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Myla Sinanaj accuses Kim Kardashian of cheating with Kanye West while dating Reggie Bush

Myla Sinanaj has accused Kim Kardashian of cheating with Kanye West while she was still dating NFL star Reggie Bush.

Myla Sinanaj, a key witness in Kim Kardashian’s divorce proceedings from ex-husband Kris Humphries, launched the allegations via Twitter.

She claims that she had aided Kim Kardashian in her undercover affair by secretly making Kanye West keys at the hotel she worked at for a late night rendezvous, while Kim was still in a relationship with Reggie Bush.

Myla Sinanaj tweeted, on Friday, that she witnessed Kanye West, 35, enter Kim Kardashian’s luxury suite at the W Hotel at 2 a.m. one early morning.

The former hotel manager wrote: “I was the one making kanye keys to her suit at 2 am!!! Back when she was supposed to be with the love of her life Reggie Bush right??”

Adding: “She should thank me for my discretion for not mentioning the fact when I was the Overnight Manager at the W Hotel.”

Myla Sinanaj warned that the current revelations may just be the tip of the iceberg, writing: “There is soooo much more that I know and had to be quiet about, but i ain’t working at the hotel no more so.”

Meanwhile, Kim Kardashian and Kanye West revealed on Sunday night that they are expecting a baby girl in July.

And Myla Sinanaj had some wisdom to bestow upon the soon-to-be father: “My advice to Kanye is <<if they cheat with you, they cheat on you>>. Remember that sh**.”

She also included a snap of a check she received from Kim Kardashian’s lawyer, marked as payment for “witness/travel” expenses, in her online tirade.

Myla Sinanaj accuses Kim Kardashian of cheating with Kanye West while dating Reggie Bush
Myla Sinanaj accuses Kim Kardashian of cheating with Kanye West while dating Reggie Bush

The check was for her appearance at a sitting deposition in the Kardashian-Humphries divorce proceedings – but the amount of the check was blurred.

Myla Sinanaj captioned the snap: “Truth is my ass didn’t want to go to her dumb deposition, so I said I have no dollars for gas.

“But that didn’t stop her from mailing me a check that’s how bad she wanted me to go! Which I dont understand why.”

But the reasons for her appearance at the deposition may have something to do with Myla Sinanaj having dated Kris Humphries soon after his break up with Kim Kardashian.

Myla Sinanaj’s attorney Joe Tacopina claimed last year that her testimony would make it “pretty hard” for Kris Humphries to claim that he was “broken-hearted” since he started “dating my client just two months after the marriage broke up”.

Adding: “My client’s relationship with Kris goes to the heart of his claim against Kim Kardashian and that could hurt him, certainly.”

This is not the first time claims have been made about Kim Kardashian cheating on Reggie Bush, 28, who she dated off and on from 2007 to 2010.

In an interview with Star magazine, Amber Rose, 29, said: “Kim is one of the main reasons why me and Kanye are not together. She’s a homewrecker!

“They were both cheating. They were both cheating on me and Reggie with each other.”

And she said that Kim Kardashian instigated the affair by sending pictures of herself to Kanye West as well as calling and texting him.

Amber Rose added: “She was sending pictures, and I was like, <<Kim, just stop. Don’t be that person>>.”

She said she also emailed Kim Kardashian asking her for an explanation but was disappointed not to get a reply.

Amber Rose said: “I thought at least she’d be woman enough to respond to me. She never responded. It’s very important that us women stick together and we don’t f**k each other over like that.”

Singapore Airlines chaotic in-flight mess after sudden bout of turbulence hit jet while meal was served

Passengers on a Singapore Airlines flight were left surrounded by a chaotic mess after their flight fell 20 metres when it hit severe turbulence.

A total of 11 passengers and one crew member were injured on flight SQ308 from Singapore to London last Sunday.

One passenger on the flight, who saw his coffee end up on the ceiling, managed to take pictures of the destruction which he posted to Instagram.

Alan Cross told ABC News that passengers had been warned to expect turbulence and that the breakfast service would be temporarily suspended.

A short while after the seat belt sign came on, the captain issued an abrupt order for all flight attendants to take their seats immediately.

Alan Cross said the subsequent turbulence felt “like being in an elevator with a cut cable or free-falling from some amusement park ride”.

He said everything that was not tied down, including people, hit the ceiling.

The airline told The Australian: “Eleven passengers and one crew member sustained minor injuries when the aircraft experienced a sudden loss of altitude and were attended to by medical personnel on arrival at Heathrow Airport. Seat-belt signs were on at the time and meal services had already been suspended.”

Within just an hour, the carnage had been almost completely tidied up and the plane was practically back to normal.

Alan Cross said: “The cabin crew was amazing in the aftermath, as were fellow passengers who helped everyone around them then in a calm and efficient clean-up.”

Passengers on a Singapore Airlines flight were left surrounded by a chaotic mess after their flight fell 20 metres when it hit severe turbulence
Passengers on a Singapore Airlines flight were left surrounded by a chaotic mess after their flight fell 20 metres when it hit severe turbulence

He said crew checked for injuries before cleaning up the mess and gave passengers boxes of chocolates as they departed at Heathrow, where they were met by paramedics.

The vast majority of passengers are not affected by turbulence on anything like this scale, but some research suggests that unsettled flights could become the norm thanks to global warming.

Earlier this year scientists claimed climate change could result in flights from London to New York getting much bumpier in the future.

Researchers from East Anglia and Reading universities analyzed supercomputer simulations of the atmospheric jet stream over the North Atlantic, concluding that climate change will increase air turbulence.

They found the chances of hitting significant turbulence will rise by 40 to 170% by 2050, with the likeliest outcome being a doubling of the airspace containing significant turbulence at any time.

Dr. Paul Williams from the University of Reading and the University of East Anglia’s Dr. Manoj Joshi said the average strength of turbulence will also increase, by between 10 and 40%.

He said: “Most air passengers will have experienced the uncomfortable feeling of mid-flight air turbulence. Our research suggests that we’ll be seeing the <<fasten seatbelts>> sign turned on more often in the decades ahead.”

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Stevia: Natural sweetener that is 250-300 times sweeter than sugar and has no calories

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Stevia – a naturally-sourced sugar substitute – apparently has no calories, no carbohydrates, and does not raise blood sugar levels.

Mention “stevia” to someone and you may well get a quizzical look, as if you’re failing to grasp some unknown language.

But stevia – a plant used as a sweetener for centuries in Paraguay and Brazil – can now be found in many British supermarkets. In the US, it’s even more common.

It has been heralded as a “miracle sweetener” and the “holy grail for the food industry”, because of its natural origins and claimed health benefits.

Although stevia has been sold in Japan for about 40 years, stevia-based products have only been approved as a food additive since 2008 in the US, and 2011 in the EU.

Companies have been quick to capitalize. There was a 400% increase globally in new stevia-based products between 2008 and 2012, with a 158 per cent rise from 2011-2012, according to Mintel.

British vitamin retail chain Holland & Barrett says it has witnessed a 50% sales rise for stevia products in the last four weeks, compared with the same period last year.

Coca-Cola dared to alter the recipe for Sprite in the UK, re-launching a new stevia-inspired version in March and claiming a 30% calorie reduction.

Even sugar giant Tate & Lyle has responded with a sugar-stevia hybrid. You can now find stevia-based sweeteners in products as varied as yoghurts, chocolates, and even beer, says Mintel’s global food and drinks analyst David Turner.

Refined sugar is now regularly linked to obesity in the media. And obesity is now widely described as an epidemic.

Stevia has the potential to help with weight management, dental health, and diabetes, says Dr. Laura Wyness, senior nutrition scientist at the British Nutrition Foundation.

Except that these possible medical benefits are also true of the artificial low-calorie sweeteners that have been around for years, such as aspartame or saccharin.

“The big deal about stevia is that it has a natural source,” says food writer and TV presenter Stefan Gates.

“That doesn’t mean it isn’t incredibly highly processed by the time it gets into your drink or food… but that’s what everyone is craving.”

Stevia is extracted from the stevia plant in a similar process to sugar, says Dr. Margaret Ashwell, who is on the scientific advisory board of the Global Stevia Institute.

“The extraction process involves steeping the dried leaves of the plant, like you would tea, and then separating or purifying the best tasting sweet compounds, which are known as steviol glycosides.”

Stevia is a naturally-sourced sugar substitute and apparently has no calories, no carbohydrates, and does not raise blood sugar levels
Stevia is a naturally-sourced sugar substitute and apparently has no calories, no carbohydrates, and does not raise blood sugar levels

The concentrated extracts are about 300 times as sweet as sugar.

The steviol glycosides remain intact and chemically unchanged throughout the whole process, she says.

In contrast, artificial synthetic sweeteners such as aspartame – used in soft drinks like Diet Coke – have long been the subject of controversy.

Aspartame has been linked to cancer, and even though there’s never been any substantiating proof, people remain wary of the word “artificial” when it comes to food, says Stefan Gates.

“There’s a desperation in the food industry to be able to list things as having <<no added x>>,” says Stefan Gates.

“If you can label your product <<free from>> something, you have a massive advantage in the marketplace because people are swayed by news stories that whip up paranoia about food.”

The British Dietetic Association and Diabetes UK make no distinction between their advice for artificial sweeteners and stevia.

“As a dietician, I support and promote the use of sweeteners in cooking and diet,” says Sioned Quirke, a spokesperson for the British Dietetic Association.

“There is no evidence to suggest that low-calorie sweeteners, such as saccharin, aspartame and sucralose, are harmful or bad for you,” although she advises stevia use only as a sweetener and believes that the evidence for the claimed health benefits is insufficient for an endorsement.

“We have a dearth of data,” says anti-sugar advocate Dr. Robert Lustig, author of Fat Chance: The Bitter Truth About Sugar, who refuses to endorse alternative sweeteners for this reason.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), in the US, and the European Food Standards Authority (EFSA) only require acute toxicity studies, which test whether something will poison you in the short-term, explains Robert Lustig.

What we don’t know are the long-term effects of sweeteners like stevia, he says, such as whether these compounds affect hormones that alter brain function.

We don’t know how the body responds to being primed for an influx of sugar that it never receives, he adds.

“It may be that it fools your brain into thinking that it needs to release more insulin,” Robert Lustig suggests, potentially negating any supposed weight-loss benefits.

And since the FDA and the EFSA do not demand these studies, then there is no incentive for the food industry to do them, says Robert Lustig.

“We’re at an impasse.”

In the meantime, David Turner expects the stevia market to continue growing strongly, both in pre-prepared food and as a table top sweetener.

But there remain two obstacles if stevia is ever to replace sugar as the nation’s sweetener – taste and price.

“As with artificial sweeteners such as sucralose or aspartame, when they first appeared there was a distinct aftertaste,” says Turner.

“In stevia’s case this is often described as a little aniseed-like.”

“The food buying public is naturally very conservative,” says Stefan Gates.

“There are lots of people who hate the idea of change.

“I can’t see it ever replacing sugar in the kitchen.”

The stability of stevia under high temperatures could also give it a potential edge over artificial sweeteners such as saccharin when it comes to cooking, its advocates say.

But cost is a downside, explaining why hybrid products are popular at the moment.

At high prices, it’s unlikely that too many people will switch to stevia unless it’s either a medical requirement or they can afford to be so health conscious.

What is stevia – and how is it used?

  • Natural sweetener that is 250-300 times sweeter than sugar
  • Made from leaves of stevia plant (Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni)
  • No calories, no sugar or carbohydrates and its glycemic index is zero
  • Mainly added to non-alcoholic beverages
  • Increasingly used in combination with sugar

 

The stevia plant:

  • Genus of about 240 plants, native to tropical and sub-tropical areas of South and Latin America
  • Named after 16th Century botanist Pedro Jaime Esteve
  • Traditionally used for medicinal purposes by the Guarani people of south America, and first developed commercially as sweetener in Japan in 1970s

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Oscar Pistorius hearing over Reeva Steenkamp murder postponed until August 19

South African Paralympic athlete Oscar Pistorius has appeared in court for the first time since he was freed on bail over the killing of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp earlier this year.

After a brief hearing in Pretoria, the magistrate agreed to a request from both prosecution and defense to postpone the hearing until August 19.

Oscar Pistorius, 26, shot Reeva Steenkamp, 29, through the bathroom door of his house in Pretoria on February 14, 2013.

The Paralympic champion denies committing murder, saying he mistook her for an intruder.

Oscar Pistorius wore a grey suit and appeared composed as he arrived at court to meet a barrage of photographers and journalists. He was surrounded by his family and friends for the hearing.

He spoke only once, confirming: “Yes, Your Honour” when asked if he understood the magistrate’s comments.

Both the prosecution and the defense teams asked that the hearing be postponed until August 19 to give them more time to prepare their case.

Oscar Pistorius hearing over Reeva Steenkamp murder postponed until August
Oscar Pistorius hearing over Reeva Steenkamp murder postponed until August

Magistrate Daniel Thulare agreed to the postponement and extended Oscar Pistorius’s bail conditions until that date.

On Monday, Oscar Pistorius’ family said they were “shaken” by leaked, graphic photos published by Sky News, which showed the bathroom where Reeva Steenkamp was killed.

Police said they were “disgusted” by the leak.

Oscar Pistorius is a double amputee who won gold at the London 2012 Paralympic Games and also competed in the Olympics.

His arrest in February stunned many South Africans who saw him as a national sporting hero after his long legal battle to be able to compete in the Olympics.

The prosecution has accused Oscar Pistorius of premeditated murder, alleging that he killed Reeva Steenkamp intentionally after a fight.

Oscar Pistorius was freed on a bail of 1 million rand ($110,000). A court in March eased his travel restrictions, allowing him to leave South Africa to compete as long as he complied with certain conditions.

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North Korea reactivates facilities at Yongbyon nuclear reactor

North Korea is reactivating facilities at its moth-balled Yongbyon nuclear reactor, a US think-tank says.

Start-up could be one to two months away, it said, but there was uncertainty over the availability of fuel rods to power the reactor.

Pyongyang vowed to restart the reactor, which makes weapons-grade plutonium, in April amid severe regional tensions.

The Yongbyon reactor was shut down in July 2007 as part of a disarmament-for-aid deal.

The cooling tower at the facility was later destroyed, but then the disarmament deal stalled.

North Korea’s decision to restart followed its third nuclear test on February 12, which led to expanded UN sanctions.

The information came from the 38 North website, which is part of the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University in the US.

Its report said that recent satellite imagery showed that North Korea had “essentially finished repairing the cooling system necessary to restart and operate the reactor”.

North Korea is reactivating facilities at its moth-balled Yongbyon nuclear reactor
North Korea is reactivating facilities at its moth-balled Yongbyon nuclear reactor

The cooling tower that was destroyed had not been repaired, but instead a secondary cooling system had been employed. Work was also ongoing at a spent fuel facility, it said.

Piles of construction materials were visible at the site and what could be a new drainage ditch for water from the reactor building was being dug, it said.

The reactor “may be one to two months from start-up. However, the availability of fresh fuel rods to power the reactor – a key factor that will determine when the North will restart the facility – remains unclear,” it said.

Once operational, the reactor could produce “approximately six kilograms of plutonium per year that can be used for manufacturing nuclear weapons”, it added.

North Korea has conducted three nuclear tests since 2006. Analysts believe the first two tests used plutonium as the fissile material, but it is not known whether the third used plutonium or uranium.

While North Korea has depleted its stocks of “reactor-grade” plutonium needed to make the weapons-grade variety, it has plentiful reserves of uranium ore. It also has a uranium enrichment facility at Yongbyon which a US scientist said could be converted to produce highly enriched uranium bomb fuel.

After UN sanctions were expanded following the most recent nuclear test, in February, North Korea issued multiple threats against US and regional interests, vowed to reactivate Yongbyon and cut both official communications and key business ties with South Korea.

Operations at the jointly-run inter-Korean Kaesong industrial zone remain suspended – the first such stoppage since the project began.

But the threats have diminished in recent weeks and last month, North Korea sent a top envoy to Beijing – its first such move since its nuclear test.

Later this week, the US and Chinese presidents meet in California for their first summit, with North Korea likely to be high on the agenda.

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German language loses longest word following EU law change

The German language has lost its longest word following a change in the law to conform with EU regulations.

Rindfleischetikettierungsueberwachungsaufgabenuebertragungsgesetz – meaning “law delegating beef label monitoring” – was introduced in 1999 in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.

The word was repealed following changes to EU regulations on the testing of cattle.

German is famous for making compound words, often to describe something legal or scientific.

The German language has lost its longest word following a change in the law to conform with EU regulations
The German language has lost its longest word following a change in the law to conform with EU regulations

They are known in Germany as “tapeworm” words.

The 63-letter word came into being as a result of efforts to combat BSE, or “mad cow disease” and was given the abbreviation RkReUAUG – itself something of a tongue-twister.

But with the EU calling a halt to the testing of healthy cattle at abattoirs, the need for the word vanished.

The search is now on for the language’s new longest word, German media reported.

Among the contenders is said to be Donaudampfschifffahrtsgesellschaftskapitaenswitwe, meaning the “widow of a Danube steamboat company captain”.

However, experts say such long words are so rarely used they are unlikely to make it into the standard German-language dictionary.

The longest word to be found in the dictionary is Kraftfahrzeughaftpflichtversicherung, meaning “automobile liability insurance”.

Jiah Khan found dead at her home in Mumbai

Bollywood star Jiah Khan has been found dead at her home in Mumbai, police say.

The authorities did not say how Jiah Khan died, but said they were seeking information from her neighbors.

Jiah Khan, 25, made her debut in 2007 opposite Amitabh Bachchan, and went on to act with stars including Aamir Khan and Akshay Kumar.

She was born in New York and grew up in London before moving to Mumbai for a career in Bollywood.

Her death caused shock within the film industry.

Fellow actress Dia Mirza said on Twitter: “RIP Nafisa (Jiah) Khan. You were too young and beautiful…”

Jiah Khan has been found dead at her home in Mumbai
Jiah Khan has been found dead at her home in Mumbai

Amitabh Bachchan also took to Twitter to react on his colleague’s death: “WHAT …!!! Jiah Khan? What has happened? Is this correct? Unbelievable!!!”

Jiah Khan acted in Nishabd, starring Amitabh Bachchan, and the psychological thriller, Ghajini, which had Aamir Khan in the lead role.

Her last film was in the 2010 comedy Housefull, in which she played a supporting role.

Jiah Khan’s “official” website says she was born in New York and brought up in London. It says she went to New York to study acting.

Jiah Khan also featured in an advert for the animal rights group, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).

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Michael Douglas throat cancer not caused by HPV infection

Michael Douglas did not say he developed throat cancer because of a HPV infection, his publicist has said.

Michael Douglas, 68, who was diagnosed with cancer three years ago, was quoted as telling The Guardian his strain of cancer had been caused by HPV (human papillomavirus).

But in a statement Michael Douglas’ spokesman sought to clarify that the actor was not talking about his own cancer.

The World Health Organization (WHO) says HPV can cause cancer of the head and neck.

In his statement on Monday, Allen Burry said: “No. He [Michael Douglas] did not say oral s** was the cause of his cancer.”

The publicist referred to medical evidence linking oral s** to head neck cancer, adding “but [Michael Douglas] did not say it was the cause to his specific cancer”.

Michael Douglas was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2010
Michael Douglas was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2010

The Guardian stood by its story, releasing audio of the interview.

In the newspaper’s article on Sunday, Michael Douglas was asked if, given his illness, he regretted his years of smoking and drinking.

Michael Douglas was quoted as saying: “No. Because without wanting to get too specific, this particular cancer is caused by HPV, which actually comes about from cunni***gus.”

The actor continued: “I did worry if the stress caused by my son’s incarceration didn’t help trigger it. But yeah, it’s a s**ually transmitted disease that causes cancer.”

Michael Douglas’ illness is now in remission, following treatment.

His son, Cameron, is serving a prison sentence for d**g possession and dealing.

Michael Douglas, who is married to Welsh actress Catherine Zeta-Jones, was treated in the early 1990s for an addiction which some at the time claimed to be s**.

Michael Douglas himself denied this and said he was in rehab for alcohol abuse.

Gezi Park and Taksim Square plans of shopping center that sparked Turkey protests

Istanbul municipality plans to replace Gezi Park with a shopping center have sparked protests in Turkey’s largest city and beyond.

What began as a demonstration against the loss of green space has turned into a wider expression of anger against government policies. The excessive use of force by riot police has escalated tensions.

How Gezi Park and Taksim Square look now
How Gezi Park and Taksim Square look now

The development of Gezi Park – an urban park in Taksim Square – is part of a wider urban redevelopment project in the city.

Plans for Gezi Park and Taksim Square
Plans for Gezi Park and Taksim Square

The government wants to pedestrianise and ease traffic around Taksim Square; Kalyon Group, a company which has close ties with the government, has been contracted to carry out the project.

Plans include building a shopping centre, which PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan says would not be “a traditional mall”, but would include cultural centres, an opera house and a mosque.

An Ottoman-era military barracks would be rebuilt near the site and the historic Ataturk Cultural Centre would be demolished.

Opponents of Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s plans say Gezi Park is one of the few green areas left in central Istanbul.

Bradley Manning court martial trial over WikiLeaks

US soldier Bradley Manning “systematically harvested” a vast trove of secret documents to share with WikiLeaks, military prosecutors have said.

At the start of Pvt. Bradley Manning’s court martial, a prosecutor said Osama Bin Laden had received leaked information.

But defense lawyers said Pvt. Bradley Manning, 25, was young and naive when he shared the files with the anti-secrecy site.

He has not denied his role in the leak, and faces up to life in prison if convicted of aiding the enemy.

Earlier this year, Pvt. Bradley Manning pleaded guilty to 10 of the 22 charges against him related to the leaks, but not to the most serious charge.

The Manning-WikiLeaks case is considered the largest-ever leak of secret US government documents. Prosecutors say the disclosures harmed US national interests, while Pvt. Bradley Manning’s supporters say he is a whistle-blowing hero.

In opening statements on Monday at a military courtroom in Fort Meade, Maryland, prosecutor Capt. Joe Morrow called the case an example of what happened “when arrogance meets access”.

Capt. Joe Morrow argued the case was not about a whistleblower’s leak of targeted information.

“This, your honor, this is a case about a soldier who systematically harvested hundreds of thousands of documents from classified databases and then dumped that information on to the internet into the hands of the enemy,” he said.

According to the prosecutor, Pvt. Bradley Manning used his military training to gain the notoriety he craved and attempted to hide what he had done at every step of the process.

He said he would introduce evidence Osama Bin Laden himself had gained access to some of the WikiLeaks information – and had put it to use.

Prosecutors plan to introduce blog entries, a computer, a hard drive and a memory card as evidence against Pvt. Bradley Manning. The military prosecutors will also call witnesses to describe his training and his deployment to Iraq.

In an opening statement, Pvt. Bradley Manning’s lawyer David Coombs said he was “young, naive and good-intentioned” when he arrived in Iraq.

But in late 2009, after an Iraqi died in an attack, he grew disillusioned after seeing his comrades celebrating because no US soldiers had been hurt.

After that incident, Pvt. Bradley Manning began collecting information he thought would “make the world a better place” if public.

“He believed this information showed how we value human life,” David Coombs said.

At the start of Pvt. Bradley Manning's court martial, a prosecutor said Osama Bin Laden had received leaked information
At the start of Pvt. Bradley Manning’s court martial, a prosecutor said Osama Bin Laden had received leaked information

“He was troubled by that. He believed that if the American public saw it, they too would be troubled.”

The defense lawyer argued that Pvt. Bradley Manning was “selective” in his choice of the hundreds of millions of documents he had access to.

The prosecution’s opening arguments directly relate to the most serious charge against Pvt. Bradley Manning: aiding the enemy. To obtain a conviction, prosecutors must prove Pvt. Bradley Manning acted with intent to aid the enemy and knowingly gave such adversaries US intelligence information.

The prosecution’s argument – that releasing such information on to the internet counts as aiding the enemy – has serious implications for anyone leaking classified information in the future.

The military will aim to show the information was of “great value” to US enemies, but supporters argue all Pvt. Bradley Manning did was make public what should never have been private.

Pvt. Bradley Manning, who was arrested in May 2010 while serving in Iraq, has not denied leaking the documents.

He told a pre-trial hearing in February he divulged the documents to spark a public debate on the role of the US military and foreign policy.

However, prosecutors argue the leaks damaged national security and endangered American lives.

One of the leaked videos shows graphic footage of an Apache helicopter attack in 2007 that killed a dozen people in Baghdad, including a Reuters photographer.

Other documents leaked included thousands of battlefield reports from Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as secure messages between US embassies and the state department in Washington.

Whatever prison sentence Pvt. Bradley Manning receives will be reduced by 112 days, after a judge ruled he had suffered unduly harsh treatment during his initial detention following his arrest.

The soldier chose to have his court martial heard by a judge instead of a jury. It is expected to run all summer.

Judge Col. Denise Lind ruled in May she would close parts of the trial to the public to protect classified material.

Meanwhile, the UK government said on Sunday it was considering a request from Ecuador to hold talks on the future of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Julian Assange has lived in the Ecuadorean embassy in London for a year, having been granted political asylum there.

He faces extradition to Sweden over s** allegations, which he denies.

What is WikiLeaks?

  • Website with a reputation for publishing sensitive material
  • Run by Julian Assange, an Australian with a background in computer network hacking
  • Released 77,000 secret US records of US military incidents about the war in Afghanistan and 400,000 similar documents on Iraq
  • Also posted video showing US helicopter killing 12 people – including two journalists – in Baghdad in 2007
  • Other controversial postings include screenshots of the e-mail inbox and address book of US vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin

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Central Europe flood: Thousands of people flee their homes in Austria, Germany and Czech Republic

Deadly flood waters continue to rise across central Europe and thousands of people have alredy fled their homes in the region.

Emergency operations are under way in Austria, Germany and the Czech Republic to cope with river levels which have reached record heights in some places.

Landslides and flooding have led to the deaths of at least seven people. More than eight others are missing.

The German army has been drafted in to help reinforce flood defenses in the south and east of the country.

In the Czech Republic, a nationwide state of emergency is in force. Around 3,000 people have been forced to leave their homes across the west of the country.

The authorities in the capital, Prague, are on high alert amid fears that the River Vltava could swamp its historic centre. On Monday morning, the river was flowing at 2,800 cubic metres per second – 10 times its normal volume.

Thousands of people flee their homes as central Europe flood waters rise
Thousands of people flee their homes as central Europe flood waters rise

As a precaution the city’s metro system has been closed, metal flood defenses are being erected and sandbags built up along the banks of the Vltava.

No major evacuations are planned in Prague, but tigers at the city’s zoo have been tranquilized and moved out of an enclosure thought to be at risk of flooding.

“The story is not yet over here,” warned Environment Minister Tomas Chalupa.

Although the Vltava was expected to rise again on Tuesday morning, officials said it was unlikely to reach the levels seen in 2002, the last time Europe saw similar floods.

Seventeen people were killed in the Czech Republic and the cost of the damage across the continent was estimated at 20 billion euros ($26 billion).

The destruction so far seen in the capital has been relatively minor compared to elsewhere. In southern and western areas of the country, several towns and villages are under water.

Main roads in many areas of central Europe have been closed and rail services cut. Thousands of homes are without power.

Czech police said on Monday that at least five people were now known to have died due to the flooding. Two people died after their cottage collapsed on Sunday, and three people had died in separate incidents across Bohemia. Several people are missing.

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Turkey protests: No Turkish Spring, says PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan says the continuing anti-government protests in Istanbul and across the country do not constitute a “Turkish Spring”.

At a news conference before a trip to Morocco, Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the protests were organised by extremists and accused the opposition of provoking “his citizens”.

For a fourth night, there have been confrontations between police and protesters with tear gas being used.

A protester has died after being hit by a taxi on Sunday, doctors say – the first fatality since the unrest began.

The demonstrator, 20-year-old Mehmet Ayvalitas, was hit when the car ignored warnings to stop and ploughed into a crowd of protestors in the Mayis district of Istanbul, said the Turkish Doctors’ Union.

On Monday evening, thousands of demonstrators again gathered in Taksim Square, the focus of the recent protests.

A helicopter, its searchlight shining onto the crowd, hovered overhead and tear gas wafted into the square.

Many protesters shouted “Tayyip, resign!” while waving red flags and banners and blowing whistles, according to the AFP news agency.

Police also fired tear gas again to disperse protesters near Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s office in the Besiktas district of Istanbul.

Earlier on Monday, protesters clashed with police in the capital, Ankara. Tear gas and water cannon were fired at hundreds of demonstrators in the city as around 1,000 protesters converged on central Kizilay Square.

In another development, a public sector trade union confederation, Kesk, says it will begin a two-day strike starting on Tuesday in support.

The left-wing confederation accused the government of being anti-democratic and carrying out “state terror”.

Shares in Turkey fell sharply as fears that the protests could continue took hold, with the main share index falling by 10.47%. The cost of insuring Turkish debt rose to a two-month high.

In a sign of continuing concern in Washington, Secretary of State John Kerry spoke of “excessive use of force” by the police.

PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan says the continuing anti-government protests in Turkey do not constitute a Turkish Spring
PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan says the continuing anti-government protests in Turkey do not constitute a Turkish Spring

“We obviously hope that there will be a full investigation of those incidents and full restraint from the police force,” he said.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan said during a televised news conference: “There are those attending these events organized by extremists. This is not about Gezi Park anymore. These are organized events with affiliations both within Turkey and abroad.

“The main opposition party CHP has provoked my innocent citizens. Those who make news [and] call these events the Turkish Spring do not know Turkey.”

Meanwhile, Turkish President Abdullah Gul urged calm and defended protesters’ rights to hold peaceful demonstrations.

“If there are different opinions, different situations, different points of view and dissent, there is nothing more natural that being able to voice those differences,” he was quoted as saying by the Anatolia news agency.

“The messages delivered with good intentions have been received.”

Protesters say the Turkish government is becoming increasingly authoritarian.

They fear Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) is trying to impose conservative Islamic values on the officially secular country and infringe on their personal freedoms, correspondents say.

Officials say more than 1,700 people have been arrested in demonstrations in 67 towns and cities, though many have since been released.

On Sunday night, protesters in Besiktas tore up paving stones to build barricades, and Istanbul police responded with tear gas and water cannon.

Mosques, shops and a university in Besiktas were turned into makeshift hospitals for those injured in the demonstration.

Several thousand people took part in the protest outside the recently decommissioned Besiktas football stadium.

Unrest was also reported on Sunday in the western coastal city of Izmir, Adana in the south and Gaziantep in the south-east.

Last week, the government passed legislation curbing the sale and advertising of alcoholic drinks.

The protests began on a small scale last week in opposition to plans to redevelop Gezi Park in Istanbul but have since taken on wider political demands.

The demonstrators say the park is one of the few green spaces in Istanbul, and object to the loss of public space for commercial purposes.

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French winemaking has Italian origin

A new research has found evidence of the earliest winemaking in France, which indicates it has an Italian origin.

Shaped vessels called amphoras, known to have been imported from the Etruscan people of Italy around 500 BC, have shown chemical evidence of wine.

A wine press identified in the same region shows that the beverage quickly gained favor and launched a local industry that would conquer the world.

The study appears in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

There is also evidence that the wines contained herbal and pine resins, which may have helped preserve them for shipping.

The history of wine development is a patchy one, principally because wine leaves behind few chemical markers that archaeologists today can ascribe definitively to wine, rather than other agricultural products.

The earliest known examples of wine-making as we know it are in the regions of modern-day Iran, Georgia, and Armenia – and that modern winemaking slowly spread westward to Europe.

In 2004, Patrick McGovern of the University of Pennsylvania Museum led a team whose findings suggested that wine based on rice may have been developed in China at the same time or even before efforts in the Middle East.

But details for many parts of the spread from the Middle East, including into France, remained unclear.

A new research has found evidence of the earliest winemaking in France, which indicates it has an Italian origin
A new research has found evidence of the earliest winemaking in France, which indicates it has an Italian origin

Dr. Patrick McGovern and colleagues have now pinned down another part of the story in the new study.

“You could argue that it comes [into France from] farther north on the continent,” he said.

“You could have it spreading across Germany, say, from Romania – but this really provides a definite set of evidence that it came from Italy.”

The team was examining what are called amphoras, vessels designed for carrying both liquids and solids and for neat packing into a boat’s hull.

The Etruscans, a pre-Roman civilization in Italy, are thought to have gained wine culture from the Phoenicians – who spread throughout the Mediterranean from the early Iron Age onward – because they used similarly shaped amphoras.

Further, it is known that the Etruscans shipped goods to southern France in these amphoras – but until now it remained unclear if they held wine or other goods.

Dr. Patrick McGovern’s team focused on the coastal site of Lattara, near the town of Lattes south of Montpellier, where the importation of amphoras continued up until the period 525-475 BC.

They used a high-precision analytical tool called gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, which provides a list of the molecules absorbed into the pottery of the amphoras. The results showed that they did once contain wine – as well as pine resin and herbal components.

But more surprising was the find of a wine-pressing platform, where grapes were ground and liquid drained off.

“In a walled town like this, it is unusual to find a wine press from an early period,” Dr. Patrick McGovern said.

“Finding the chemical evidence for the press, that was a surprise.”

The find is consistent with a pattern seen elsewhere – that wine is introduced from abroad, but a local culture eventually seeks to transplant the grapes and grow their own, local wine industry.

“From there, [winemaking] spread up the Rhone River, the domesticated vine gets transplanted, it crosses with the wild grapes and all sorts of interesting cultivars develop – those are the ones that spread around the world.

“Most of the wine we have today is from French cultivars, which ultimately derive from the Near-East cultivar via the Etruscans,” he explained.

“There’s still a lot of blanks to fill in, but I find it very exciting.”

Global consensus on death diagnosis urged at European meeting of anaesthetists

Two leading doctors at an European meeting of anaesthetists urged for an international agreement on when and how death is diagnosed.

They said improvements in technology mean the line between life and death is less clear.

They also called for precise guidelines and more research to prevent the rare occasions when people are pronounced dead but are later found to be alive.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has begun work to develop a global consensus.

In the majority of cases in hospitals, people are pronounced dead only after doctors have examined their heart, lungs and responsiveness, determining there are no longer any heart and breath sounds and no obvious reaction to the outside world.

But Dr. Alex Manara, a consultant anaesthetist at Frenchay Hospital in Bristol, said more than 30 reports in medical literature, describing people who had been determined dead but later found to be alive, had driven scientists to question whether the diagnosis of death can be improved.

At a meeting of the European Society for Anaesthesiology he said that on some occasions doctors do not observe the body for long enough before someone is declared dead.

Two leading doctors at an European meeting of anaesthetists urged for an international agreement on when and how death is diagnosed
Two leading doctors at an European meeting of anaesthetists urged for an international agreement on when and how death is diagnosed

Dr. Alex Manara called for internationally agreed guidelines to ensure doctors observe the body for five minutes, in order not to miss anyone whose heart and lungs spontaneously recover.

Many institutions in the US and Australia have adopted two minutes as the minimum observation period, while the UK and Canada recommend five minutes. Germany currently has no guidelines and Italy proposes that physicians wait 20 minutes before declaring death, particularly when organ donation is being considered.

At the conference, Ricard Valero, professor of anaesthesia at the University of Barcelona, considered the rarer scenario of patients in intensive care units whose hearts and lungs are kept functioning by machines.

In such scenarios, doctors use the concept of brain death – often conducting neurological tests to monitor any brain activity in the patient.

But the criteria used to establish brain death have slight variations across the globe.

In Canada, for example, one doctor is needed to diagnose brain death; in the UK, two doctors are recommended; and in Spain three doctors are required. The number of neurological tests that have to be performed vary too, as does the time the body is observed before death is declared.

“These variations in practice just do not seem logical,” Prof. Ricard Valero said.

He proposed further research to support a global consensus on the most appropriate criteria to diagnose brain death.

Prince Fahd al-Saud spends $20 million in three days at Disneyland Paris

Saudi Prince Fahd al-Saud has spent some 15 million euros ($20 million) during a private visit to the Disneyland resort near Paris.

Prince Fahd al-Saud is said to have booked entire areas of the park over the 22-24 May period to celebrate getting his degree.

Euro Disney, which runs the theme park, confirmed that a prince had spent three days there with some 60 guests.

Disneyland says it regularly organizes private events for firms or people.

Saudi Prince Fahd al-Saud has spent some $20 million during a private visit to the Disneyland resort near Paris
Saudi Prince Fahd al-Saud has spent some $20 million during a private visit to the Disneyland resort near Paris

The festivities included tailor-made events involving “rare Disney characters”, Euro Disney told the AFP news agency.

Special security was put in place for the prince, one of the park’s top customers, added Euro Disney.

The theme park attracted 16 million visitors last year, but Euro Disney says it has not made any profits since it was set up in 1992.

Last year, it lost 120.9 million euros in the first half of its financial year compared with a net loss of 99.5 million euros in the same period a year earlier.

Kim Kardashian is having a baby girl. Keeping Up With The Kardashians Season Premiere.

Sunday night’s episode of Keeping Up With The Kardashians revealed that Kim Kardashian is having a baby girl.

The latest episode showed Kim Kardashian discovering the news during an sonogram.

Dr. Paul Crane, the family’s doctor, laughed as he found Kim Kardashian and her sisters Kourtney and Khloe, and their mother Kris Jenner all in the office excitedly waiting together.

“I don’t see any pee-pees,” Dr. Paul Crane said as he tried to determine the gender, adding: “I’m thinking it’s a girl.”

“Oh my gosh! What’s the percentage?” a nervous Kim Kardashian was heard asking the doctor.

After being told that she was 99% having a baby girl, Kim Kardashian gushed: “I am so excited to be having a girl, who doesn’t want a girl.”

She then added that it was what her boyfriend Kanye West, who is not in attendance, “always wanted” noting that he would be thrilled at the revelation of their baby’s sex.

Kim Kardashian said: “I know that’s really what Kanye has always wanted. He wanted a little girl.”

She also hinted that her unborn child might be musical, as she shopped for baby clothes with Kourtney.

The Keeping Up With The Kardashians season premiere revealed that Kim Kardashian is having a baby girl
The Keeping Up With The Kardashians season premiere revealed that Kim Kardashian is having a baby girl

“I feel like my kid is going to need musical things,” said Kim Kardashian as she suggested all the family babies should start a band.

“What kind of child will I have? A very tutu-y, like, princess?” the reality star wondered as she gushed over the baby items.

“I just can’t wait to see what she’s going to talk like and look like. I am so excited about the joy she is going to bring into our lives,” she said.

Earlier in the episode, Kim Kardashian told the doctor she hopes to eat the placenta after the birth.

“I really want to do it,” Kim Kardashian said, much to the horror of her mother Kris Jenner.

Despite the happy news however, drama wasn’t far behind as Kim Kardashian became emotional in an earlier scene.

Before Kim Kardashian discovered the gender of baby, she began crying on her mother Kris Jenner’s shoulder when talking about her divorce with Kris Humphries.

She said: “I’m probably going to have this baby married to someone else, that’s not the way I wanted it.”

Bringing down the tone of the episode considerably was Kim Kardashian’s sister Kourtney and her partner Scott Disick, who discussed intimate details of their bedroom antics on the show.

The episode was aired on the same day that Kim Kardashian was thrown a baby shower in Beverly Hills by her family.

Kim Kardashian was spotted being driven to the Beverly Hills property by sister Khloe and then mingling with guests once the party kicked off.

She wore a flowing white gown, kept her head down and had a small smile on her face as Khloe sat behind the wheel of her white Range Rover.

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Chelsea Clinton IQ score is 127. Biography.

Chelsea Victoria Clinton was born on February 27, 1980, in Little Rock, Arkansas, and she spent part of her youth as a public figure as the daughter of President Bill Clinton and future Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Chelsea Clinton attended Stanford University and went to Columbia for an M.P.H. before becoming an NBC News correspondent.

According to reports, the former First Daughter has an IQ score of 127. Not genius, but above average.

She is an advocate for women’s rights, AIDS research and global humanitarianism.

Her name was chosen based on the Joni Mitchell’s song, Chelsea Morning. At the time of her birth, father William Jefferson Clinton was serving his first term in office as the governor of Arkansas.

Chelsea’s mother, attorney Hillary Rodham Clinton, was a partner at the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock.

Despite their hectic schedules, the Clintons made their only child the center of their busy lives.

Chelsea Clinton’s father kept a small desk for his daughter in his office and had breakfast with her every morning. Hillary Clinton interrupted her schedule to talk to Chelsea when she came home from school, helped out on class field trips and frequently left loving messages at Forest Park Elementary School for Chelsea while she was away on business.

Determined to foster independence and intellectual curiosity, the Clintons often pushed Chelsea hard to succeed. The precocious girl began studying ballet at the age of 4, skipped the third grade, and learned how to invest in the stock market when she was barely 11. After reading an article in a life sciences class that discussed the detrimental effects red meat has on the body, Chelsea Clinton also became a strict vegetarian.

Living at the White House

Chelsea Clinton, who was used to being shielded from her parents’ very public jobs, experienced a huge life change in 1993, when her father was elected the 42nd President of the United States. As the pre-teen child of the new First Family, Chelsea Clinton experienced intense media scrutiny. Entering an awkward, adolescent phase of her life didn’t help matters, and the young Clinton often endured jokes about her appearance. As a result of the intense publicity, the Clintons developed an unspoken pact with the press that Chelsea was strictly off limits.

Outside of the White House, Chelsea Clinton’s parents encouraged her to live as normal a life as possible. She attended Sidwell Friends School, where she excelled in history and science, and began taking ballet courses at the Washington School of Ballet. During her teenage years, she was so active and involved – pursuing a role in the Model United Nations, practicing for theatre and ballet performances, and even attending math camp – that she reportedly earned the Secret Service code name “Energy.”

In April 1995, Chelsea Clinton made what some called a “debut” to the national media, when she joined her mother on a tour of India. The press gave her positive reviews, and made special note of her intelligence and compassion.

Chelsea Clinton IQ score is 127
Chelsea Clinton IQ score is 127

College years

In 1997, Chelsea Clinton made the decision to attend Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, with the intention of studying pre-med.

Now an adult, she became a frequent topic in the press, who made headlines out of her romantic relationships with fellow student Matthew Pierce, as well as former White House intern Jeremy Kane. In addition to this pressure, her sophomore year was fraught with complications from the news of her father’s affair with White House intern, Monica Lewinsky. It was during this time that she brought the family together, both publicly and privately.

According to her mother’s memoirs, Chelsea Clinton was present during the meeting in which her father and his advisers debated how to acknowledge his affair with the nation.

When her parents were first seen together again after the news, Chelsea Clinton was there as well, symbolically clasping the hands of both parents in public.

While navigating these tricky social matters, Chelsea Clinton also managed a rigorous school schedule.

In her junior year, Chelsea Clinton changed her major from medicine to history and began work on her thesis project: the Northern Ireland peace process (for which she interviewed, among other sources, her father). After delivering her 167-page thesis, Chelsea Clinton headed to Oxford University in England to pursue a master’s degree in International Relations.

Professional career

In 2003, after graduation, Chelsea Clinton joined the consulting firm McKinsey & Company in New York City, becoming the youngest person in her class to be hired. After three years with the firm, she joined the hedge fund Avenue Capital Group.

After a year of campaigning for her mother’s 2008 presidential bid, Chelsea Clinton decided to explore new avenues in her personal and professional life. In November 2009, she announced that she and investment banker Marc Mezvinsky were engaged to be married.

Marc Mezvinsky, who was a longtime friend, fellow Stanford alum and son of two former members of Congress, proposed over the Thanksgiving holiday. The next month, Chelsea Clinton returned to school, this time studying health policy and management at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. The couple was married July 31, 2010, in Rhinebeck, New York. The 400-person ceremony at the exclusive Astor Courts facility was shrouded in secrecy for months before the wedding – the couple even shut down the airspace above Rhinebeck for the 12 hours surrounding the ceremony to avoid an influx of paparazzi.

In addition to her studies, Chelsea Clinton serves on the board of the School of American Ballet and has also served as co-chairperson for her father’s Clinton Foundation.

What is human papilloma virus (HPV)?

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Human papilloma virus (HPV) is spread through s**ual contact and is more usually associated with cervical cancer in women.

It is the most commonly s**ually transmitted infection in the U.S.

HPV can be passed between men and women by genital contact, most often during vaginal and anal s**.

It may also be passed on during oral s** and genital-to-genital contact. It can be passed on between straight and same-s** partners – even when the infected person has no signs or symptoms.

The cervical cancer jab given to 12 and 13-year-old schoolgirls aims to cut their odds of the cancer by protecting them against the virus.

Although most mouth and throat cancers are normally blamed on drinking and smoking an increasing number of cases that occur around the tonsils and back of the tongue are due to HPV.

HPV infection is more usually associated with cervical cancer in women
HPV infection is more usually associated with cervical cancer in women

Although the cancer is not contagious, the virus is.

In the US, HPV is blamed for up to 80% of these tumors of the tonsils and the back of the tongue, which experts say could be due to increasing popularity of oral s**.

The typical patient is described as an otherwise healthy man in his late 40s or early 50s who has never smoked or smoked very little.

Symptoms include persistent mouth ulcers, pain, discolored patches and difficulty chewing and swallowing.

Men are advised to check their neck for lumps when shaving and both men and women to look at the back of their throat while brushing their teeth.

Treatments such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery are often more successful in mouth and throat cancers caused by the virus than those caused by tobacco and alcohol.

Sean Parker and Alexandra Lenas Game of Thrones wedding in Big Sur

Facebook founding president Sean Parker married singer-songwriter Alexandra Lenas in a lavish ceremony in California.

Photographed in the story-book forest surroundings of Big Sur, California, the $10 million wedding took place in front of 300 friends and family members and the theme has been compared by many to the HBO show, Game of Thrones.

The Internet entrepreneur, who is estimated to be worth $2 billion, is now officially hitched to the mother of his young daughter after his wedding at the swanky Ventana Inn & Spa.

The ceremony and reception featured opulent decorations including a ruin, a waterfall and long feast style tables.

“Forget what you heard about Sean Parker’s wedding,” friend John Perry Barlow tweeted following the ceremony.

“It [was] elegant, tasteful, and magical.”

They “have just been enormously generous to their friends. We are all very grateful”, he wrote.

Alexandra Lenas, 24, wore a dress that appears similar to Daenerys Targaryen from the Game of Thrones.

Sean Parker, 33, is believed to have shelled out $10 million to turn a boutique hotel into what looks like a movie set, equipped with outfits for guests designed by the costume designer for the Lord of the Rings movies.

One source told the New York Post that guests “entered down a long trail and came to a big gate and entered this other world in a forest there … They made the forest come alive”.

The ceremony was officiated by Unitarian Universalist minister John A. Buehrens.

The extensive guest list included Sting and his wife Trudie, Allison Williams, Emma Watson, Sean Lennon and Charlotte Kemp Muhl, Metallica drummer Lars Ulrich, Perry and Etty Farrell and Lucian Grainge.

Jacqueline Laurita, from the Real Housewives of New Jersey, also attended the event and shared photographs of the lavish hotel on Twitter.

“Words cannot even describe how beautiful the wedding I went to yesterday was,” she gushed.

“Nothing like I’ve ever seen. I felt like I was in a fairy [tale].”

Sean Parker married Alexandra Lenas in Game of Thrones wedding ceremony in Big Sur
Sean Parker married Alexandra Lenas in Game of Thrones wedding ceremony in Big Sur

The political world was represented by California Attorney General Kamela Harris, Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and Newark Mayor Cory Booker.

Alexandra Lenas’ gown was by Elie Saab, while Sean Parker, the couple’s infant daughter Winter Victoria and the guests were dressed by Academy Award-winning costume designer Ngila Dickson.

Designer Ken Fulk, caterer Paula LeDuc and designer Preston Bailey, who designed the flowers, all helped coordinate the massive affair. Mark Seliger was the photographer.

Guests enjoyed cake from Perfect Endings as well as music by Loreena McKennitt and The Good The Bad and The Ginger.

Sean Parker had previously denied the Game of Thrones theme on his Twitter account, but admitted they would be instructing guests on what to wear.

“Just because we don’t trust our guests to dress themselves properly doesn’t mean we want them to look like #GoT characters,” he wrote in April.

“Academy award winning costume designer Ngila Dickson is creating gorgeous, inspiring, and unique designs that are both modern and whimsical.”

Sean Parker hired a landscaping company to build fake ruins, waterfalls, man made ponds, bridges and a gated cottage in the surrounding woods at the hotel, sources told TMZ in April.

The venue included two terraces that are used for weddings, that offer “privacy and an uninterrupted 50-mile view of the Big Sur coastline to the south”, according to its website.

The Inn boasts its design is mean to “complement nature and encourage guests to experience the essence of romance”.

Residents in the California community have been less than thrilled with the attention Parker’s spectacle has attracted.

The California Coastal Commission reportedly was called in to investigate whether the inn had procured the proper permits for the wedding-related construction, the San Jose Mercury News reported.

“We’re pretty used to celebrities being in Big Sur. But for this one, they’ve basically built a movie set to have their wedding,” Stan Russell, head of the city’s chamber of commerce, told the paper.

Stan Russell said the construction will go away after the Saturday bash and expects the attention the town receives could actually help the wedding industry in the city.

“The wedding planners in Big Sur are planning ahead for 2014 already, because they’re booked. People want to come and see what all of the excitement’s about,” Stan Russell said.

Guests were expected to enter through a $600,000 gate, dance on a $350,000 floor and walk past more than $1 million worth of plants and flowers, the gossip website site.

The New York Post reported that the save-the-date cards for the June 1 wedding look like wizard scrolls.

“There is a chance the wedding could end up looking like an episode of Game of Thrones,” an insider told the Post.

Game of Thrones is a popular Medieval fantasy TV show on HBO that features knights and dragons and sorcery.

Sean Parker is worth an estimated $2 billion after becoming the founder of Napster and other tech start-ups and working with Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg during the early days of the social network.

The internet guru is most famous for his portrayal in the movie Social Network, which details the role he played in the beginnings of Facebook. Justin Timberlake played him in the Oscar-winning movie.

Sean Parker proposed to Alexandra Lenas, a singer-songwriter, in February, after she gave birth to the couple’s daughter, Winter Victoria Parker.

Michael Douglas throat cancer caused by HPV

Michael Douglas has claimed that his throat cancer was caused by human papilloma virus (HPV), a s**ually transmitted disease.

Michael Douglas, 68, who fought a six month battle with the disease from August 2010 until January 2011, had initially believed that it was his years of smoking and drinking that had lead to the illness.

The Hollywood star made the frank admission about how he developed the illness during an interview with The Guardian newspaper when he was asked if he had regretted smoking and drinking in the past.

Michael Douglas candidly replied: “No. Because, without wanting to get too specific, this particular cancer is caused by HPV, which actually comes about from cunni***gus.”

The actor, who is married to Welsh actress Catherine Zeta-Jones, was diagnosed with cancer in August 2010 after a walnut-sized tumor was found on his tongue.

Michael Douglas’ health troubles started just a few months after his eldest son Cameron – from his first marriage to Diandra Luker – was jailed for d**g possession and dealing.

The actor admitted he initially believed his disease had been triggered by the stress over his son’s legal troubles.

Michael Douglas has claimed that his throat cancer was caused by human papilloma virus
Michael Douglas has claimed that his throat cancer was caused by human papilloma virus

Michael Douglas explained: “I did worry if the stress caused by my son’s incarceration didn’t help trigger it. But yeah, it’s a s**ually transmitted disease that causes cancer. And if you have it, cunni**gus is also the best cure for it.”

He was diagnosed with stage four of the disease and underwent an intense course of chemotherapy and radiation.

Eventually, Michael Douglas was given the all-clear, although he still has to undergo check-ups with doctors every six months.

However, the actor is optimistic he has conquered the disease once and for all.

“With this kind of cancer, 95 per cent of the time it doesn’t come back,” he said.

More than 20 years ago, Michael Douglas was hospitalized for an addiction, which many reports at the time claimed was to s**.

However, he has since denied that he was a s** addict, insisting that he was being treated for alcohol abuse.

HPV is a sexually transmitted virus which is more widely known as a cause of cervical and anal cancer.

Last year, Cancer Research UK said the rising rates of HPV16-positive cases of oral cancer could be linked to oral s**.

China: At least 112 people killed in a fire at poultry processing plant in Dehui

At least 112 people have been killed in a fire at a poultry processing plant in China, according to officials.

The fire broke out at a slaughterhouse in Dehui in Jilin province early on Monday, according to state-run Xinhua news agency.

Rescue workers were at the scene and the fire had not yet been put out, the report said, citing local sources.

There are reports that the fire took hold following three explosions in an electrical system.

About 100 workers had managed to escape from the plant, Xinhua said, adding that the “complicated interior structure” of the building and narrow exits had made rescue work more difficult.

The number of workers trapped inside the plant had yet to be confirmed, the agency added. The cause of the fire was under investigation, it said.

At least 112 people have been killed in a fire at a poultry processing plant in China
At least 112 people have been killed in a fire at a poultry processing plant in China

Those injured were sent to hospital, Xinhua says. The severity of their injuries however remains unclear.

Workers interviewed by state broadcaster CCTV said the fire broke out during a shift change and may have started in a locker room.

The company that owns the farm, a big producer of processed chicken, employs more than 1,000 people, reports say.

Photographs posted on Chinese news websites showed thick smoke coming from the large cement and corrugated iron sheds, with fire trucks still at the scene.

Workplace safety standards can often be poor in China, with fatal accidents regularly reported at large factories and mines.

The plant is located around 500 miles north-east of Beijing.

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Mega Potato: McDonald’s launches its highest calorie item ever in Japan

World’s largest fast food chain McDonald’s has just released its highest calorie item ever in Japan: the Mega Potato.

The Mega Potato is almost a pound of the brand’s famous fries, and contains 1,142 calories and costs $4.9, the Consumerist reported, citing Japan Today.

The Mega Potato is almost a pound of McDonald's famous fries, contains 1,142 calories and costs $4.9
The Mega Potato is almost a pound of McDonald’s famous fries, contains 1,142 calories and costs $4.9

“The Mega Potato will set you back 490 yen and also cost you a large chunk of your dignity and possibly a few years of your life,” Japan Today wrote.

McDonald’s latest exercise in caloric excess in Japan is in stark contrast to what it’s attempting in the U.S.

The company has recently added a slew of healthy offerings, including a chicken McWrap to compete with Subway and draw in calorie-conscious millennials.

McDonald’s also released the Egg White Delight and added more smoothie flavors with fresh fruit.

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Marjorie Margolies: Chelsea Clinton’s mother-in-law enters House race

Marjorie Margolies, Chelsea Clinton’s mother-in-law, made it official Thursday and filed her papers to run for her old House seat in Pennsylvania in 2014.

The newly minted congressional candidate is better known as Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky, her former married name.

Marjorie Margolies cast a decisive vote for Bill Clinton’s 1993 budget. Republicans chanted “Bye, Bye, Marjorie,” when she did and she was defeated for re-election the following year.

Marjorie Margolies, Chelsea Clinton's mother-in-law, filed her papers to run for her old House seat in Pennsylvania in 2014
Marjorie Margolies, Chelsea Clinton’s mother-in-law, filed her papers to run for her old House seat in Pennsylvania in 2014

“My desire to serve today is rooted firmly in the very same belief I held when I first won this seat – a belief in the power of different voices in Congress to make a difference,” Marjorie Margolies in a statement, reported by the PoliticsPA blog.

Marjorie Margolies is running in Pennsylvania’s 13th District, which is based in suburban Philadelphia. Rep. Allyson Schwartz, a Democrat, is vacating the seat to run for governor.

She is the founder of Women’s Campaign International, a non-profit organization that works around the world to ensure women can participate in the development of public policy and provides advocacy training. She also teaches at the University of Pennsylvania’s Fels Institute of Government.

Marc Mezvinsky, the candidate’s son, married Chelsea Clinton in 2010.

Marjorie Margolies divorced her son’s father, former congressman Ed Mezvinsky, in 2007.

Yunupingu dead: Indigenous Australian singer of Yothu Yindi band dies aged 56

Singer Yunupingu, one of Australia’s leading indigenous figures, has died aged 56 at his home in Yirrkala in Eastern Arnhem Land.

Mandawuy Yunupingu, lead singer of Yothu Yindi, died at his home in the Northern Territory after suffering from kidney disease.

He was a significant cultural figure whose music helped bridge the divide between white and black Australians.

Yunupingu is also widely credited with introducing indigenous music to the world with the 1990s hit Treaty.

The song, which blends indigenous music and rock, made him a household name.

Mandawuy Yunupingu, lead singer of Yothu Yindi, died at his home in the Northern Territory after suffering from kidney disease
Mandawuy Yunupingu, lead singer of Yothu Yindi, died at his home in the Northern Territory after suffering from kidney disease

It also helped win him the Australian of the Year award in 1992, for “building bridges of understanding between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people”.

“We have lost a uniquely talented musician, a passionate advocate for Aboriginal people and a truly great friend,” Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard said.

Before entering the music industry, Yunupingu was a teacher.

He was the first Aboriginal person from Arnhem Land to gain a university degree and also Australia’s first indigenous school principal, taking over as head of the Yirrkala Community School in 1990.

Yothu Yindi toured internationally and released a successful album in 1992, Tribal Voice.

Former Midnight Oil singer Peter Garret, who is now an Australian government minister, described him as a “path breaker and leader. A shining light for his people.”

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Sumandef Hakkinda Letter: What’s happening in Istanbul?

Sumandef Hakkinda describes what happens in Turkey these days and writes on what’s behind protests – and how Turkish media are refusing to report it.

 

To my friends who live outside of Turkey: I am writing to let you know what is going on in Istanbul for the last five days. I personally have to write this because most of the media sources are shut down by the government and word of mouth and the internet are the only ways left for us to explain ourselves and call for help and support.

Four days ago a group of people who did not belong to any specific organization or ideology got together in Istanbul’s Gezi Park. Among them there were many of my friends and students. Their reason was simple: To prevent and protest the upcoming demolishing of the park for the sake of building yet another shopping mall at very center of the city. There are numerous shopping malls in Istanbul, at least one in every neighborhood! The tearing down of the trees was supposed to begin early Thursday morning. People went to the park with their blankets, books and children. They put their tents down and spent the night under the trees. Early in the morning when the bulldozers started to pull the hundred-year-old trees out of the ground, they stood up against them to stop the operation.

They did nothing other than standing in front of the machines. No newspaper, no television channel was there to report the protest. It was a complete media blackout. But the police arrived with water cannon vehicles and pepper spray. They chased the crowds out of the park.

In the evening the number of protesters multiplied. So did the number of police forces around the park. Meanwhile the local government of Istanbul shut down all the ways leading up to Taksim Square, where Gezi Park is located. The metro was shut down, ferries were cancelled, roads were blocked. Yet more and more people made their way up to the center of the city by walking.

They came from all around Istanbul. They came from all different backgrounds, different ideologies, different religions. They all gathered to prevent the demolition of something bigger than the park: The right to live as honorable citizens of this country.

They gathered and marched. Police chased them with pepper spray and tear gas and drove their tanks over people who offered the police food in return. Two young people were run over by the tanks and were killed. Another young woman, a friend of mine, was hit in the head by one of the incoming tear gas canisters. The police were shooting them straight into the crowd. After a three hour operation she is still in the Intensive Care Unit and in a very critical condition. As I write this we don’t know if she is going to make it. This blog is dedicated to her.

Istanbul protests June 2013
Istanbul protests June 2013

These people are my friends. They are my students, my relatives. They have no ‘hidden agenda’, as the state likes to say. Their agenda is out there. It is very clear. The whole country is being sold to corporations by the government, for the construction of malls, luxury condominiums, freeways, dams and nuclear plants. The government is looking for (and creating when necessary) any excuse to attack Syria against its people’s will.

On top of all that, the government’s control over its people’s personal lives has become unbearable as of late. The state, under its conservative agenda, passed many laws and regulations concerning abortion, cesarean birth, sale and use of alcohol and even the colour of lipstick worn by the airline stewardesses.

People who are marching to the center of Istanbul are demanding their right to live freely and receive justice, protection and respect from the state. They demand to be involved in the decision-making processes about the city they live in. What they have received instead is excessive force and enormous amounts of tear gas shot straight into their faces. Three people lost their eyes.

Yet they still march. Hundred of thousands join them. A couple of thousand more passed the Bosporus Bridge on foot to support the people of Taksim.

No newspaper or TV channel was there to report the events. They were busy with broadcasting news about Miss Turkey and ‘the strangest cat in the world’.

Police kept chasing people and spraying them with pepper spray to an extent that stray dogs and cats were poisoned and died by it.

Schools, hospitals and even 5 star hotels around Taksim Square opened their doors to the injured. Doctors filled the classrooms and hotel rooms to provide first aid. Some police officers refused to spray innocent people with tear gas and quit their jobs. Around the square they placed jammers to prevent internet connection and 3G networks were blocked. Residents and businesses in the area provided free wireless networks for the people on the streets. Restaurants offered food and water for free.

People in Ankara and Izmir gathered on the streets to support the resistance in Istanbul. Mainstream media kept showing Miss Turkey and ‘the strangest cat in the world’.

I am writing this letter so that you know what is going on in Istanbul. Mass media will not tell you any of this. Not in my country at least. Please post as many articles as you see on the Internet and spread the word.

As I was posting articles that explained what is happening in Istanbul on my Facebook page last night someone asked me the following question: ‘What are you hoping to gain by complaining about our country to foreigners?’ This blog is my answer to her.

By so called ‘complaining’ about my country I am hoping to gain:

Freedom of expression and speech,

Respect for human rights,

Control over the decisions I make concerning my on my body,

The right to legally congregate in any part of the city without being considered a terrorist.

But most of all by spreading the word to you, my friends who live in other parts of the world, I am hoping to get your awareness, support and help!

Please spread the word and share this blog. Thank you!

 

This blog post is republished from defnesumanblogs.com.

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