Tuesday, June 25, 2013

'I Am Legend' author Richard Matheson dies at 87

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Richard Matheson, the prolific sci-fi and fantasy writer whose "I Am Legend" and "The Shrinking Man" were transformed into films, has died. He was 87.

A spokesman for the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films said Matheson died Sunday in Los Angeles. No other details were provided.

With a career spanning more than 60 years, Matheson crafted stories that deftly transitioned from the page to both the big and small screens. Several of his works were adapted into films, including 1953's "Hell House," 1956's "The Shrinking Man," 1958's "A Stir of Echoes" and 1978's "What Dreams May Come."

Matheson's 1954 sci-fi vampire novel "I Am Legend" inspired three different film adaptations: 1964's "The Last Man on Earth" starring Vincent Price, 1971's "Omega Man" starring Charlton Heston and 2007's "I Am Legend" starring Will Smith.

Matheson was also responsible for writing several episodes of "The Twilight Zone," as well as editions of "The Alfred Hitchcock Hour," ''Rod Serling's Night Gallery," ''The Martian Chronicles" and "Amazing Stories." His "Twilight Zone" installments included "Nightmare at 20,000 Feet," which featured William Shatner as an airplane passenger who spots a creature on a plane's wing, as well as "Steel," which inspired the 2011 film "Real Steel" starring Hugh Jackman.

"I loved Richard Matheson's writing, and it was a huge honor getting to adapt his story 'Button, Button' into a film," posted "Donnie Darko" and "The Box" director Richard Kelly on Twitter on Monday.

Matheson influenced several generations of storytellers. Among them were Stephen King, who dedicated his 2006 novel "Cell" to Matheson, and Steven Spielberg, whose first feature-length film was the made-for-TV movie "Duel," based on the Matheson short story of the same name.

"Richard Matheson's ironic and iconic imagination created seminal science-fiction stories and gave me my first break when he wrote the short story and screenplay for 'Duel,'" said Spielberg in a statement. "His 'Twilight Zones' were among my favorites, and he recently worked with us on 'Real Steel.' For me, he is in the same category as (Ray) Bradbury and (Isaac) Asimov."

Matheson was scheduled to receive the visionary award at the Academy of Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Films' Saturn Awards on Wednesday. The organization said the award will be presented posthumously and the 39th annual ceremony would be dedicated to Matheson.

"We are heartbroken to lose a writer of towering talent, unlimited imagination and unparalleled inspiration," said Robert Holguin, the academy's president. "Richard was a genius whose visions helped bring legitimacy and critical acclaim to science fiction and fantasy. He was also a longtime supporter of the academy, and everyone associated with the Saturn Awards feels emptier today to learn of this enormous loss."

Matheson is survived by his wife and four children.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/am-legend-author-richard-matheson-dies-87-011242928.html

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Jon Gosselin: I live in the woods now

Celebs

8 hours ago

IMAGE: Jon Gosselin

Michael Buckner / Getty Images file

Jon Gosselin in 2012.

Once Jon Gosselin lived in a large house in Pennsylvania and his life unrolled on television in front of millions. Now, the dad of eight lives "in the woods," and says he doesn't even have an address.

Gosselin didn't clarify exactly where or how he lives, but he confirmed to VH1's "The Gossip Table" that he's taken to a more private life after living in an apartment where paparazzi and others "figured out where I was."

Gosselin, then-wife Kate, and their twins and sextuplets starred on "Jon and Kate Plus 8" for five seasons before divorcing. The show continued as "Kate Plus 8" despite Jon Gosselin suing to prevent filming of his children.

Gosselin was asked if Kim Kardashian and Kanye West should allow their newborn daughter, North, to appear on the reality show "Keeping Up With the Kardashians," and unsurprisingly, he didn't think so.

"I wanted to raise my kids off television, so I changed my mind," he said. "So I would definitely not film with my newborn child."

Gosselin was also asked if he still wore Ed Hardy clothing, the brand he favored at the height of his tabloid fame in 2009. He said no, adding "I gave all my (Hardy clothing) to my mother." Tattoo artist Hardy recently told the New York Post that an association with Gosselin "tanked" his clothing brand.

He also said he'd be interested in appearing on "Dancing With the Stars," as his ex-wife Kate Gosselin famously did in 2010. She was the fourth celebrity eliminated on the show's tenth season, and partner Tony Dovolani later joked he needed "a lot of therapy" after partnering with her.

"I feel like I could probably get further than her," Jon Gosselin said.

Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/jon-gosselin-i-live-woods-now-6C10433570

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Edward Snowden stops off in Moscow with US extradition request snapping at his heels

Edward Snowden stops off in Moscow, US extradition demand snaps at his heels

Even if he anticipated the risks involved in turning whisteblower, Edward Snowden can't have imagined the rushed, convoluted journey he'd have to take to avoid the full wrath of the US government. First to Hong Kong; most recently to Moscow, and perhaps soon to Ecuador (via Cuba and Venezuela) where he has apparently made a request for asylum. Strongly worded demands for his capture have followed every step of the way, with the White House National Security Council expressing "disappointment" that Hong Kong allowed Snowden to flee and now urging Russia (which has no formal extradition treaty with America) to "expel Mr. Snowden back to the US to face justice for the crimes with which he is charged." In an effort to help the fugitive navigate the maze of diplomatic fault lines, WikiLeaks has stepped up to say that its own legal advisors are "escorting" Snowden towards his final destination, likely making use of the knowledge they gained while protecting Julian Assange, and that it sees US efforts to arrest him as an "assault against the people."

Filed under:

Comments

Source: WikiLeaks, CBS News, @RicardoPatinoEC (Twitter)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/24/edward-snowden-stops-off-in-moscow/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Love Your Dog? Dog-Owner Bond Similar to That of Child-Parent ...

By Traci Pedersen Associate News Editor
Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on June 22, 2013

Love Your Dog? Dog-Owner Bond Similar to That of Child-ParentIn a new study, published in the journal PLoS ONE, scientists have found that the relationship between dogs and their owners is strikingly similar to the child-parent bond in humans.

According to the Humane Society, 46 percent of households in the United States have at least one dog.? Dogs are so well adapted to living with humans that, in many cases, the owner assumes the role of the dog?s main social partner.

Certain aspects of the deep bond between dogs and their owners turn out to be very similar to that of young children and their parents.

During the study, the researchers found that one particular aspect of the bond between humans and dogs is something called the ?secure base effect.?

This effect is found in parent-child relationships in which babies use their caregivers as a secure base so they can feel safe while interacting with their environment.

Not until recently has the ?secure base effect? been investigated in dog-owner relationships.

Lisa Horn, Ph.D.,?from the Messerli Research Institute at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, wanted to get a closer look at the behavior of dogs and their owners. She analyzed dogs? reactions under three different conditions: absent owner, silent owner and encouraging owner.

For the study, the dogs were given the opportunity to earn a food reward by manipulating interactive dog toys. The dogs seemed far less interested in working for food, however, when their owners were not there compared to when they were.

Interestingly, whether an owner encouraged the dog during the task or remained silent had little influence on the animal?s level of motivation.

In another experiment, the researchers replaced the owner with an unfamiliar person. The scientists found that the dogs barely interacted with the strangers and were not much more motivated in trying to earn the food reward than when this person was not present.

The dogs were far more motivated only when their owner was present. The scientists believe that the owner?s presence encourages the dog to behave in a confident manner.

The study provides the first evidence for the similarity between the ?secure base effect? found in dog-owner and child-caregiver relationships. This striking connection will be further studied in direct comparative studies on dogs and children.

?One of the things that really surprised us is that adult dogs behave towards their caregivers like human children do. It will be really interesting to try to find out how this behavior evolved in the dogs with direct comparisons,? said Horn.

Source:? PLoS ONE

APA Reference
Pedersen, T. (2013). Love Your Dog? Dog-Owner Bond Similar to That of Child-Parent. Psych Central. Retrieved on June 23, 2013, from http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/06/22/love-your-dog-dog-owner-bond-similar-to-that-of-child-parent/56378.html

?

Source: http://psychcentral.com/news/2013/06/22/love-your-dog-dog-owner-bond-similar-to-that-of-child-parent/56378.html

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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Little inducted into West Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame - Spokesman ...

Spokane native Chad Little returned to the West Coast to be part of a ceremony honoring his career in the Northwest and beyond. The 1987 NASCAR Winston West champion, Busch Series and Winston Cup driver who now oversees the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, was one of five racing icons inducted into the West Coast Stock Car Hall of?Fame.

Joining Little on Thursday night in Napa, Calif., were four-time truck series champion Ron Hornaday, fellow Northwest star and 1991 Daytona 500 winner Derrike Cope, Buddy Jobe who was owner and operator of Phoenix International Raceway and 2007 NASCAR West??


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Racing?roundup

Spokane County?Raceway

Today: Street Legal Drags, Test and Tune (drag strip), 6?p.m.

Saturday: Summit Series (drag strip), Fever 4?s, Road Runners, Bump to Pass (oval), both 2?p.m.

Spokane Kart Racing?Association

Saturday/Sunday: Adult/Junior road-course karting,?noon

Stateline?Speedway

Saturday: Northwest Modified Series, HyDrive Late Models, Hobby Stocks, 6?p.m.

Sunset?Speedway

Saturday: Adult/Junior dirt oval karting, 6?p.m.

Airway Motocross?Park

Saturday: Supercross Series, 6?p.m.

Spokane native Chad Little returned to the West Coast to be part of a ceremony honoring his career in the Northwest and beyond. The 1987 NASCAR Winston West champion, Busch Series and Winston Cup driver who now oversees the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, was one of five racing icons inducted into the West Coast Stock Car Hall of?Fame.

Joining Little on Thursday night in Napa, Calif., were four-time truck series champion Ron Hornaday, fellow Northwest star and 1991 Daytona 500 winner Derrike Cope, Buddy Jobe who was owner and operator of Phoenix International Raceway and 2007 NASCAR West Series championship car owner Randy?Lynch.

Little joins his legendary car owner, George Jefferson, who was inducted into the hall in 2004. Jefferson led Little?s team as they won the NASCAR West Series title after years of competition across the?Northwest.

Jefferson?s leadership and set-up led Little to much success, but the Washington State University graduate points out that two people closer to him shaped an outstanding racing?career.

?My father (Chuck) and my mother (Donna) without question were the biggest influences on my career. They taught me to respect my competitors, drive smart and take care of the equipment. My dad (also) taught me about taking care of the cars and earning respect which are lessons I?m sharing with young drivers today,? Little?said.

One such young driver is Little?s son, Jesse, who will be racing this weekend in Virginia in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East, where he is in the running for the 2013 series Rookie of the Year title and a top-10 finish in the championship?chase.

Chad Little has competed against some of the best NASCAR has to offer. From Richard Petty to Dale Earnhardt and Jeff Gordon, his NASCAR career came along at the time the sport was taking off in popularity across the country. While the icons of the sport have earned Little?s respect, one driver stands out above others, the 50-year old?said.

?Hershel McGriff (named in 1998 as one of NASCAR?s 50 greatest drivers and a fellow inductee to the West Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame) is one of my favorite drivers (to race against). He?s a great competitor (the 85-year old McGriff still makes occasional NASCAR starts including last year at Sonoma) and very well-respected throughout the racing?world.?

To be part of an induction class that includes Hornaday and Cope was very special, Little?added.

?We?re all friends and they?re drivers I?ve competed against (from the West Series up to and including the Winston Cup Series). We have a certain bond that comes from being raised and growing up racing here on the West?Coast.?

Behar after another?win

Saturday?s Stateline Speedway HyDrive Late Model race pits the field against Nicole Behar, who is seeking her third consecutive victory. One driver knows all too well the challenge ahead of him after battling the Otis Orchard teen for many seasons from go-karts to Baby Grands and now Late?Models.

University High School senior-to-be, Joey Bird, is in his rookie season in the division and has posted two top-five finishes to kick the year off. Adapting to the heavier Late Model from the Baby Grands has been the biggest adjust he?s had to make thus far, he?noted.

?The transition has been fairly easy so far. The car is different due to the fact it?s bigger then a Baby Grand by about double the weight and size. You need to dive into the corner and put the nose where it needs to be. The Late Model definitely fits my driving style and I can only see myself going forward from?here.?

Follow area racing news at www.spokesman.com/blogs/ keepingpace.

Source: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2013/jun/21/little-inducted-into-west-coast-stock-car-hall-of/

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Video: Can Strasburg get Nats on track?

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/52274956#52274956

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Friday, June 21, 2013

Comparing The Market Share of Android Phones To The iPhone Is A D@mned Lie

by John Kirk ??|?? June 20th, 2013

Disraeli is reputed to have said that there were three kinds of lies: Lies, damned lies, and statistics.

?Lies, damned lies, and statistics? is a phrase describing the persuasive power of numbers, particularly the use of statistics to bolster weak arguments. ~ Wikipedia

Comparing the market share of Android phones to the market share of iPhones is a damned statistical lie and it should never be done. Here?s why.

Venn Diagrams

If you drew a Venn diagram of ?all iPhones? and ?all iPhones that ran iOS?, they would be one and the same. Here is another example of such an overlapping Venn Diagram:

helpful-venn-diagram-for-the-ladies-18244-1267403205-248

Source: thehighdefinite

? If you replace ?Male friends who joke about having sex with you? with the words ?all iPhones?; and
? If you replace ?Men who would have sex with you if you showed the slightest interest? with the words ?all iPhones that ran iOS??

?you would ruin a perfectly good joke. But you would also have a Venn diagram that accurately represented the overlap between ?iPhones? and ?iPhones that run on the iOS operating system.? All iPhones run on iOS. But the opposite is not true. iOS is more than just iPhones.

On the other hand, Android phones are made by many manufacturers. About 40% are made by Samsung and the other 60% are made by Motorola, Sony, HTC and a variety of different hardware manufacturers. Why then do we lump all Android phones together and count them as one?

The only legitimate reason to group all Android phones together is in order to suggest a causal relationship between the number of Android phones and the strength of the Android platform. But is there such a relationship?

Comparing Android?s phone activation numbers to the iPhone?s sales numbers is akin to comparing fish to whales and concluding that fish outnumber mammals.


The Folly Inherent In Comparing Android Phones to iPhones Instead Of Comparing Android To iOS

Comparing Android?s phone activation numbers to the iPhone?s sales numbers ? and concluding that Android outnumbers iOS ? is akin to comparing fish to whales and concluding that fish outnumber mammals.

Fish MAY outnumber mammals, but not nearly by the margin that fish outnumber whales. And Android devices do outnumber iOS devices but not nearly by the margin that Android phones outnumber iPhones. When making comparisons, one needs to compare like to like, otherwise, it skews the results.

There have been over 900 million Android devices activated and over 600 million iOS devices sold. And ? if Flurry?s clientele is representative ? the total number of active Android devices may only exceed the total number of active iOS devices by little more than 10% (see chart, below).

ios_android_chart1

Source: Flurry

Comparing an operating system to an operating system; comparing all active devices to all active devices; comparing like to like; ? now THAT is the proper basis for a comparison.

You do not compare an entire class of things to a subset of another class, and you do not compare phones that run the Android operating system to a subset of devices (iPhones) that run on the iOS operating system, otherwise, you are likely to get is a skewed result?

?and a damned lie?

?or (-shudder-) a ?Chart Of The Day.?

Legitimate Reasoning Vs. Bogus Reasoning

There are legitimate reasons to compare fish to whales and there are legitimate reasons to compare Android phones to iPhones.

images-60Mammals and Fish Venn Diagram

But if you?re actually trying to compare fish to mammals or the Android operating system to the iOS operating system, such a comparison conceals ? rather than reveals ? the truth. It is deceitful, dishonest, untruthful, false, duplicitous, mendacious; hypocritical, untrustworthy, unscrupulous, unprincipled, two-faced, double-dealing, underhanded, crafty, cunning, sly, scheming, calculating, treacherous, Machiavellian, sneaky, tricky, foxy, crooked, fraudulent, counterfeit, fabricated, invented, concocted, made up, trumped up, untrue, false, bogus, fake, spurious, fallacious, deceptive and misleading.

In other words, it?s a damn lie.

Source: http://techpinions.com/comparing-the-market-share-of-android-phones-to-the-iphone-is-a-dmned-lie/18797?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=comparing-the-market-share-of-android-phones-to-the-iphone-is-a-dmned-lie

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US welcomes Qatar decision on Taliban name change

UNITED NATIONS (AP) ? The United States on Thursday welcomed Qatar's decision to take down a sign that cast the Taliban's new office in Doha as a rival Afghan embassy saying the militant group can't represent itself "as an emirate, government or sovereign."

The Taliban held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday in which they hoisted their flag and a banner with the name they used while in power more than a decade ago: "Political Office of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan."

U.S. deputy ambassador Rosemary DiCarlo told the U.N. Security Council Thursday the United States does not recognize that name and is "pleased that Qatar has clarified that the name of the office is the Political Office of the Afghan Taliban, and has had the sign with the incorrect name in front of the door taken down."

The Taliban move angered Afghan President Hamid Karzai who suspended security negotiations with the U.S. and scuttled a peace delegation to the Taliban on Wednesday. An Afghan government spokesman said Thursday that Karzai is now willing to join planned peace talks with the Taliban ? provided that the Taliban flag and nameplate are removed from the Doha office and he receives a formal letter from the United States supporting the Afghan government.

Afghanistan's U.N. Ambassador Zahir Tanin told the council that the Taliban's "rather theatrical" inauguration of the Doha office contradicted the principles under which it was established ? namely that it would be a venue for direct negotiations, that it would not serve as a Taliban "government, embassy, emirate or sovereign," and that it would not engage in or support terrorism or violence.

"Raising the Taliban flag on Tuesday in Doha was just a reminder of a dark and bloody past from which our country still struggles to emerge," Tanin said. "The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan is the sole sovereign and legitimate authority chosen by Afghan people and recognized and supported by the international community."

Tanin said the public statement by the Taliban representative in Doha went "against the very spirit of peace" because it lacked a clear commitment to peace talks with the Afghan High Peace Council and made an explicit reference to the continuation of violence.

DiCarlo recalled that Karzai and U.S. President Barack Obama called on Qatar in January to facilitate an office "for the purposes of negotiations between the Afghan High Peace Council and the authorized representatives of the Taliban."

"The United States supports the opening of the Political Office of the Afghan Taliban for this purpose," DiCarlo said. "We have underscored that the office must not be treated as, or represent itself as, an embassy or other office representing the Afghan Taliban as an emirate, government or sovereign."

DiCarlo said that "while there may be bumps in the road, the fact that the parties have an opportunity to talk and discuss Afghanistan's future is very important."

Under Taliban rule, girls were barred from school and women were barred from many jobs. Di Carlo said that the United States "will continue to stand strongly with Afghan women to protect and advance their hard-won gains," including the right to education and jobs, since the Taliban was ousted.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-welcomes-qatar-decision-taliban-name-change-153445771.html

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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

IRS official contradicts claims about reviews

FILE - This March 22, 2013 file photo shows the exterior of the Internal Revenue Service building in Washington. Internal Revenue Service officials in Washington scrutinized the very first application from a tea party group seeking tax-exempt status _ and dozens of others, including some requests that languished for more than a year without action, an IRS official has told congressional investigators. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

FILE - This March 22, 2013 file photo shows the exterior of the Internal Revenue Service building in Washington. Internal Revenue Service officials in Washington scrutinized the very first application from a tea party group seeking tax-exempt status _ and dozens of others, including some requests that languished for more than a year without action, an IRS official has told congressional investigators. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

(AP) ? Internal Revenue Service officials in Washington scrutinized the very first application from a tea party group seeking tax-exempt status ? and dozens of others, including some requests that languished for more than a year without action, an IRS official has told congressional investigators.

Holly Paz, who until recently was a top deputy in the division that handles applications for tax-exempt status, told congressional investigators she reviewed 20 to 30 applications after learning that field agents had stopped working on them. Her assertions contradict initial claims by the agency that a small group of agents working in an office in Cincinnati were solely responsible for mishandling the applications.

Paz, however, provided no evidence that senior IRS officials ordered agents to target conservative groups or that anyone in the Obama administration outside the IRS was involved.

Instead, Paz described an agency in which IRS supervisors in Washington worked closely with agents in the field but didn't fully understand what those agents were doing. Paz said agents in Cincinnati openly talked about handling "tea party" cases, but she thought the term was merely shorthand for all applications from groups that were politically active ? conservative and liberal.

Paz said dozens of tea party applications sat untouched for more than a year while field agents waited for guidance from Washington on how to handle them. At the time, she said, Washington officials thought the agents in Cincinnati were processing the cases.

Paz was among the first IRS employees to be interviewed as part of a joint investigation by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee.

Congressional investigators have interviewed at least six IRS employees as part of their inquiry. The Associated Press has reviewed transcripts from three interviews ? with Paz and with two agents, Gary Muthert and Elizabeth Hofacre, from the Cincinnati office.

The IRS declined comment for this story.

Republican and Democratic staffers are working together on the investigation. Nevertheless, it is starting to take on a partisan tone.

Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., accused the Republican chairman of the House oversight committee of selectively leaking transcripts of the interviews. Cummings is the ranking Democrat on the committee and Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., is the chairman.

"Another week, another leak from chairman Issa of cherry-picked excerpts that show no White House involvement whatsoever in the identification and screening of these cases," Cumming said. "By leaking transcript portions that omit key details from the accounts witnesses provided to the committee, chairman Issa has now drawn condemnation even from House Republicans working with him on this very investigation."

Last week, Cummings released excerpts from an interview with an IRS manager in Cincinnati who said that he set the review of tea party applications in motion. Cummings said the manager, who was not identified, confirmed that the White House was not involved.

Cummings has called for all of the transcripts to be released but Issa said that would be reckless while the investigation is ongoing. Issa said limited releases of testimony may empower other witnesses to come forward.

A yearlong audit by the agency's inspector general found that IRS agents had improperly targeted conservative political groups for additional and sometimes onerous scrutiny when those groups applied for tax-exempt status.

The IRS watchdog blamed ineffective management by senior IRS officials for allowing it to continue for nearly two years during the 2010 and 2012 elections.

Since the revelations became public last month, much of the agency's leadership has been replaced and the Justice Department has started a criminal investigation. Both Paz and her supervisor, Lois Lerner, who headed the division that handles applications for tax-exempt status, have been replaced.

Agency officials told congressional aides that Lerner was placed on administrative leave. They did not disclose the status of Paz, other than to say she was replaced June 7.

Lerner is the IRS official who first disclosed the targeting at a legal conference May 10. That day, she told The AP: "It's the line people that did it without talking to managers. They're IRS workers, they're revenue agents."

On May 22 ? the day after Paz was interviewed by investigators ? Lerner refused to answer questions from lawmakers at a congressional hearing, citing her Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate herself.

Paz told congressional investigators that an IRS agent in Cincinnati flagged the first tea party case in February 2010. The agent forwarded the application to a manager because it appeared to be politically sensitive, Paz said. The manager informed Paz, who said she had the application assigned to a legal expert in Washington.

At the time, Paz headed a technical unit in Washington that provided guidance to agents who screened applications for tax-exempt status. The agents worked primarily in Cincinnati. One of their tasks was to determine the applicant groups' level of political activity.

IRS regulations say tax-exempt social welfare organizations may engage in some political activity but their primary mission cannot be influencing the outcome of elections. It is up to the IRS to make that determination.

"It's very fact-and-circumstance intensive. So it's a difficult issue," Paz told investigators.

"Oftentimes what we will do, and what we did here, is we'll transfer it to (the technical unit), get someone who's well-versed on that area of the law working the case so they can see what the issues are," Paz said. "The goal with that is ultimately to develop some guidance or a tool that can be given to folks in (the Cincinnati office) to help them in working the cases themselves."

By the fall of 2010, the legal expert in Washington, Carter Hull, was working on about 40 applications, Paz said. A little more than half had "tea party" in the name, she said.

IRS agents in Cincinnati were singling out groups for extra scrutiny if their applications included the words "tea party," ''patriots" or "9-12 project," according to the inspector general's report. Paz said she didn't learn that agents were targeting groups based on those terms until June 2011, about the time Lerner first ordered agents to change the criteria.

Paz said an IRS supervisor in Cincinnati had commonly referred to the applications as "tea party" cases. But, Paz said, she thought that was simply shorthand for any application that included political activity.

"Since the first case that came up to Washington happened to have that name, it appeared to me that's why they were calling it that as a shorthand," Paz told congressional investigators.

Paz said she didn't think the agents in Cincinnati were politically motivated.

"Many of these employees have been with the IRS for decades and were used to a world where how they talked about things internally was not something that would be public or that anyone would be interested in," Paz said. "So I don't think they thought much about how it would appear to others. They knew what they meant and that was sort of good enough for them."

___

Follow Stephen Ohlemacher on Twitter: http://twitter.com/stephenatap

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-06-17-US-IRS-Investigation/id-1558d10dab444d4bb31f0447045ba730

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Self-esteem - ADD Forums - Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder ...

I also struggle with this from time to time. Right now I am doing great again. Some things that help me:

- Being conscious that no one is perfect and that everyone needs a lot of practice to become good at something. Practice requires failure. Failure requires courage. Courage simply means being conscious of what could go wrong but believing you could conquer something... sooner or later!
- It's better to learn something late then never (a recent example for me: I just started to learn to keep my room organized. I have never been able to, and while I am not perfect I'm already a lot better at this then I was)
- A lot of quality time with friends and family, open heartedly discussing what goes on within you, has helped me a lot. Knowing that there are people who love me, who know me. Connecting to them in this way gives me a huge boost of self confidence. Hearing that they believe in me. Saying to them that it's sometimes hard, but that I will keep on going for it! Hearing that they love whatever happens. No substitute for that! (It's quite special to have such good relations with people, but I hope that if you have these people, treasure them, or invest in them! Or find them.)
- Have patience with yourself and focus on one issue at the time. All other issues should be irrelevant, something for later that you accept at the time. And have plenty of fun and relaxing time. You need that to be fit to conquer the issue you're focussing on.

For me, I've always see that I need a 3:1 ratio, or better, for positive:negative thoughts/experiences. If I have a 5:1 ratio, I am in a positive cycle and changing something is really easy. If I have a 1:5 ratio, then I can really get stuck and totally lose my self esteem.

It's not totally up to us to determine how this ratio is for use. There can be negative and stressful circumstances and events in our lives. But there are things that we can control and these are the number of goals we set for ourselves (which should never exceed 2, preferably 1 - I am talking about new goals, about changing stuff, which causes stress and perhaps shame and guilt) and the time and activities we allow ourselves to have fun and relax.

So, to summarize: for me, the keys are: reflection, courage, patience, meaningful relations with people (quality time), balancing and fun and relaxing.

Source: http://www.addforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=146704

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Boston Marathon victim still fighting to keep leg months after bombing: 'I could not have it tomorrow'

Eric Kayne

Boston Marathon survivor Rebekah Gregory, who has undergone 13 surgeries to save her left leg. She was medivaced to Houston, where she is from, two weeks ago.

By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

RICHMOND, Texas ? After 13 surgeries aimed at saving her lower left leg, including one that used live back muscle to cover an open and infected wound, a mother seriously hurt in the Boston Marathon bombings has managed to keep that injured limb ? for now.

But the days are full of pain and exhaustion for Rebekah Gregory, 26, who is believed to have been the last patient connected to the Boston bombings released from hospital when she was discharged on June 10. She spent 56 days total in hospitals in Boston and Houston, near her home.

Though tales of triumph and comeback abound among the 275 injured in the April 15 bombings on the city's famed road race, some victims like Gregory have a long and uncertain path ahead -- one that does not guarantee full recovery.

?I am kind of just taking it one day at a time because we don't really know what's going to happen,? Gregory said Thursday as she sat in bed and an IV drip fed antibiotics into her body to keep at bay a bone infection ? first detected around the fourth week of her recovery ? that could force amputation of her limb. ?I have a leg today, but I could not have it tomorrow.?

Gregory's case is rare even among the more seriously wounded: while amputees are moving ahead with prosthesis training and others are recovering in rehabilitation, she is stuck many steps back, wondering what will happen with her leg.

Doctors have told her at least ten times that they would need to amputate, but then would quickly walk back as her condition changed. One time, they asked her to make the call.

?How do you make that decision? Because I could say, 'Okay, yeah this hurts really bad,? she said, ? ? and all these other people that didn't have the choice to have the amputation are out and they're being fitted for their prosthetics and going on about their lives.?

?But how do you make that decision to just say, 'Okay, just take it?'? she said. ?At that point, I still didn't feel like that was the way to go. So at least now if I lose my leg tomorrow or next week, I can at least say I tried to keep it.?

A catalog of injuries

Gregory's injuries are primarily to her left side and include: losses of a lot of soft tissue to her foot and in what she calls a series of ?craters? going down her leg, the destruction of about 30 percent of her fibula bone, fractures to her tibia and hand, and multiple fractures to her foot as well as the loss of part of her fourth and fifth metatarsals.

She was medically evacuated to Houston after nearly 40 days in Boston to continue her care near home.

When she got there, doctors at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center tended to a pressing matter: irrigating and cleaning the infected open wound on her foot that, if not remedied, could lead to amputation.

After doing that, they removed a small piece of muscle from her back, with a blood vessel attached, to connect to her foot and a corresponding artery and vein. They placed skin grafts from her thigh on top of it, said Dr. Emmanuel Melissinos, a microsurgeon who performed the procedure.

So far, Gregory has responded well to treatment and her recovery is in line with doctors' expectations, he said. He believes the chances of amputation are remote but possible, especially if the six weeks of antibiotics doesn't squelch the infection.

That recovery is now happening at the home of Gregory's parents, which they moved into the weekend of the bombing. Her mom, Tina, and dad, Tim, packed up her house in Houston and moved her and her son Noah, 5, in with them and her two younger sisters.

Back home

Though Gregory was anxious to get out of the hospital, the transition hasn't been easy.

Eric Kayne

Michael Umana, RN, performs wound care on Boston Marathon survivor Rebekah Gregory, who has undergone 13 surgeries to save her left leg.

Every move she makes must be calculated in advance. That's because she can't bear weight on her leg and she has to keep her left foot raised above her heart for at least 50 minutes of every hour to protect the transplanted muscle and skin graft.

?My leg hurts really bad every day, all day,? she said. ?It's a constant pain.?

Going to the bathroom, steps away from her bedroom, is a workout. It entails her getting in the wheelchair, rolling to the door and then using a walker.

?That process alone, I mean, I could take a nap for three hours afterwards. ... It's very difficult right now,? she said as she laid in bed with her left foot propped up on three pillows: ?What you see is what I do.?

But that's only part of the adjustment.

?It's not only the physical part of it but it's just the getting back to normal routine as best as I can,? she said, noting the humdrum sounds of everyday life made her anxious.

?Noises really bother me right now ... especially loud noises, I know that Noah's the same way,? she added, noting both her eardrums were ruptured in the blast. ?It sends your body into freakout mode ? because that day is very much relived. It's like it happened yesterday.?

That day for Gregory was the culmination of what up to then had been a perfect weekend. It began on Friday with her birthday celebration in Rochester, N.Y., at the home of her boyfriend, Pete DiMartino.

The couple, Noah, DiMartino's sister and his parents, and others then traveled to Boston to watch his mother compete in the marathon. They were at the finish line when the first bomb went off.

?All of a sudden, everything was gray,? she said. ?I was on the pavement and I couldn't move my body.?

Her main concern was Noah. ?Out of all the people screaming and crying, and all the commotion going on around us, I could hear his little voice saying, 'Momma, momma, momma.'?

DiMartino's aunt whisked Noah up and brought him to Gregory. Noah had been struck by shrapnel in the back of his head, where he now has a bald patch, and straight to the bone on his right leg, where he has a long scar that he has dubbed the ?swordfish.? He was in the hospital for five days.

Bystanders wrapped Gregory in jackets and she was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance with another victim. She could hear the medics saying, ?We have an amputee,? and thought they were speaking about her. When she gained consciousness, her parents had to show her a photo of her leg to convince her that she still had it.

?I'm just hoping that I'll be able to keep it,? she said. ?But if not, my leg is not my life.?

The costs of recovery

Complicating matters for Gregory, who had been working as an account executive at a corporate housing relocation company, is that her health insurance expired on her birthday, just two days before the attacks.

She had been on her parents' plan and had planned quickly to apply for the one provided by her work, but instead is paying $400 a month for Cobra coverage on top of the costs that her insurance doesn't cover.

Doctors have told her a full recovery could take up to 16 months and she will likely have more surgeries. To help with the medical bills, she applied for the One Fund set up by authorities in Massachusetts to aid the marathon victims.

"It would make a huge difference," she said. "There's a lot. I mean right now, home health (care from a practitioner) and all of the medicines I am on. ... I have $1,000 at least worth of prescriptions a month, and a lot that insurance doesn't cover."

Taking it slow

Eric Kayne

Boston Marathon attack survivor Rebekah Gregory, with her son Noah. She has faced the possibility of amputation many times, and is resigned to the fact that may be a possibility. She says her life is not about her leg and is just happy to be alive.

Dr. Edward Ken Rodriguez, one of the doctors who treated Gregory in Boston at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, said he believed Gregory was the most severely injured marathon patient at the hospital who had kept such a wounded limb.

He was very optimistic about her prospects going forward with her leg but cautioned: ?When you salvage a limb like that, it's never a normal limb. What's hard to predict is the level of chronic pain she will have in the future, how functional the limb will be, how strong it will be.?

?We understand that you can go through many, many surgeries and end up with a very unsatisfying limb, a limb with chronic pain. So it's not unusual for patients who have even started down the course of salvage (to) have changed their minds after a few months,? he added.

At least 15 of the people wounded in the marathon had amputations. Gregory's case was an example of the debate and conflict between salvage and amputation that has been going on for many years, said Rodriguez, the hospital's chief of orthopedic trauma.

?Salvage is a very time intensive, slow first phase. It could be a good year before you get to the point where you have a bit of a picture of how it's going to turn out,? he said.

?She could do very well with an amputation, but she could also do very well with her own leg,?? he added. ?This is the uncertainty and how long a road you want to ride before you find out.?

Gregory plans to ride that road out for the time being. She is also mindful that she and her son need also to recover from the emotional scars and lamented that Noah ?remembers too much? from that day.

He doesn't want them to leave the house and brings his mom breakfast daily: one day it was soggy Froot Loops, another it was toast slathered with an inch thick of jelly.

?I take care of my momma and she takes care of me,? he said.

Gregory maintained a positive attitude and a constant smile while talking about some of their darkest days. She keeps up with her boyfriend, DiMartino, who was also injured and is recovering at home, by video chatting online.

The experience has made her ?appreciate everything just a little bit more,? she said.

"I'm grateful for every single day that comes because it's just reinforced what I've known all along -- that we don't have as much time as we think we do.?

How to help:?To donate to Gregory, her employer set up this fund: http://corporates.com/rebekah/

Related:

Full coverage of the Boston Marathon tragedy on NBCNews.com

?

?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2d5cd86d/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C160C189868930Eboston0Emarathon0Evictim0Estill0Efighting0Eto0Ekeep0Eleg0Emonths0Eafter0Ebombing0Ei0Ecould0Enot0Ehave0Eit0Etomorrow0Dlite/story01.htm

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Monday, June 17, 2013

IRS supervisor in DC scrutinized tea party cases

WASHINGTON (AP) ? An Internal Revenue Service supervisor in Washington says she was personally involved in scrutinizing some of the earliest applications from tea party groups seeking tax-exempt status, including some requests that languished for more than a year without action.

Holly Paz, who until recently was a top deputy in the division that handles applications for tax-exempt status, told congressional investigators she reviewed 20 to 30 applications. Her assertion contradicts initial claims by the agency that a small group of agents working in an office in Cincinnati were solely responsible for mishandling the applications.

Paz, however, provided no evidence that senior IRS officials ordered agents to target conservative groups or that anyone in the Obama administration outside the IRS was involved.

Instead, Paz described an agency in which IRS supervisors in Washington worked closely with agents in the field but didn't fully understand what those agents were doing. Paz said agents in Cincinnati openly talked about handling "tea party" cases, but she thought the term was merely shorthand for all applications from groups that were politically active ? conservative and liberal.

Paz said dozens of tea party applications sat untouched for more than a year while field agents waited for guidance from Washington on how to handle them. At the time, she said, Washington officials thought the agents in Cincinnati were processing the cases.

Paz was among the first IRS employees to be interviewed as part of a joint investigation by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee.

Congressional investigators have interviewed at least six IRS employees as part of their inquiry. The Associated Press has reviewed transcripts from three interviews ? with Paz and with two agents, Gary Muthert and Elizabeth Hofacre, from the Cincinnati office.

The IRS declined comment for this story.

A yearlong audit by the agency's inspector general found that IRS agents had improperly targeted conservative political groups for additional and sometimes onerous scrutiny when those groups applied for tax-exempt status.

The audit found no evidence that Washington officials ordered or authorized the targeting. But the IRS watchdog blamed ineffective management by senior IRS officials for allowing it to continue for nearly two years during the 2010 and 2012 elections.

Since the revelations became public last month, much of the agency's leadership has been replaced and the Justice Department has started a criminal investigation. Both Paz and her supervisor, Lois Lerner, who headed the division that handles applications for tax-exempt status, have been replaced.

Agency officials told congressional aides that Lerner was placed on administrative leave. They did not disclose the status Paz, other than to say she was replaced June 7.

Lerner is the IRS official who first disclosed the targeting at a legal conference May 10. That day, she told The AP: "It's the line people that did it without talking to managers. They're IRS workers, they're revenue agents."

On May 22 ? the day after Paz was interviewed by investigators ? Lerner refused to answer questions from lawmakers at a congressional hearing, citing her Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate herself.

Paz told congressional investigators that an IRS agent in Cincinnati flagged the first tea party case in February 2010. The agent forwarded the application to a manager because it appeared to be politically sensitive, Paz said. The manager informed Paz, who said she had the application assigned to a legal expert in Washington.

At the time, Paz headed a technical unit in Washington that provided guidance to agents who screened applications for tax-exempt status. The agents worked primarily in Cincinnati. One of their tasks was to determine the applicant groups' level of political activity.

IRS regulations say tax-exempt social welfare organizations may engage in some political activity but their primary mission cannot be influencing the outcome of elections. It is up to the IRS to make that determination.

"It's very fact-and-circumstance intensive. So it's a difficult issue," Paz told investigators.

"Oftentimes what we will do, and what we did here, is we'll transfer it to (the technical unit), get someone who's well-versed on that area of the law working the case so they can see what the issues are," Paz said. "The goal with that is ultimately to develop some guidance or a tool that can be given to folks in (the Cincinnati office) to help them in working the cases themselves."

By the fall of 2010, the legal expert in Washington, Carter Hull, was working on about 40 applications, Paz said. A little more than half had "tea party" in the name, she said.

IRS agents in Cincinnati were singling out groups for extra scrutiny if their applications included the words "tea party," ''patriots" or "9-12 project," according to the inspector general's report. Paz said she didn't learn that agents were targeting groups based on those terms until June 2011, about the time Lerner first ordered agents to change the criteria.

Paz said an IRS supervisor in Cincinnati had commonly referred to the applications as "tea party" cases. But, Paz said, she thought that was simply shorthand for any application that included political activity.

"Since the first case that came up to Washington happened to have that name, it appeared to me that's why they were calling it that as a shorthand," Paz told congressional investigators.

Paz said she didn't think the agents in Cincinnati were politically motivated.

"My impression, based on, you know, this instance and other instances in the office is that because they are so apolitical, they are not as sensitive as we would like them to be as to how things might appear," Paz said.

"Many of these employees have been with the IRS for decades and were used to a world where how they talked about things internally was not something that would be public or that anyone would be interested in," Paz added. "So I don't think they thought much about how it would appear to others. They knew what they meant and that was sort of good enough for them."

For several months in 2010, Hull worked closely with Hofacre, the agent in Cincinnati, to review the tea party cases, Paz said. In Hofacre's interview, she complained that Hull micromanaged her work.

Hofacre left for a different IRS job in October 2010 and was replaced by an agent whose name was blacked out in the transcript. Paz said the new agent sat on the tea party applications for more than a year because he was waiting on guidance from Washington on how to proceed. Officials in Washington, however, thought the agents in Cincinnati were still processing the cases, she said.

As a result, many applications languished for more than a year, which, the inspector general said, hurt the groups' ability to raise money.

"I knew they were waiting for guidance," Paz said. "I did not know that they were not working the cases because what had been done previously was, they were working the cases in consultation with Washington. And I was under the impression that that was continuing."

Hull was to be interviewed by congressional investigators on Friday. Efforts to reach Hull and Paz for comment were unsuccessful.

In all, agents singled out 298 applications for additional scrutiny because the groups appeared to be involved in political activity, the inspector general's report said. But IRS agents in Cincinnati weren't given adequate training on how to handle the cases until May 2012, the report said.

Before the training, only six applications had been approved. Afterward, an additional 102 applications were approved by December 2012, the report said.

Of those 102 applications, 29 involved tea party, patriots, or 9-12 organizations, the report said. Many applications are still awaiting action. None has been rejected, according to the IRS.

___

Follow Stephen Ohlemacher on Twitter: http://twitter.com/stephenatap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/irs-supervisor-dc-scrutinized-tea-party-cases-222846717.html

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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Asian shares recover after bruising selloff, sentiment still fragile

By Chikako Mogi

TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian shares rebounded from multi-month lows on Friday, as upbeat U.S. economic data calmed frayed nerves after a bruising selloff in global markets, but investors remained anxious ahead of next week's Federal Reserve policy meeting.

European stocks look set to track Asia higher, with financial spreadbetters predicting London's FTSE 100 <.ftse>, Paris's CAC-40 <.fchi> and Frankfurt's DAX <.gdaxi> will open up as much as 0.8 percent. A 0.1 percent drop in U.S. stock futures hinted at a more shaky Wall Street start. <.l><.eu><.n/>

Volatility was still high in currency markets, with the dollar at one point losing more than 1 percent from early gains against the yen, and approached Thursday's four-month lows against a basket of six major currencies.

Wall Street rallied more than 1 percent on Thursday and the dollar pared losses on better-than-expected U.S. retail sales in May and a drop in the weekly jobless benefits claims, which signaled resilience despite fiscal tightening in America.

The better data appeared to bring some temporary relief to markets that have been rocked by uncertainty on whether the Fed would dial back its massive stimulus later this year. The U.S. central bank's huge bond-buying scheme has been the main source of rallies in broad risk assets.

Analysts expect markets to remain on edge ahead of the Fed meeting on June 18-19.

Some investors, such as holders of U.S. Treasuries, appear to have judged the Fed is close to paring back its $2.5 trillion, 4-1/2-year bond purchase program.

"Sentiment has improved following forecast-beating economic data from the U.S., but caution still largely rules markets ahead of the FOMC's meeting next week," said Kim Soon-young, a market analyst at IBK Securities, of Seoul shares.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.miapj0000pus> advanced 1.5 percent, but was set for a weekly decline of 1.4 percent. It tumbled more than 2 percent at one point to its lowest since September on Thursday and closed down 1.3 percent for its biggest daily drop in three weeks.

The dollar was down 0.4 percent at 94.98, off the session low of 94.43 but retreating from a high of 95.80 yen set in early Asian trading. The dollar fell to a 10-week low of 93.75 overnight, bringing it down about 8 percent from last month's 4-1/2-year peak of 103.74 yen.

The dollar index <.dxy> against a basket of six major currencies steadied just above a four-month low of 80.50 hit on Thursday.

"The Fed tapering speculation is keeping equities nervous and currencies will remain volatile until stability returns to equities," said Koji Fukaya, FPG Securities CEO in Tokyo.

"Because yen-short and dollar-long positions had been built to excessive levels, the reversal is deep. The yen selling was overdone and the latest market turbulence has taken much of that excess out," Fukaya said, adding that markets may view the dollar around 95 yen as a comfortable level for now.

Over the past three weeks global markets from stocks to emerging currencies were roiled by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke hinting at the possibility of tapering the bond-buying stimulus if the economy continued to improve. The Chinese government's stance to hold off from taking additional steps despite a string of weak domestic data also heightened investor anxiety.

The World Bank this week cut its outlook for global growth, saying the economy should expand more slowly this year than last as it cited a deeper-than-expected recession in Europe and a recent slowdown in some emerging markets.

China's short-term funding costs jumped to their highest levels since January 2012, as a hardline stance by the central bank against injecting liquidity has forced the market to reverse expectations of monetary easing, traders said.

South Korean shares <.ks11> rose 0.3 percent after slumping to a seven-month closing low on Thursday on selling by foreign investors, while Australian shares <.axjo> rebounded 2.1 percent for their biggest one-day gain in 18 months after sinking to a 5-1/2-month low the previous day.

Hong Kong shares <.hsi> rose from an eight-month closing low the previous day, while Shanghai shares <.ssec> had a comparatively tepid recovery from six-month lows as money rates stayed tight.

INDONESIA SURPRISES, NIKKEI REMAINS VOLATILE

Southeast Asian stocks also recovered, with the Philippine index <.psi> rising 3 percent after suffering its biggest loss since October 2008 on Thursday as investors worried about a destabilizing outflow of funds when the Fed reduces its liquidity injection.

In the strongest sign yet in regional emerging economies of the stress being wrought by the global markets rout, Indonesia on Thursday became the first central bank in Asia to raise its policy interest rate since 2011.

Two other central banks -- the Philippines and South Korea, however, decided to stand pat on Thursday.

In Japan, the stock market had another choppy session, extending a roller coaster ride in recent weeks, hurt by the stimulus worries and an underwhelming package of pro-growth measures unveiled by the government.

The benchmark Nikkei stock average <.n225> closed up 1.9 percent after surging more than 3 percent earlier. The Nikkei lost 6.4 percent on Thursday, which wiped out the gains made since the Bank of Japan's big-bang stimulus unveiled on April 4, which had helped propel the index up to a 5-1/2-year high last month. <.t/>

The BOJ's decision at its meeting earlier this week to skip fresh steps to calm domestic bond market turbulence and the Fed tapering jitters accelerated a wave of unwinding in heavily built short-yen and long-Nikkei positions - highly profitable bets until the latest tumult. Dwindling expectations for the government's economic policies also and fed to negative tone.

These adjustments were exacerbated as some hedge funds dumped assets for cash amid the global turmoil ahead of their half-year book closing, traders said.

As the unusual confluence of factors caused both the Nikkei and the dollar/yen to retreat to levels prior to the April 4 BOJ move, Japan's cabinet on Friday rubber-stamped a set of measures to boost economic growth, and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe promised to take more steps after next month's upper house elections.

U.S. crude futures eased 0.3 percent at $96.46 a barrel and Brent eased 0.3 percent at $104.60.

A sluggish dollar underpinned gold, which was up 0.1 percent at $1,386.06 an ounce.

(Additional reporting by Jungyoun Park in Seoul; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asian-shares-recover-bruising-selloff-wall-street-rebound-003457686.html

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