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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50980086/
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Mitchel Mortaza is going through the trouble of trying to re-brand his LFL football League. It makes me wonder, if they would have re-named the Titanic before it went down, would on display someplace instead of laying on the bottom of the ocean floor?? Display, that is some of the problem with the LFL. Mortaza is running out of places to put his Under dressed women who go out on artificial turf to sustain the worse rug burns of their lives. Mortaza has left a path of destruction all over the United States. He equates himself to being on the same level as Roger Goodell of the NFL.? Now that people are flocking away from Mortaza?s ways, he is desperately trying to save a sinking ship. Not only does he make the women who play do the ticket selling, he seems to have a less than acceptable attitude towards the people who make things work for him.
Time is passing by and so are the opportunities for this once popular sport to jump into the big time. Once upon a time, Mortaza could have sold these women?s football franchises to people in the cites they popped up in. I heard a number as high as 1/2 million dollars for the team in Minnesota. Mortaza wouldn?t have any part of that. He wanted to keep all his teams under his own tight fisted control.? He once payed the ladies who played in these games until he figured out he could get away without paying them.
That?s when the wheels started to fall off. The big name players like Deborah Poles and Tasha The Tank Pryor left to gone onto bigger and better things. These where the kind of players that packed people in the seat. Mortaza couldn?t keep women like them from speaking their mind to him. Girls that talk him what they thought were soon to be gone. The family members who worked behind the scenes to help this self-proclaimed LFL commissioner build his oversize ego even larger left a long time ago. Now with the departure of the main masterminded deal maker, Mitchell Mortza thinks he can re-brand this seriously wounded League and it?s all going to be fine.
These days there are lots of other choices for women to play football now. They don?t have to be humiliated by the owner of the LFL to do it.? There are teams forming like the Orlando Eclipse.?? Just click the teams name and go to faceboook to see their team page. Women won?t have to put up with Mitchell Mortaza and his false promises anymore.
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1. Bowing before the altar.
2. Prostrating himself on the floor
with his face down.
3. Whipping his bare back with an
iron chain.
4. Staring at the Crucifix while
kneeling repeatedly.
5. Clasping, opening or spreading his
hands.
6. Stretching arms out in the form of
a cross.
7. Stretching or reaching straight up
to heaven.
8. Sitting to read or to ponder
readings.
9. Separating from others on the road
and repeating the Sign of the Cross.
?
Here is the exposition of the Eighth Way, Sitting to read or to ponder readings:
The holy
father Dominic also had another beautiful way of praying, full of devotion and
grace. After the canonical hours and the grace which is said in common after
meals the father would go off quickly to some place where he could be alone, in
a cell or somewhere. Sober and alert and anointed with a spirit of devotion
which he had drawn from the words of God which had been sung in choir or during
the meal, he would settle himself down to read or pray, recollecting himself in
himself and fixing himself in the presence of God. Sitting there quietly, he
would open some book before him, arming himself first with the sign of the
cross, and then he would read. And he would be moved in his mind as
delightfully as if he heard the Lord speaking to him. As the Psalm says, ?I
will hear what the Lord God is saying in me, because he will speak peace to his
people and upon his saints, and to those who turn to him with all their heart?
(Psalms 84:9). It was as if he were arguing with a friend; at one moment he
would appear to be feeling impatient, nodding his head energetically, then he
would seem to be listening quietly, then you would see him disputing and struggling,
and laughing and weeping all at once, fixing then lowering his gaze, then again
speaking quietly and beating his breast. If anyone was inquisitive enough to
want to spy on him secretly, he would find that the holy father Dominic was
like Moses, who went into the innermost desert and saw the burning bush and the
Lord speaking and calling to him to humble himself (Exodus 3:1ff). The man of
God had a prophetic way of passing over quickly from reading to prayer and from
meditation to contemplation.When he
was reading like this on his own, he used to venerate the book and bow to it
and sometimes kiss it, particularly if it was a book of the gospels or if he
was reading the words which Christ had spoken with his own lips. And sometimes
he used to hide his face and turn it aside, or he would bury his face in his
hands or hide it a little in his scapular. And then he would also become
anxious and full of yearning, and he would also rise a little, respectfully,
and bow as if he were thanking some very special person for favors received.
Then, quite refreshed and at peace in himself, he would continue reading his
book.?
More here.
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BRUSSELS (Reuters) - An employee who was asked by British Airways to remove a Christian cross from around her neck has won a religious discrimination case at Europe's human rights court but three other claimants lost similar cases on Tuesday.
The ruling by the European Court of Human Rights will mean private companies will have to reconsider how they treat their employees' rights to express their religious beliefs in the workplace.
Nadia Eweida was sent home without pay from British Airways in 2006 for wearing a necklace with a small silver cross that the company said violated its dress code.
The court ruled that British Airways' request for Eweida to remove the cross "amounted to an interference with her right to manifest her religion".
Reacting to the ruling, British Prime Minister David Cameron said on Twitter: "Delighted that principle of wearing religious symbols at work has been upheld - people shouldn't suffer discrimination due to religious beliefs."
Cameron had pledged to introduce legislation allowing individuals to wear religious symbols at work in response to Eweida's case in July 2012.
However, Shirley Chaplin, Lillian Ladele and Gary McFarlane all lost appeals in which they argued that British courts had not protected their rights to religious expression.
Nurse Chaplin was told by her employers to remove a crucifix around her neck as it could cause injury if a patient pulled at it.
The court ruled that the reason for asking her to remove the cross - protection of health and safety on a hospital ward - was "of a greater magnitude than that which applied in respect of Ms Eweida".
Both Eweida's and Chaplin's case were originally dismissed by British labor courts.
CIVIL PARTNERSHIP
The two remaining cases pit gay rights against the right to religious freedom.
McFarlane was dismissed from a national counseling service when his employers judged him unwilling to offer sex advice to homosexual couples. The fourth claimant, Ladele, refused to officiate at civil partnership ceremonies for gay couples as part of her duties as a registrar.
Both lost their cases on Tuesday.
Britain's Equality and Human Rights Commission has suggested that the British courts' interpretation of the law on the manifestation of religion and religious discrimination is too narrow, a position underlined by the European court's ruling in the case of Eweida.
Commenting on the case, London-based employment law specialist Fraser Younson said the British courts fully protected the holding of religious beliefs but not how they were demonstrated.
"These cases are about the extent to which an employee can manifest their religious beliefs at work," he said.
In one previous case, the European court ruled that a French school could make its Muslim students remove their headscarves during sports classes for safety reasons.
In another, it found that an Italian state school did not violate the rights to religious freedom or education by displaying crucifixes in classrooms.
Rulings by the human rights court cannot be appealed and signatories must comply or risk exclusion from the Council of Europe.
(Additional reporting by Mohammed Abbas; Editing by Alison Williams)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/british-woman-wins-religious-discrimination-case-105742111--finance.html
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Jan. 16, 2013 ? Evidence is increasing from multiple scientific fields that exposure to the natural environment can improve human health. In a new study by the U.S. Forest Service, the presence of trees was associated with human health.
For Geoffrey Donovan, a research forester at the Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station, and his colleagues, the loss of 100 million trees in the eastern and midwestern United States was an unprecedented opportunity to study the impact of a major change in the natural environment on human health.
In an analysis of 18 years of data from 1,296 counties in 15 states, researchers found that Americans living in areas infested by the emerald ash borer, a beetle that kills ash trees, suffered from an additional 15,000 deaths from cardiovascular disease and 6,000 more deaths from lower respiratory disease when compared to uninfected areas. When emerald ash borer comes into a community, city streets lined with ash trees become treeless.
The researchers analyzed demographic, human mortality, and forest health data at the county level between 1990 and 2007. The data came from counties in states with at least one confirmed case of the emerald ash borer in 2010. The findings -- which hold true after accounting for the influence of demographic differences, like income, race, and education -- are published in the current issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
" There's a natural tendency to see our findings and conclude that, surely, the higher mortality rates are because of some confounding variable, like income or education, and not the loss of trees," said Donovan. "But we saw the same pattern repeated over and over in counties with very different demographic makeups."
Although the study shows the association between loss of trees and human mortality from cardiovascular and lower respiratory disease, it did not prove a causal link. The reason for the association is yet to be determined.
The emerald ash borer was first discovered near Detroit, Michigan, in 2002. The borer attacks all 22 species of North American ash and kills virtually all of the trees it infests.
The study was conducted in collaboration with David Butry, with the National Institute of Standards and Technology; Yvonne Michael, with Drexel University; and Jeffrey Prestemon, Andrew Liebhold, Demetrios Gatziolis, and Megan Mao, with the Forest Service's Southern, Northern, and Pacific Northwest Research Stations.
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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by USDA Forest Service - Pacific Northwest Research Station.
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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.
Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/n_usR-86G7c/130116163823.htm
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NEW YORK (AP) ? Mr. "SexyBack" is back.
Justin Timberlake released his new single, "Suit and Tie," late Sunday night. It features rapper Jay-Z.
The upbeat jam is the 31-year-old's first musical offering since 2006's critically acclaimed "FutureSex/LoveSounds." His third solo album, "The 20/20 Experience," will be out later this year.
In a letter posted on his website, Timberlake said he began recording music in June. He wrote that the "inspiration for this really came out of the blue."
Timberlake co-wrote and co-produced "Suit and Tie" with Timbaland, who produced much of the Grammy-winning "FutureSex/LoveSounds."
The buzz around the pop star's return to music kicked off Friday when he posted a video on his website that showed him walking into a studio, putting on headphones and saying: "I'm ready."
___
Online:
http://www.justintimberlake.com
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/justin-timberlake-releases-song-suit-tie-053129576.html
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The Large Quasar Group isn't just a psychedelic cover band, but also an enormous cluster of quasars forming what an international team of astronomers led by University of Central Lancashire are calling "the largest known structure in the universe." When the name isn't being reappropriated for British laser tag, its being used to describe the distant (and therefore aged) nuclei of galaxies which often group together in clusters; this cluster just happens to also be the largest such structure ever discovered, making it the de facto largest in the known universe. Resultantly, it also may challenge an Einstein-derived supposition that, "the universe, when viewed at a sufficiently large scale, looks the same no matter where you are observing it from." Of course, you'd have to be incredibly huge to determine conclusively whether or not that's the case, but that Einstein guy was pretty good at making educated guesses.
[Photo credit: M. Kornmesser, ESO]
Via: HuffPo UK
Source: Royal Astronomical Society
Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/14/large-quasar-group-largest-structure/
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Adware for mobile devices -- referred to as madware -- caught fire in 2012 and is expected to continue escalating this year.
That's because software application developers and online ad networks are scrambling to profit from the vast audience of mobile device users. So they are experimenting with intrusive forms of mobile advertising -- with no industry standards, nor U.S. privacy laws to constrain them, Internet analysts say.
"The problem is getting worse," says Paul Ferguson, vice president of threat intelligence at IID, a security firm that monitors Internet traffic. "App developers and ad networks want to make money, and the screening to keep out malicious actors is not adequate."
Antivirus giant Symantec has been tracking 1.5 million mobile apps for Android smartphones and touch tablets. It found a 210% increase in madware over the last nine months of 2012. Nearly half of the apps analyzed distributed madware, some issuing as many as 17 variants.
The nuisance factor typically kicks in after you download a free app. Madware appears in your calendar entries, photo albums and ringtones. One type inserts an audio commercial that triggers when you dial a call. You're forced to listen to the entire commercial before the call connects.
Another type continually inserts ad alerts in notification bars. "It becomes almost impossible to distinguish between the genuine alerts that you expect to see, such as calendar reminders, text message alerts and e-mail alerts," says Richard Clooke, a Symantec mobile security adviser.
Many free apps require consumers to divulge location information and personal data, which app developers and ad networks then use to concoct new ways to hook people and their contacts into a transaction. Another concern is that all of that harvested personal data can be accessed by spammers and identity thieves, says Giri Sreenivas, mobile manager at security firm Rapid7.
For now, mobile device users must bear the burden for policing madware. Experts advise them to carefully consider permission requests, search the Web for reports on suspicious apps; and make use of madware detectors, such as Symantec's free Norton Spot tool.
Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/half-of-mobile-apps-contain-pop-up-ad-malware-2013-1
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