Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Cher to perform on NBC's 'Voice' finale

Cher will sing 'Woman's World,' the first single off her upcoming album of the same name, the network said.

By Lynn Elber,?Associated Press / June 11, 2013

Cher is seen at the AFI Night at the Movies at the ArcLight in Los Angeles. Cher will be performing on the singing competition series "The Voice" during the season finale on Tuesday, June 18.

Todd Williamson/Invision/AP

Enlarge

Cher?has a date with NBC's "The Voice."

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The network said Monday the pop star will perform live on the talent contest's June 18 season finale.

She will sing "Woman's World," the first single off her upcoming album of the same name, the network said.

Cher, who turned 67 in May, joins other pop artists who have appeared on TV contests to promote new records. They include "Voice" guest stars Rod Stewart and Lady Antebellum.

Cher's?"Woman's World" album, her first in 12 years, is due out later this year.

The Grammy, Oscar and Emmy winner has scored a No. 1 single on the Billboard pop charts in each of the last six decades, including her 1998 single "Believe."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/xNnBp6Pu8PE/Cher-to-perform-on-NBC-s-Voice-finale

masters par 3 contest google augmented reality glasses wonderlic test texas tornado fantasy baseball jared sullinger jaleel white

Monday, June 10, 2013

Hit reality series of car restoration expert makes Asian debut ...

Danny 'The Count' Koker, star of the History series 'Counting Cars'. (Photo by Smallz & Raskind)

If you?re a fan of ?Pawn Stars?, the popular American reality series aired on the History Channel, then you?re probably familiar with the series? resident mechanic and auto restoration expert, Danny ?The Count? Koker.

Now we?ll get to see The Count do what he does best in his own spin-off reality series ?Counting Cars?, which premiered last May 27 also on History where it currently airs every Monday at 9:30PM.

?In all honesty, it?s a very surreal thing for me. You know, working with the ?Pawn Stars? gentlemen is absolutely wonderful. The fact that History was gracious enough to give me my own show is kinda of mind-blowing to me! I feel like the luckiest guy in the world,? Koker exclaimed during a recent phone interview with InterAksyon and other Southeast Asian media.

In recalling how he got to be fascinated with cars, Koker revealed that he grew up in Detroit, known as the motor vehicle capital of the world.

?For me, it?s just a lifelong passion. A large part of my youth growing up was spent around cars, hard rods and motorcycles as far back as I can remember. My father got me my first motorcycle when I was 8 years old. Also, many of my relatives from my father?s side actually work for Ford Motor Compan in Detroit. I?ve got a lot of automotive blood in my family.?

Two particular cars made a lasting impression on The Count when he was a kid. One was the 1966 Mustang GT 350 Chevy that his dad bought when he was 9 years old and the 1979 Z28 Camaro that he bought with his own money when he was 15 years old. He still has both cars and would like to particularly restore the Camaro in a future season of the series.

A Las Vegas legend who makes a profit from the classic cars and motorcycles that he amazingly restores every week in his shop called Count?s Kustoms, he is helped by a very able and loyal crew composed of right hand man Kevin, airbrush artist Horny Mike, shop detailer Roli, project scout Big Ryan, manager and bookkeeper Scott, bike shop manager and lead builder Shannon and body work wizard Grandpa.

Danny 'The Count' with his crew. (Photo by Stuart Pettican)

?My main people, they?ve been with me for years. They understand my style. They understand my flavor, my vibe, the way I like to do things and we work very well together as a team. So it?s really kind of been a course of years in collecting and finding these right guys. Now, they?ve been with me for several years now and together as a team, we work great together,? Koker said of his team.

The Count added that he and his team have two ways of restoring old cars.

?Certain cars need to be kept original and so vehicles like that, I do my best to make sure that we use as many original parts on it as possible. Other cars, I do what I call, ?Restomod?. It basically means it?s half restoration, half modification. With a car like that, we use a lot of newer parts where we?ll put a new engine, new transmission, updated drivetrain, so you?ve got a vehicle that looks old has that vintage flavor and style to it, yet it runs and drives like a brand new car.?

Asked about his biggest restoration challenge, Koker points to the Stutz Blackhawk that he restored for the wife of the late, great soul singer Barry White in Season 1.

?That was a challenge because the car itself is such a rare and unusual car with a lot of detail and intricate parts that are almost impossible to find. Parts we couldn?t find, we literally had to make,? he recalled.

But more than the finding and making the parts, Koker was challenged more by the fact that he?s doing it for the family of a musical legend.

?Doing it for Barry White?s family, for his wife, for his kids ? it was very important to me. These folks were friends of mine, they are beautiful people. I understand how important this vehicle is for their family being the fact that this was Barry?s last car before he passed away. So between the emotional connection for the family and the fact that the car is just so rare and so unusual, that was an extremely challenging restoration. But it came out gorgeous! I love that car!?

As for the other highlights of the first season of ?Counting Cars?, Koker points to the restoration of 1967 GTO Convertible that he ended up keeping afterwards. There was also this little green dune buggy that The Count says was an ?absolute blast? to restore.

?And then there?s this gentlemen in a wheelchair that wanted to get back out and ride his motorcycle again. He was shot and had been paralyzed from the waist down and all he wanted to do was to get back out and ride. I don?t want to tell you what we did till you watch the episode, but all I can tell you is ? this gentlemen is back out riding motorcycles with his buddies. So you have to watch for that episode. You?ll love it!?

Finally, we asked Koker which of the many cars he would prefer to be stuck with on a desert island if he only had one choice.

?Off the top of my head, I have to say it?s my father?s 1966 Mustang GT 350 Chevy. It?s the car that really got me started in getting hands-on on restoring cars. So it was the first car that meant something to me. The first one in our collection when my father and I started collecting cars together. It?s an extremely cool car. Plus it reminds me of my fond memories of my father. So I would say, it would be the car right there.?

With Father?s Day just around the corner The Count just might need to take a ride in that Mustang GT 350.

Source: http://www.interaksyon.com/motoring/hit-reality-series-of-car-restoration-expert-makes-asian-debut/

vice presidential debate Martha Raddatz Chris Lighty JJ Watt jerry sandusky raul ibanez completely wrong

World's first large(wafer)-scale production of III-V semiconductor nanowire

June 10, 2013 ? Researchers from Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), South Korea, and University of Illinois, U.S.A, developed the large-scale heteroepitaxial growth III-V nanowires on a Si wafer.

The research team demonstrated a novel method to epitaxially synthesize structurally and compositionally homogeneous and spatially uniform ternary InAsyP1-y nanowire on Si at wafer-scale using metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). The high quality of the nanowires is reflected in the remarkably narrow PL and X-ray peak width and extremely low ideality factor in the InAsyP1-y nanowire/Si diode.

A nanowire is a nanostructure with a diameter of the order of a nanometer (10-9 meters). Alternatively, nanowires can be defined as structures that have a thickness or diameter constrained to tens of nanometers or less and an unconstrained length. Technology related to nanowires has been selected as one of the 10 Breakthrough Technologies of 2004 by MIT Technology Review.

High-aspect-ratio semiconductors have led to significant breakthroughs in conventional electrical, optical, and energy harvesting devices. Among such structures, III-V semiconductor nanowires offer unique properties arising from their high electron mobility and absorption coefficients, as well as their direct bandgaps.

A common technique for creating a nanowire is Vapor-Liquid-Solid (VLS) synthesis. This process can produce crystalline nanowires of some semiconductor materials. However, metal catalysts, usually expensive noble metals, should be used for initiating the VLS mechanism. In addition, these metal catalysts are known to significantly degrade the quality of semiconductor nanowires by creating deep levels, thus limiting practical applications of nanowires into opto-electronic devices.

In this work, however, Prof. Choi's group developed a novel technique of growing III-V semiconductor nanowires without metal catalysts or nano-patterning. Metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD, AIXTRON A200) was used for the growth of the InAsyP1-y. 2 inch Si (111) wafer was cleaned with buffer oxide etch for 1 minute and deionized (DI) water for 2 seconds. Then, the wafer was immediately dipped in poly-L-lysine solution (Sigma-Aldrich inc.) for 3 minutes then rinsed in DI water for 10 seconds. The Si substrate was then loaded into the MOCVD reactor without any delay. The reactor pressure was lowered to 50 mbar with 15liter/min of hydrogen gas flow. Then the reactor was heated to growth temperatures (570 -- 630 ?), and stabilized for 10 minutes.

Kyoung Jin Choi, Associate Professor at Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), Korea, and Xiuling Li, Professor at University of Illinois, U.S.A. led the research and this description of the new research was published on the web on May 7 in ACS Nano. (Title: Wafer-Scale Production of Uniform InAsyP1-y Nanowire Array on Silicon for Heterogeneous Integration).

"If we develop new technology which manages the density of nanowire and bandgap energy with further study, it is also possible to produce high-efficiency & low-cost large scale solar cells," said Prof. Choi. "This technology will give us a chance to lead the research on the new renewable energy."

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/LMJT78FR8gA/130610083916.htm

separation of church and state dale earnhardt oscar predictions nba all star game 2012 academy awards 2012 nominations independent spirit awards 2012 jan brewer

Ultrex Fiberglass Windows Ideal for Severe Weather at the Jersey Shore

This proprietary fiberglass material pioneered by Marvin Windows and Doors is far stronger and more temperature-resistant than other materials ? and looks great for decades?

ultrex stronger than vinyl 408 Ultrex Fiberglass Windows Ideal for Severe Weather at the Jersey Shore

WARROAD, Minn. ? The United States witnessed 11 billion-dollar extreme weather and climate events in 2012, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration?s National Climatic Data Center. Seven of those were tornadoes or other spring/summer severe weather, which brought extreme wind, hail and other hazards to the safety of people and property across the country.

When it comes to protecting your home, choosing high-quality, durable building materials is important. Ultrex ? a proprietary fiberglass material created by Marvin Windows and Doors ? is one of the toughest, longest-lasting materials on the market. Ultrex fiberglass is available exclusively in products from Integrity Windows and Doors, Infinity Windows and Doors, and Apex Siding.

Vinyl and vinyl-wood composites, such as Fibrex?, are two common building materials, often used in relatively inexpensive windows, doors and siding. Unfortunately for homeowners, vinyl and vinyl-wood composites are susceptible to deformation ? becoming soft in heat and brittle in cold ? expansion and contraction. Further, vinyl is particularly susceptible to UV degradation from exposure to sunlight, which can cause chalking, fading or cracking.

?Homeowners are increasingly dissatisfied with vinyl and want something that requires less maintenance than wood. By comparison, Ultrex is quite possibly the perfect building material,? said John Evans, marketing manager for Infinity Windows and Doors. ?Windows, doors and siding made with Ultrex pultruded fiberglass outperform vinyl and vinyl-wood composites in virtually every measurable category.?

 Ultrex Fiberglass Windows Ideal for Severe Weather at the Jersey Shore

Strength

Infinity_Circle_8xUltrex is eight times stronger than vinyl and three times stronger than vinyl-wood composites. Just one inch of Ultrex can hold up to 34,000 pounds. As a house settles over time ? and is assaulted with hail, baseballs and other bits of everyday life ? Ultrex stays true and resists sagging. And because it?s so much stronger than other materials, Ultrex windows can be built with thinner, stronger frames, allowing larger openings and more daylight.

Durability

Ultrex resists harsh corrosives and remains stable in extreme temperatures. It?s also the only product in the fiberglass, vinyl or composite category whose finish meets the American Architectural Manufacturers Association?s certification standards 624-10 and 625-10 for quality and durability.

Ultrex provides a consistent, low-maintenance finish that can be painted without voiding the warranty, and Ultrex finishes are even available in dark colors because the material provides superior resistance to chalking and fading.

Energy efficiency

Unlike vinyl and vinyl-wood composites, Ultrex expands at nearly the same rate as glass, resulting in windows and doors that keep their seal and don?t leak ? all improving long-term performance and providing better energy efficiency.

Learn more about Ultrex fiberglass and request a free sample of the material at www.ultrexfiberglass.com.

ABOUT ULTREX
Strong, stable, durable and virtually indestructible, Ultrex fiberglass is possibly the perfect building material, creating windows and doors that leave other materials in the dust. Made from pultruded fiberglass, Ultrex outperforms vinyl on nearly every measure.

For more information on Fiberglass Replacement Windows by Marvin call Global Home Improvement at 888-234-2929 or visit us online at www.globalhomeinc.com.

Copyright ? Infinity from Marvin Replacement Windows. All rights reserved.

Source: http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2013/06/10/ultrex-fiberglass-windows-ideal-for-severe-weather-at-the-jersey-shore/

patrice oneal shamrock slainte the quiet man yellow cab dropkick murphys guernsey

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Mars discovery: Rock reveals science of planet?s watery past

A rock analyzed by the rover Opportunity has signs of clay-mineral composition, hinting at abundant fresh water ? perhaps a habitable environment ? in Mars? past.

By Mark Trumbull,?Staff writer / June 8, 2013

This image provided by NASA shows a rock that the NASA Mars rover Opportunity recently examined. The six-wheel, solar-powered rover is leaving its current location in Endeavour Crater and headed for a new spot ahead of the next Martian winter.

NASA/AP

Enlarge

In a small rock, planetary scientists are reading important evidence of once-abundant water on Mars.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; // google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The rover Opportunity has examined a rock on Mars that dates back to a distant era when the Red Planet had plenty of water ? and possibly an atmosphere with clouds and rain.

?A lot of water moved through this rock," said Steve Squyres of Cornell University, principal investigator for the Opportunity mission, run by NASA?s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The rock, given the name ?Esperance? by scientists, has a combination of elements that indicate a clay-mineral composition, formed in a watery environment. ?This is water you could drink," Mr. Squyres said, referring to a neutral, non-acidic composition like fresh water on Earth.

That?s important because such neutral water and a substantial surrounding atmosphere are conditions that are favorable for harboring life. Those conditions may have existed in Mars? relatively early history, several billion years ago.

?The Esperance results are some of the most important findings of our entire mission," said Squyres, who is based in Ithaca, N.Y. "The composition tells us about the environmental conditions that altered the minerals.?

The finding isn?t the first evidence to emerge that Mars, now seen as a ?hostile? place lacking in protective atmosphere, once had conditions hospitable to life.

Back in March, NASA reported important findings from drilling done by a more advanced rover, Curiosity.

Minerals in that rock sample ?speak of abundant standing water, conditions neither too acidic or too alkaline for life, and the minerals that would have provided a ready energy source for microbes, if any had been there,? according to a Christian Science Monitor account of that discovery.

In contrast to the newer Curiosity, Opportunity?s longevity is part of the intrigue behind the latest evidence of a watery past on Mars.

Opportunity has chugged forward far longer than scientists expected, and is now nearing the 10-year mark in its exploratory mission.

It used a rock abrasion tool, spectrometer, and microscopic imager to examine the rock Esperance at an area of the planet called Cape York. Now Opportunity is trekking to a place called Solander Point, where researchers hope to use a large exposed cross-section of geological layering to learn about stages in the planet?s environmental history.

Much about the Martian past remains a mystery.

?There are signs that in the distant past, billions of years ago, Mars was a much more inviting place,? NASA said in 2011 as the space agency was launching new missions to the planet. ?It appears that in its youth, Mars was a place that could have harbored life, with a thicker atmosphere warm enough for rain that formed lakes or even seas.?

The exploring since then appears to be bearing out that view.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/iZIxuILpa-8/Mars-discovery-Rock-reveals-science-of-planet-s-watery-past

Hurricane Isaac Sam Claflin Tony Farmer West Nile virus symptoms snooki Prince Harry Vegas pictures Avril Lavigne

In Iran vote, reformists struggle with few options

In this Friday, June 7, 2013 photo, an Iranian man reads one of electoral leaflets, covering the street, after Friday prayers in Tehran, Iran. Despite four years of non-stop arrests and intimidation, Iran?s dissidents still find ways to show their resilience. Protest messages ricochet around social media and angry graffiti pops up. But it only takes a closer look at the lockdown atmosphere across Iran ahead of Friday?s presidential election to show how much the organized opposition has fallen since massive protests in 2009. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

In this Friday, June 7, 2013 photo, an Iranian man reads one of electoral leaflets, covering the street, after Friday prayers in Tehran, Iran. Despite four years of non-stop arrests and intimidation, Iran?s dissidents still find ways to show their resilience. Protest messages ricochet around social media and angry graffiti pops up. But it only takes a closer look at the lockdown atmosphere across Iran ahead of Friday?s presidential election to show how much the organized opposition has fallen since massive protests in 2009. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

In this Friday, June 7, 2013 photo, an Iranian woman looks out of the window of a public bus as supporters of presidential candidates attend a street campaign, reflected at the window after Friday prayers in Tehran, Iran. Iranian Presidential election will be held on June 14, 2013. Despite four years of non-stop arrests and intimidation, Iran?s dissidents still find ways to show their resilience. Protest messages ricochet around social media and angry graffiti pops up. But it only takes a closer look at the lockdown atmosphere across Iran ahead of Friday?s presidential election to show how much the organized opposition has fallen since massive protests in 2009. (AP Photo/Ebrahim Noroozi)

FILE - In this file picture released by the semi-official Fars news agency on Tuesday, June 4, 2013, mourners show the victory sign during a funeral ceremony for Ayatollah Jalaluddin Taheri, shown in the poster at center, in the central city of Isfahan, Iran. Despite four years of non-stop arrests and intimidation, Iran?s dissidents still find ways to show their resilience. Protest messages ricochet around social media and angry graffiti pops up. But it only takes a closer look at the lockdown atmosphere across Iran ahead of Friday?s presidential election to show how much the organized opposition has fallen since massive protests in 2009. (AP Photo/Fars News Agency, Hamid Reza Nikoumaram, File)

FILE - In this June 15, 2009 file photo, a demonstrator wears a mask in the party's color of green, due to fears of being identified, as hundreds of thousands of supporters of leading opposition presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims there was voting fraud in election, turn out to protest the result of the election at a mass rally in Azadi (Freedom) square in Tehran, Iran. Despite four years of non-stop arrests and intimidation, Iran?s dissidents still find ways to show their resilience. Protest messages ricochet around social media and angry graffiti pops up. But it only takes a closer look at the lockdown atmosphere across Iran ahead of Friday?s presidential election to show how much the organized opposition has fallen since massive protests in 2009. ( AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)

FILE - In this Monday, June 15, 2009 file photo, hundreds of thousands of supporters of leading opposition presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, who claims there was voting fraud in Friday's election, turn out to protest the result of the election at a mass rally in Azadi (Freedom) square in Tehran, Iran. Despite four years of non-stop arrests and intimidation, Iran?s dissidents still find ways to show their resilience. Protest messages ricochet around social media and angry graffiti pops up. But it only takes a closer look at the lockdown atmosphere across Iran ahead of Friday?s presidential election to show how much the organized opposition has fallen since massive protests in 2009. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File)

(AP) ? Despite four years of non-stop pressure, arrests and intimidation, Iran's dissidents still find ways to show their resilience.

Protest messages still ricochet around social media despite Iran's cyber cops' attempts to control the Web. Angry graffiti pops up and then quickly painted over by authorities. Mourners at the funeral of a dissident cleric flashed V-for-victory gestures and chanted against the state.

But just a look at the sidewalks around Tehran's Mellat Park shows how far Iran's opposition has fallen as the country prepares for Friday's presidential election.

Four years ago, girls on rollerblades sped around the park delivering fliers for the reform camp's candidate-hero Mir Hossein Mousavi. Emerald-colored head scarves and wrist bands representing Mousavi's Green Movement were in such demand that bloggers would list shops with available fabric.

This time, there are just a few subdued election placards for candidates considered fully in sync with Iran's ruling clerics. Security forces and paramilitary volunteers are never far away.

Mousavi and other opposition leader, Mahdi Karroubi, are under house arrest and hundreds more activists, bloggers and journalists have faced detention as part of relentless crackdowns since Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election in 2009 brought accusations of vote rigging and something Iran has not seen since the 1979 Islamic Revolution: Huge crowds in the streets chanting against the leadership.

Iran's forces for reform are not so much crushed as now bottled up tightly. Now the election that marks the end of Ahmadinejad's eight-year era also brings another moment of political transition: Whether the loose affiliation of reformists, liberals and Western-leaning activists can somehow remain relevant in a time when the guardians of the Islamic establishment are consolidating their defenses.

"There is no shortage of people in Iran who would like to see a different way of being governed and a different world view from the leadership," said Theodore Karasik, a security and political affairs analyst at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis. "Trouble for them is that they now fragmented and disorganized. This is exactly what Iranian authorities want to see."

The entire process has been derided by Western governments and rights groups as a farce after Iran's election overseers ? all loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ? blacklisted former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani from the ballot despite his lofty status as one of the architects of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

For Iran's rulers, the relatively moderate Rafsanjani represents an unsettling force who could breathe some life into the battered opposition.

Any momentum toward a backlash over Rafsanjani's barring quickly dissipated. He grumbled over the rebuff and Iranian reformist websites buzzed with complaints. But there have been no major street protests, suggesting ? once again ? there are only remote chances for a revival of the 2009 mass demonstrations. His backers have retreated to election boycott calls or drifted to other candidates who have no apparent intention to shake up the system.

The only significant public show of dissent before the election came in a coincidence of timing. Some mourners at the funeral procession of dissident Ayatollah Jalaluddin Taheri, who died last Sunday in the central city of Isfahan, used the march to revive the opposition chants from 2009 such as "death to the dictator," according to video clips posted on the Internet. But the outburst did not seem to inspire other rallies around the country.

"There is significant opposition in Iran to a lot of things, international relations, crackdowns on the Internet, but its dispersed over all classes of society and without a real focus," said Rasool Nafisi, an Iranian affairs analyst at Strayer University in Virginia. "There is opposition, but I doubt you can call it a movement."

Opposition voters now face the choice of whether to boycott the polls or turn to whatever they see as the least objectionable candidate. So far, the top figures of the reform movement, like former President Mohammad Khatami, have not given an indication to their supporters which avenue to take ? meaning a unified strategy may only emerge at the last minute, if at all.

A likely major indicator in the final vote will be how many eligible voters stayed away, in comparison to a reported 85 percent turnout in 2009. It worries officials enough that Khamenei used one of the country's most somber occasions ? the memorial ceremony marking the death of Islamic Revolution founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ? to say that a low turnout will only help Iran's "enemies" such as the U.S. and Israel.

Most of the eight hopefuls cleared to run are bathed in pro-establishment credentials, including such insider figures as top nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili and Khamenei adviser Ali Akbar Velayati.

Some reformists have migrated toward former nuclear negotiator Hasan Rowhani as a sort of default, since he is closely aligned with Rafsanjani. Khatami's former vice president, Mohammad Reza Aref, has made a strong bid to draw reformist voters, speaking with the most passion about freedoms Wednesday during the second television debate among the eight candidates.

"An unprecedented security atmosphere has been imposed in recent years that caused lack of motivation among students," he said. "The solution is not confrontation, elimination or shutting down. We are living in the age of communications."

Others have gravitated to Tehran Mayor Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf in hopes his hands-on reputation could halt the downward slide of Iran's sanctions-wracked economy.

But there is little sense left of the unified Green Movement that poured onto the streets in 2009 over claims that vote rigging robbed Mousavi of victory and handed re-election to Ahmadinejad. The protests ? the worse domestic unrest since the Islamic Revolution ? momentarily stunned authorities with once-unthinkable acts of rebellion, such as burning portraits of Khamenei, a full 18 months before even the first hints of the Arab Spring uprisings.

Mousavi and fellow candidate Karroubi have been under house arrest since early 2011. Security forces and intelligence units have been bolstered to the point where any form of dissent ? in public or online ? risks arrest. Most recently, several people were detained at a Rowhani rally after calling for Mousavi's release.

Iranian police chief, Gen. Ismail Moghadam warned: "Police will confront individuals who have counter-revolutionary behavior."

Authorities have sharply limited visas for Western media to cover the election. Tehran-based journalists also face sweeping restrictions on street reporting and travel. On Thursday, the Paris-based media rights group Reporters Without Borders accused Iranian officials of blocking coverage of the "government's suppression of fundamental freedoms, including freedom of information."

"The regime is showing its true colors," said Abdollah Mohtadi, a member of a London-based opposition group Unity for Democracy in Iran. "When Iranians cannot campaign or give voice to their political views without fear of persecution or prosecution, any claims the regime might make to democracy are shown to be a lie."

Farid Kia, 45, a university instructor in business administration who backed Mousavi four years ago, now says, "Voting is fruitless."

Hossein Yekkeh, a 30-year-old engineer who voted for Mousavi, said he doesn't plan to vote because "none of current candidates represent reformists."

Prominent U.S.-based Iranian blogger Mehdi Saharkhiz ? whose father Isa, a well-known journalist, has been jailed since 2009 ? has engaged in online debates with Iranians on the value of a mass boycott. Saharkhiz encourages voters to stay away after the rejection of Rafsanjani and in protest of the vote-rigging claims four years ago.

"So you think they won't do it again this time?" he wrote.

Another variable is the deepening Western sanctions over Iran's nuclear program, which may have the indirect consequence of boosting the vote.

Many former Green Movement backers have put ideology aside and have fallen behind candidates, such as Tehran Mayor Qalibaf, seen as capable fiscal managers as the economy reels under 30 percent unemployment and prices rising more than threefold on goods such as chicken and beef. The only sporadic protests in the past years, in fact, have been over pocketbook issues and not the squeeze on political freedoms.

"Is there still an organized Green Movement? No," said Scott Lucas, an Iranian affairs expert at Britain's Birmingham University. "Whatever was there, the authorities have been successful in breaking it up with detentions and crackdowns. But the issues the protesters raised ? accountability, political transparency, reforms, openness ? are still there and very much alive. They just have no cohesive expression."

___

Associated Press writer Nasser Karimi in Tehran contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-09-Iran-Dissent%20in%20Disarray/id-f97a32279c0e4b78910f34e1c6ebecff

Heisman watch John McAfee Jenny Rivera Pacquiao vs Marquez 4 pacquiao Jim DeMint Dave Brubeck

Gowanus Canal Pollution: Photos By William Miller Show Devastating Beauty Of Toxic Channel

Brooklyn's Gowanus Canal is one of the "most extensively contaminated" waterways in America, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Now, the channel's toxicity is being highlighted in a more artistic light. Photographer William Miller has released some stunning images of the the Gowanus Canal, a runoff point for billions of gallons of wastewater and sewage from metropolitan New York City (and, for a time, a dead dolphin). Miller, a native New Yorker, shot the photos in 2011.

The EPA's plans to dredge and clean up the 1.8-mile canal could cost upwards of $500 million, and may take until 2020, according to a New York Times report.

Take a look at some of Miller's haunting photos below.

All photos courtesy of William Miller Photography.

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/08/gowanus-canal-pollution-william-miller-photos_n_3397220.html

Macho Camacho Rise of the Guardians Pumpkin Pie Jack Taylor Apple Pie Recipe black friday How long to cook a turkey