreed to shut the country's second-largest bank under pressure from a German-led bloc of creditors in a night-time negotiating melodrama that threatened to rekindle the debt crisis and rattle markets. LINK

BUDGET: The Wall Street Journal's Janet Hook: " Congress Set to Alter Focus After Passing Two Budgets" After the Senate passed its budget this weekend, Congress is expected to pivot to issues such as immigration and guns before attempting a broader deal on taxes, spending and the national debt later this year. Capitol Hill fell quiet as lawmakers headed home for a two-week spring recess, the longest pause in the Capitol Hill budget wars in months. LINK

ECONOMY: USA Today's David Jackson: " Obama loses polling advantage on economy" President Obama's poll numbers are heading in the wrong direction, especially as it relates to the economy and the Republicans. While most Americans favored Obama over the Republicans on economic issues after the president's re-election in November, more recent polls indicate that advantage is now gone. LINK

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN: Politico's Jennifer Epstein: " Biden speaks at Richard Ben Cramer memorial at Columbia" Vice President Joe Biden paid his respects Sunday to journalist Richard Ben Cramer, who followed the then-presidential hopeful during the 1988 race for his campaign classic, "What It Takes." Biden rounded out a weekend in New York that also included a fundraiser and a night at a theater with a trip up to Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus for Cramer's memorial service on Sunday, the Columbia Spectator reported. LINK

BACKGROUND CHECKS: The Hill's Alexander Bolton: " McCain emerges as key senator in expanding background checks" Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) has emerged as a key player if Senate Democrats are to have any chance of passing legislation to expand background checks for private sales of firearms. McCain and Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Dean Heller (R-Nev.) are at the top of a list of Republicans considered most likely to sign on to legislation expanding background checks after talks with Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) stalled earlier this month. LINK

The Washington Times' David Sherfinski: " Sen. Tom Coburn: Enhanced background checks will pass Senate, but not as written" New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn predict the Senate will pass a measure to strengthen background checks on gun sales, but National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre warned Sunday that Mr. Bloomberg cannot "buy America" on the issue. Three months after the shooting rampage at a Connecticut elementary school shocked the country, the Senate is poised to debate a gun package that includes several measures, the most contentious requiring near-universal background checks on all gun sales. LINK

ABC NEWS VIDEOS: " Roundtable I: Karl Rove and Jim Messina" LINK

BOOKMARKS: The Note: LINK The Must-Reads Online: LINK Top Line Webcast (12noon EST M-F): LINK ABC News Politics: LINK George's Bottom Line (George Stephanopoulos): LINK Follow ABC News on Twitter: LINK ABC News Mobile: LINK ABC News app on your iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad: LINK

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/notes-must-reads-monday-march-25-2013-071006998--abc-news-politics.html

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Monday, March 25, 2013

How to speed up Retina MacBook Pro wake from sleep

Last week while Mark Gurman and I were complaining about those little imperfections that mar the otherwise fantastic Retina MacBook Pro experience, Chad Coleman passed along a tip from Erv Walter on how to make the Retina MacBook Pro wake from sleep faster. This is for those times when you lift the lid, see the password entry field, but can't actually enter a password for what feels like 10 seconds or so. I mentioned it on MacBreak Weekly on Tuesday, and so many people found it helpful I figured I'd mention it here as well. From Ewal.net:

What is actually happening is that these new MacBook Pro?s (and recent MacBook Air?s) have a new powersaving mode which Apple calls standby. Standby mode kicks in after the laptop has been in normal sleep mode for about an hour. When that happens, the contents of RAM are written to the hard drive and the RAM is powered down to further extend battery life. In theory, the laptop will last up to 30 days in standby mode. The trade off is that, when waking up, it takes a long time to reload 16 GB of RAM from the hard drive (even with SSD).

It's a battery saving feature that, if you're plugged in, feels like a bug. If you're not on the road and you want speed over savings, Walter shows a terminal command that lets you change the standby delay. I've been using it all week and it's been great. I'll be traveling this week, however, so I'll be reverting to default. That's the nice thing about it -- you can set it to what makes the most sense for your current work flow.

For more information, and the terminal command you need to use, hit the link below.

Source: Ewal.net



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/QAPfPYL-1n4/story01.htm

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UK police: No 'third party involvement' in Russian tycoon's death

By Daniel Arkin, Staff Writer, NBC News

British police said evidence at the home of Boris Berezovsky, an exiled Russian oligarch who was found dead near London on Saturday, does not indicate "third party involvement."

?It would be wrong to speculate on the cause of death until the post mortem has been carried out. We do not have evidence at this stage to suggest third party involvement,? Detective Chief Inspector Kevin Brown, Deputy Senior Investigating Officer in the case, said in a statement.

Berezovsky, 67, amassed a mammoth fortune as an oil and automobiles magnate during Russia?s post-Soviet privatization of state assets in the early 1990s. He also accrued immense political influence, catapulting Boris Yeltsin to re-election in?1996 and brokering Vladimir Putin?s rise to prominence.

But when Putin became president of Russia in 2000, Berezovsky became one of his harshest critics and?often clashed?with the Kremlin. He soon fled to Britain, where he was granted political asylum three years later.

Police said the tycoon?s death was ?unexplained? and are working to make sense of Berezovksy?s final hours.

?The investigation team (is) building a picture of the last days of Mr. Berezovsky?s life, speaking to close friends and family to gain a better understanding of his state of mind,? said Brown.

Authorities announced Sunday that radioactive, biological and chemical specialists sent to conduct tests gave the scene an ?all clear,? The Associated Press reported.

?Officials found nothing of concern in the property, and we are now progressing the investigation as normal,? according to the police statement.

Heightening the intrigue is the fact that Berezovsky was a close friend of Alexander Litvinenko, a Russian dissident who was fatally and mysteriously poisoned with radioactive polonium in London in 2006.

Berezovsky was an outspoken opponent of Putin in recent years, charging the president with dictatorial policies and domestic terrorism. Berezovsky, who survived assassination attempts ? including a bombing that decapitated his driver ? said he feared retributive violence after criticizing the government, according to Reuters.

A spokesman for Putin on the Russia 24 television station said that he was not aware of the president?s reaction to the news of Berezovsky?s death, but that ?news of anyone?s death, no matter what kind of person they were, cannot arouse any positive emotions.?

NBC News? Becky Bratu contributed to this report.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/29ef10ea/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A30C240C174419710Euk0Epolice0Eno0Ethird0Eparty0Einvolvement0Ein0Erussian0Etycoons0Edeath0Dlite/story01.htm

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Desperate NBC Using Paterno Apologist?s Footage For Sandusky ?Exclusive? Interview (OliverWillisLikeKryptoniteToStupid)

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