Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Obama Is 'Not Bluffing' - Yeshiva World News

Biden: Obama Is ?Not Bluffing? On Stopping Iran?s Nuclear Drive

(Monday, March 4th, 2013)

bidbiU.S. Vice President Joe Biden told America?s biggest pro-Israel lobbying organization on Monday that President Barack Obama is ?not bluffing? about the United States? determination to stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon.

?The president of the United States cannot and does not bluff. President Barack Obama is not bluffing,? he told the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) in a speech to its annual policy conference.

Biden said the United States was ?not looking for war? and wanted peaceful negotiations with Iran, adding that there was still time and space for talks to succeed, but the ?window is closing.?

(Reuters)

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Subscribe to RSS Feed For This Article

Source: http://www.theyeshivaworld.com/?p=159372

tory burch Al Smith Dinner Herman Melville Books Kyna Treacy megan fox Bb&t Lane Goodwin

Suspect in Vegas Strip shooting fights extradition from California

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A man accused of fatally shooting an aspiring rapper as he drove a Maserati along the Las Vegas Strip, touching off a fiery car crash that killed two other people, challenged his extradition back to Nevada from California on Monday.

The man insisted through his defense lawyer that police or other authorities from Nevada be summoned to Los Angeles to identify him in court as the fugitive they seek in the February 21 shooting, 26-year-old Ammar Harris.

Harris is accused of opening fire from a black Range Rover on the 2008 Maserati being driven by Kenneth Wayne Cherry Jr., 27, in an intersection at the heart of the Vegas Strip, near several casino resort hotels.

Cherry, who performed under the name "Kenny Clutch," was mortally wounded in the pre-dawn shooting, and his car veered out of control into a taxicab, which exploded in flames, killing driver Michael Bolden, 62, and his passenger Sandi Sutton-Wasmund, 48.

After an exhaustive six-day, multi-state manhunt, a man authorities identified as Harris was tracked to an apartment in the North Hollywood section of Los Angeles, where he surrendered to police and FBI agents last Thursday.

Harris is charged in Clark County Justice Court with 11 felony counts, including murder, attempted murder and firearms charges.

Police say he has a long criminal history that includes arrests for robbery, sexual assault and kidnapping as well as pandering and soliciting prostitution. Police have said they believed he was involved in the sex trade.

The suspect, dressed in blue jail fatigues and standing in a glass-enclosed booth, appeared on Monday in a Los Angeles courtroom for a brief proceeding in which a judge had been expected to order him sent back to Nevada.

Instead, an identification hearing was set for March 14, and the judge ordered him to remain held without bond until then.

SHOOTING CAUGHT ON CAMERA

The circumstances behind the high-profile shooting in the desert resort city remained unclear, although police have cited a verbal altercation in the valet area of the Aria resort and Casino, a few blocks away on the Strip.

According to an arrest warrant filed by a Las Vegas police detective in the case and released by prosecutors on Monday, security cameras captured Harris briefly approaching the driver's side of Cherry's silver Maserati in the Aria's valet area just minutes before the shooting.

Surveillance cameras from several casinos showed the Range Rover following the Maserati out of the Aria and northbound on the Strip, Detective Dan Long wrote in the warrant.

The driver of a taxi driving along the Strip at the same time told police the drivers of the Range Rover and Maserati had a brief exchange at a red light, Long wrote.

Minutes later, a dashboard camera in the cab captured the Range Rover moving into the path of the Maserati, forcing it to brake, and then the sound of a gunshot, Long said in the arrest warrant. Several more gunshots were recorded on the camera before the Maserati slammed into a cab being driven by Bolden.

According to Long, Cherry suffered a gunshot wound to the chest and was pronounced dead at a hospital a short time later.

"Ammar Harris drove the Range Rover and shot at the occupants of the Maserati after a verbal altercation," the detective wrote.

Cherry's slaying took place less than a mile from where rapper Tupac Shakur was fatally shot in September 1996 while riding in a BMW with Death Row Records co-founder Marion "Suge" Knight after the two men had attended a Mike Tyson boxing match.

Shakur, 25, was hit by gunfire from at least one assailant in a Cadillac while sitting in Knight's car at an intersection and died six days later. His murder remains unsolved.

(Additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Andrew Hay and Eric Walsh)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/suspect-vegas-strip-shooting-fights-extradition-california-020014390.html

mega millions march 30 lucky numbers odds of winning mega millions mary mary sag aftra merger dj am bully

Honoring a Force of Nature, in Computers and Networks - NYTimes ...

As a brilliant Israeli-born math student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology during the 1960s, Danny Cohen was known as a force of nature. And when he learned that Ivan Sutherland, the inventor of the seminal Sketchpad computer interface system, was teaching a small graduate seminar on computer graphics at Harvard, he was determined to take the course.

?At that time the way you got into courses like that was that Harvard had a quaint little phrase, ?admission by consent of the instructor,?? recalled Robert F. Sproull, a computer scientist who was a Harvard student at the time. ?Danny had shown up and we all figured that Ivan had consented, but later we learned, according to Ivan, it was more like relented.?

The Israeli math prodigy would go on to become a graduate student with Dr. Sutherland, with whom he designed the first computerized flight simulation system, pioneering the software technique for hiding visual surfaces from view.

After earning his doctorate he joined the Harvard computer science faculty and then moved to the University of Southern California, where he spent 20 years at the Information Sciences Institute. While at the institute he made fundamental contributions that included developing techniques for sending voice and other ?real time? information over the Arpanet, the predecessor to the modern Internet; to helping create the Metal Oxide Semiconductor Implementation Service, the first computer chip ?foundry,? which helped train a generation of students in the art of Very Large Scale Integrated circuit design, as well as inventing a ultra-high speed networking system, which made possible the first commodity computing clusters ? forerunners of today?s cloud computing systems ? practical.

Along the way he achieved a legendary status inside the elite computing fraternity who pioneered today?s computers and networks.

On Saturday, to celebrate his recent retirement as a distinguished engineer from the former Sun Microsystems Laboratories, which in 2009 became part of Oracle, a small group of computing pioneers gathered at Google to hold a ?Festschrift? ? which traditionally refers to a book written to honor a respected academic colleague.

Among the more than 40 attendees who came to the afternoon seminar and told stories about Dr. Cohen?s academic accomplishments and adventures were Vint Cerf and Robert Kahn, who designed the original Internet protocols; Larry Roberts, an early ARPA manager who would become the first president of Telnet and later other networking firms; Leonard Kleinrock, a UCLA computer scientist who did early design work in computer networking; Charles Seitz, a California Institute of Technology computer scientist who designed some of the first supercomputers based on cheap microprocessors; Neil Gershenfeld, director of the Center for Bits and Atoms at MIT; Ivan and William Robert Sutherland, known as Bert, brothers who pioneered a range of computing technologies at Xerox, Sun and elsewhere; and Deborah L. Estrin, a member of a well known family of computer scientists who recently became the first professor hired by CornellNYC Tech.

Long known for both a sly sense of humor and also being a bit of a practical joker, Dr. Cohen over the years took to publishing with a mysterious co-author, the imaginary ?Professor James Finnegan? (who is cited twice in Dr. Cohen?s Wikipedia entry). A scientist playing Dr. Finnegan, outfitted in a tiger-stripe sport coat, made a presentation on Saturday ? an academic treatise on the invention of something called a ?daser.? Just as the laser amplified light, the daser, he noted, would amplify darkness.

Ron Ho, a microprocessor architect at Oracle, described arriving at Sun Labs in 2003 and on his second day Dr. Cohen, introducing himself as ?Danny,? charged into his office and handed him a paper written by Professor Finnegan and told him he must read it.

As he read the paper Dr. Ho became more and more enraged. ?It wasn?t until I got to the very end where it said, ?the more processors, the better the paper,? that I realized it was a joke,? he recalled.

Source: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/04/honoring-a-force-of-nature-in-computers-and-networks/

the killers julianne hough brandy michael pineda charles taylor bruins boston bruins

Monday, March 4, 2013

Scientists say baby born with HIV apparently cured

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A baby born with the AIDS virus appears to have been cured, scientists announced Sunday, describing the case of a child from Mississippi who's now 2? and has been off medication for about a year with no signs of infection.

There's no guarantee the child will remain healthy, although sophisticated testing uncovered just traces of the virus' genetic material still lingering. If so, it would mark only the world's second reported cure.

Specialists say Sunday's announcement, at a major AIDS meeting in Atlanta, offers promising clues for efforts to eliminate HIV infection in children, especially in AIDS-plagued African countries where too many babies are born with the virus.

"You could call this about as close to a cure, if not a cure, that we've seen," Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health, who is familiar with the findings, told The Associated Press.

A doctor gave this baby faster and stronger treatment than is usual, starting a three-drug infusion within 30 hours of birth. That was before tests confirmed the infant was infected and not just at risk from a mother whose HIV wasn't diagnosed until she was in labor.

"I just felt like this baby was at higher-than-normal risk, and deserved our best shot," Dr. Hannah Gay, a pediatric HIV specialist at the University of Mississippi, said in an interview.

That fast action apparently knocked out HIV in the baby's blood before it could form hideouts in the body. Those so-called reservoirs of dormant cells usually rapidly reinfect anyone who stops medication, said Dr. Deborah Persaud of Johns Hopkins Children's Center. She led the investigation that deemed the child "functionally cured," meaning in long-term remission even if all traces of the virus haven't been completely eradicated.

Next, Persaud's team is planning a study to try to prove that, with more aggressive treatment of other high-risk babies. "Maybe we'll be able to block this reservoir seeding," Persaud said.

No one should stop anti-AIDS drugs as a result of this case, Fauci cautioned.

But "it opens up a lot of doors" to research if other children can be helped, he said. "It makes perfect sense what happened."

Better than treatment is to prevent babies from being born with HIV in the first place.

About 300,000 children were born with HIV in 2011, mostly in poor countries where only about 60 percent of infected pregnant women get treatment that can keep them from passing the virus to their babies. In the U.S., such births are very rare because HIV testing and treatment long have been part of prenatal care.

"We can't promise to cure babies who are infected. We can promise to prevent the vast majority of transmissions if the moms are tested during every pregnancy," Gay stressed.

The only other person considered cured of the AIDS virus underwent a very different and risky kind of treatment ? a bone marrow transplant from a special donor, one of the rare people who is naturally resistant to HIV. Timothy Ray Brown of San Francisco has not needed HIV medications in the five years since that transplant.

The Mississippi case shows "there may be different cures for different populations of HIV-infected people," said Dr. Rowena Johnston of amFAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research. That group funded Persaud's team to explore possible cases of pediatric cures.

It also suggests that scientists should look back at other children who've been treated since shortly after birth, including some reports of possible cures in the late 1990s that were dismissed at the time, said Dr. Steven Deeks of the University of California, San Francisco, who also has seen the findings.

"This will likely inspire the field, make people more optimistic that this is possible," he said.

In the Mississippi case, the mother had had no prenatal care when she came to a rural emergency room in advanced labor. A rapid test detected HIV. In such cases, doctors typically give the newborn low-dose medication in hopes of preventing HIV from taking root. But the small hospital didn't have the proper liquid kind, and sent the infant to Gay's medical center. She gave the baby higher treatment-level doses.

The child responded well through age 18 months, when the family temporarily quit returning and stopped treatment, researchers said. When they returned several months later, remarkably, Gay's standard tests detected no virus in the child's blood.

Ten months after treatment stopped, a battery of super-sensitive tests at half a dozen laboratories found no sign of the virus' return. There were only some remnants of genetic material that don't appear able to replicate, Persaud said.

In Mississippi, Gay gives the child a check-up every few months: "I just check for the virus and keep praying that it stays gone."

The mother's HIV is being controlled with medication and she is "quite excited for her child," Gay added.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/scientists-baby-born-hiv-apparently-cured-213124051.html

Lupe Ontiveros London 2012 China muhammad ali Opening ceremony London 2012 Google Fiber Olympics Schedule 2012 Olympic Medal Count 2012