Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/lern2play
aaron hernandez trayvon martin today show Wendy Davis Jordan Ozuna Federer Windows 8.1
Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/lern2play
aaron hernandez trayvon martin today show Wendy Davis Jordan Ozuna Federer Windows 8.1
Supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi rise a banner with his portrait during a protest outside the Republican Guard building in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, July 7, 2013. Egypt's new leadership wrangled over the naming of a prime minister, as both the Muslim Brotherhood and their opponents called for new mass rallies Sunday, renewing fears of another round of street violence over the military's ousting of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi. The calls for competing rallies come after clashes two days ago between the rival camps left at least 36 dead and more than 1,000 injured nationwide .(AP Photo/Manu Brabo)
Supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi rise a banner with his portrait during a protest outside the Republican Guard building in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, July 7, 2013. Egypt's new leadership wrangled over the naming of a prime minister, as both the Muslim Brotherhood and their opponents called for new mass rallies Sunday, renewing fears of another round of street violence over the military's ousting of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi. The calls for competing rallies come after clashes two days ago between the rival camps left at least 36 dead and more than 1,000 injured nationwide .(AP Photo/Manu Brabo)
One of the supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi raises his picture during a rally near Cairo University in Giza, Egypt, Sunday, July 7, 2013. Feuding erupted within Egypt's new leadership on Sunday as secular and liberal factions wrangled with ultraconservative Islamists who rejected their choice for prime minister, stalling the formation of a new government after the military's ouster of President Mohammed Morsi. The Arabic on the poster reads, "No alternative to legitimacy." (AP Photo/Nasser Shiyoukhi)
CAIRO (AP) ? The military's overthrow of Mohammed Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood's fall from power in Egypt have sent Islamist parties around the region scrambling to preserve gains made in the Middle East and North Africa as a result of the Arab Spring uprisings.
The stunning reversal has instilled caution among some Islamists against pushing their agenda too hard, but it has also strengthened hard-liners long opposed to democracy.
The Arab Spring uprisings boosted Islamist political parties from Morocco to Syria, and nowhere was their victory more complete than the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood's domination of parliamentary and presidential elections, which made its repudiation by the people and then the army all the more striking.
Brotherhood offshoots in Tunisia and Syria are struggling to distance themselves from their parent outfit in Egypt, while the secular forces they are struggling against have been emboldened.
"What happens in Egypt has a major impact on the 'children' or branches," said Middle East analyst Fawaz Gerges of the London School of Economics. "I am not talking about the loss of power, but the setback to the moral argument that the Islamists somehow stand above the fray, are more competent. In fact, one of the lessons we learned is that they are as incompetent, if not more so, than the old authoritarian regimes."
The night the military deposed Morsi, celebrations erupted across the Tunisian capital, with people calling for dissolution of the Islamist-dominated assembly elected in October 2011.
After Egypt, the Islamists' electoral victory in Tunisia, where the Arab Spring began, was the most impressive. The long-repressed Ennahda Party won more than 40 percent of the seats and rules in a coalition with two other leftist secular parties.
The head of Ennahda, Rachid Ghannouchi, was quick to condemn the overthrow of Morsi as a "flagrant coup" but soon followed up with statements setting his party apart from how the Brotherhood conducted itself in Egypt.
"We have followed a strategy based on consensus, especially between the Islamist and modernist movements, which has saved our country from divisions," he told the Saudi daily Asharq al-Awsat on Thursday.
But now Tunisia's diverse opposition of left-wing parties and remnants of the deposed regime have been galvanized and are calling for a new national unity government. There is even a signature-gathering campaign modeled on the Egyptian one that helped mobilize opposition to Morsi in the past few months.
They accuse Ennahda of many of the same failings that brought down Egypt's Brotherhood, including incompetence and an arrogant approach to rule.
North Africa analyst Issandr El Amrani noted that the significance for the region is more than just the triumph of secularists over Islamists in Egypt, but a realignment of the original coalition of the Arab Spring that overthrew dictators like Hosni Mubarak in Egypt and Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia.
"It's not just an anti-Islamist shift, but elements of the revolutionary leftists and liberals who had once allied with the Islamists against the old regime now allying with the old regime against the Islamists," he said.
The Brotherhood's fall comes at a delicate time for Tunisia. It not only faces an economic crisis but is also finally coming to the final stages of the difficult process of approving the country's new constitution.
The upheaval in Egypt, however, has also shown Tunisia how much smoother its own rocky transition to democracy has been. Tunisians may opt to let the process run its course and express their feelings about Ennahda in elections that could be held as soon as early next year.
In Syria's conflict, which pits a rebel movement rife with Islamist groups against the regime of President Bashar Assad, the Brotherhood has always played a large role in the attempts to create a leadership in exile.
But following the setback in Egypt, it has have taken a more subdued part. At a meeting in Istanbul this week, its candidate to be the new leader of the opposition's political umbrella group lost by a narrow margin.
The Syrian Brotherhood's spokesman, Zuhair Salem, warned that the overthrow of a democratically elected Islamist leader sends a deeply negative message to other Islamists around the region.
"I've been in the Brotherhood since I was 15 and I used to always preach the value of the election box and democracy, conciliation and partnership. This makes a lie of what I said," he said.
According to Salman Shaikh, director of the Brookings Doha Center, Syria's Brotherhood had disagreed with the high-handed approach of its Egyptian counterparts.
"Privately most of them are quite critical about how the Brotherhood handled their year in office," he said. "You hear criticism that they have not managed to build trust and have been too confrontational and they have not turned themselves into a true national force."
Hard-line Islamists who have been among the toughest and most effective fighters in the rebel movement may now be even more resistant to allowing more moderate factions to move to the fore ? with an eye on who will hold power in Syria if Assad ever falls.
A jihadist site on Sunday compiled a series of tweets from commanders of extremist groups fighting in Syria saying that the overthrow showed that Islamists would never be allowed to succeed in elections.
"Secularism has shown its ugly face to those who were blind, and the mask of democracy has fallen in the struggle between right and wrong," said Sheik Zahran Alloush, a commander of the Islam Brigade. "As the mujahedeen leaders say, we chose ammunition boxes over ballot boxes."
Extremist groups around the region that have long called democracy un-Islamic and a Western conspiracy were positively gleeful over what they saw as proof that elections were no way to seek power.
In North Africa, al-Qaida's branch issued a statement Thursday saying that Western governments' refusal to condemn the military overthrow of the Brotherhood showed that the only path lies through armed struggle.
"The youth of Egypt should learn that the price for applying principles on the ground is a mountain of body parts and seas of blood, because evil must be killed and not shown mercy," said its spokesman Abu Abdelilah al-Jijeli.
Probably the Islamist party hit hardest by the Brotherhood's fall has been Hamas, in the tiny Gaza Strip next to Egypt's Sinai. Hamas has lost its most important regional ally.
Senior Hamas officials have largely remained silent about the development, especially since the new Egyptian government could easily re-seal their borders, but one Hamas official said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject that it was a serious blow.
"It's a setback to Hamas and the Muslim Brothers in the region. People now view the Muslim Brothers in Egypt as losers," he said.
Many countries in the region that have regarded the Brotherhood in Egypt with deep suspicion welcomed its downfall as a vindication of their long-held view that the organization was dangerous and had no business ruling.
Saudi Arabia applauded Morsi's fall. The normally staid official news agency of the United Arab Emirates described its "satisfaction" at the turn of events. The UAE claims groups backed by the Muslim Brotherhood have sought to topple its Western-backed ruling system, and earlier this week 69 people were convicted on coup-plotting charges.
But it was from Damascus that the real crowing could be heard, as Assad told the daily Al-Thawra that "this is the fate of anyone in the world who tries to use religion for political or factional interest."
Most analysts don't see the Brotherhood's setback as the end of political Islam as a force in the region. It remains the most organized political movement in many countries. The ideology has remained relevant despite several military interventions in the past, including Algeria's overturning of elections Islamists were set to win in 1991 and the Palestinian Authority's refusal to recognize a Hamas electoral victory in the West Bank in 2006.
The Egyptian Brotherhood's catastrophic loss of popularity in just a year, however, shows Islamism has a lot to learn when it comes to ruling, said Shaikh of the Brookings Institute.
"As time went on, they have shown themselves as a lot less capable and more ideological in their approach than people would have liked, and this should be a wake-up call," he said.
______
Associated Press reporters Dale Gavlak in Amman, Jordan; Diaa Hadid and Zeina Karam in Beirut; Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank; and Maamoun Youssef in Cairo contributed to this report.
Associated PressProp 30 Election 2012 Michigan Election Results Missouri Election Results Amendment 64 marijuana Colorado Marijuana
Updated from 8:54 a.m. ET with additional data from the BLS report
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- The U.S. work force added 195,000 jobs in June while the national unemployment rate remained unchanged at 7.6%, the Labor Department said Friday.
The June jobs growth beat expectations as economists polled by Thomson Reuters anticipated nonfarm payrolls to add 165,000 jobs and expected the unemployment rate to dip to 7.5%.
The report upwardly revised May payrolls to 195,000 from 175,000, and April jobs to 199,000 from 149,000. Jobs have grown an average of 182,000 a month over the prior 12 months. Many investors pay closer attention to the prior-revised monthly payrolls as they provide more refined numbers.
Average hourly earnings rose by 10 cents to $24.01. The average work week for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls remained unchanged at 34.5 hours. >Contact by Email.Andrew Wiggins James Gandolfini funeral Nelson Mandela Dead Dylan Redwine doma Rachel Jeantel nelson mandela
Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.
Who Won The Superbowl Super Bowl Halftime Show 2013 Super Bowl Commercials 2013 Ray Lewis Murders 2013 Super Bowl Commercials joe flacco Go Daddy Superbowl Commercial 2013
AFP
Skipper Virat Kohli led from the front with a responsible century-knock as India bounced back in the race for the tri-series final with a dominating 102-run win over the West Indies in a crucial rain-hit match, on Friday.
Batting with a lot of grit and gumption, Kohli anchored India to a challenging 311 for seven after his side was in a spot of bother, having lost five established batsmen at a score of 210 in 40 overs.
Openers Shikhar Dhawan (69) and Rohit Sharma (46) had laid a strong foundation with their 123-run stand and Kohli (102) ensured that their hard work does not go waste as he made up for the failure of the middle-order with his gritty 14th one-day century.
Pacer Bhuvneshwar Kumar rattled the West Indies chase with wickets of Chris Gayle and Darren Bravo, and rain gods only made the job tougher for the hosts as their target was revised to 274 from 39 overs after a two-hour rain delay.
West Indies had a daunting task of scoring a further 218 runs from 39 overs after resuming at 56 for two in 10 overs.
India, desperately requiring a win to remain in the hunt for a berth in the final, bowled out the hosts for 171 in 34 to walk away with a bonus point.
India's victory meant that the tournament is open with all three teams having a chance to qualify for the final. West Indies next play Sri Lanka on Sunday and then India face Sri Lanka on Tuesday in the last league match.
West Indies batsmen succumbed to pressure after resumption of play and lost wickets in a heap. Stage was set for Indian pacers and Kumar (3/29) and Ishant Sharma in no time had knocked off half of the West Indies' batting line up.
Sharma had Marlon Samuels (6) caught and removed set opener Johnson Charles (45) while Kumar added wicket of dangerous Kieron Pollard, who could not even open his account.
Umesh Yadav (3/32) joined the party by scalping Denesh Ramdin (9) and rival skipper Dwayne Bravo (14) to leave West Indies reeling at 108 for six.
Earlier, Kohli got out in the last ball of the innings as he nullified the success of West Indies fast bowlers, who had put the hosts in a good position with regular strikes.
Kohli faced 83 balls in his innings and punished the Caribbean bowlers with 13 fours and two sixes.
After 40 overs, India had 210 runs on the board and only Kohli to bat with tail-enders as pace duo of Kemar Roach and Tino Best had polished off the Indian middle-order.
Kohli responded to the challenge in the best possible manner as India scored 101 runs in the last 10 overs and his contribution was 67 runs. R Ashwin supported Kohli well with his 18-ball 25 as they shared a 90-run stand for the seventh wicket in 8.2 overs.
Earlier after sent in to bat, Dhawan and Sharma provided a solid start to India with 123-run stand, which was broken when the left-hander chose to play aggressively after spending a watchful 23 overs at the crease.
Coming into the make-or-break match, both the Indian openers batted with a lot of responsibility. They chose caution over aggression, relying on rotation of the strike and hitting an odd boundary in between.
Dhawan, who by nature is a stroke-maker, kept his natural urge to go for strokes under control till India had safely negotiated almost half-the-overs.
The left-hander opened up after India had crossed 100-run mark. He chose local lad and highly-rated spinner Sunil Narine for some punishment, hitting him for two sixes and a four.
However, Dhawan could not continue in the same vain, as he holed out to Darren Bravo at deep square leg when he attempted to hit one off Kemar Roach over the ropes. His knock came off 77 balls and contained eight fours and two sixes.
Sharma too joined him in the pavilion when he edged one behind off Tino Best. In space of seven overs India lost Suresh Raina (10), Dinesh Karthik (6) and Murali Vijay (27).
Ravindra Jadeja's run out made things worse for India but Kohli pulled India out of trouble.
Scorecard
?
Source: http://sports.in.msn.com/cricket/india-whip-west-indies-by-102-runs
Mario Machado May the Fourth be with you James Righton finish line kentucky derby Iron Man 3 Emmett Till
Suzanne Choney NBC News
8 hours ago
A tweet in Arabic translated to English.
As the strife in Egypt continues, Twitter is testing out a translation service that lets users worldwide read the tweets of high-profile Egyptians in the users' own languages.
"Watching Egypt? We've included some highly followed accounts in the region in our Tweet text translation experiment," read a post that appeared Wednesday on the official Twitter for News page. The post added that the experiment will "allow you to see Tweets translated on user profiles, in your timeline and in search."
For more than a year, the Twitter has been testing translation software in general, and is currently using Microsoft's Bing Translator for the service. The Egypt tweets translation is Twitter's most high-profile translation effort so far.
It's still too soon to know how reliable the service is. If you want to try another means, Movement.org is one site that has suggestions, including using Google Translate and other browser extensions and scripts that can also do Twitter translation.
As of Friday, Twitter listed 63 prominent Egyptians, including ousted Egyptian president Mohammed Morsi, and organizations with interests there as part of its @Egypt2013 page. If you would like to try this out, go to the page and follow the person or group you're interested in.
Once those tweets are in your feed, they will still be in Arabic. Hover your mouse over the tweet, though, and to the right of the person's name, you'll see a hyperlink for "View Translation." Click that, and the tweet will appear in English.
The tweets you choose to follow will show up in your feed in Arabic. But ...
... hover your mouse to the right of the person who posted the tweet and you'll see a hyperlink for "View translation." Click on that ...
... and the tweet's translation appears.
Check out Technology and TODAY Tech on Facebook, and on Twitter, follow Suzanne Choney.
romney etch a sketch jeb bush sherry arnold snooty fox el debarge portland weather clintonville
After holding six town halls throughout his Congressional District at the end of May, a telephone town hall in March, and dozens of Kilmer at Your Company events around the region, Representative Derek Kilmer will hold an online Twitter Town Hall tomorrow to answer questions from his constituents.?
Representative Kilmer said, ?This is part of my ongoing effort to hear directly from the people I represent and to use a variety of communication channels so I can be a highly accessible and responsive Representative.?
Representative Kilmer will be answering questions tomorrow, June 25th from 3:00 PM ? 3:45 PM PDT.?? Constituents are encouraged to participate by asking questions through Twitter anytime on Monday or Tuesday by tweeting at Representative Kilmer?s Twitter account (@RepDerekKilmer) and/or using the hashtag #AskKilmer.
?
WHO: ??????????? Representative Derek Kilmer, constituents
WHAT:?????????? Kilmer Twitter Town Hall
WHEN: ? ? ? ? ? June 24, 2013
??????????????????????? 3:00 PM ? 3:45 PM PDT
WHERE:???????? Follow along on Representative Kilmer?s twitter account @RepDerekKilmer
Source: http://kilmer.house.gov/media-center/press-releases/kilmer-to-hold-twitter-town-hall
usps Ola Ray Ginobili miley cyrus miley cyrus game 7 ray allen