Saturday, July 14, 2012

Fundraising golf day suits hospice to a tee

Fundraising golf day suits hospice to a tee

Snooker legend Willie Thorne takes partSnooker legend Willie Thorne takes part

KEEN golfers got into the swing of raising funds for charity by taking part in the Prospect Hospice?s golf day.

The event, which was held at Marlborough Golf Club yesterday, saw 100 people teeing off to raise ?7,000 for the charity, in Wroughton.

World snooker champion Willie Thorne took part in the event, which included a full 18 holes of golf.

Organiser Dave Haydon said: ?This is the third year I have organised it. I want to put something back into the community and Prospect is a local charity and it needs such a lot of money.

?We have got 100 people playing, which is about average but with the economic climate a lot of events are struggling. This was a really good turn-out.?

The day included competitions and an evening meal and auction.

There was also a question and answer session with Swindon Town?s Fraser Digby and Paul Bodin in the evening, which was hosted by Willie. A total of 25 teams took part in the golf.

Prospect spokesman Ben Holloway said: ?It has been a great turn-out. Despite the recession people are still prepared to raise money for us. It is great to see so many people supporting and a big thank you to everybody who turned up. There are quite a few teams who turn up every year.?

It is the first year the event, which is usually at Ogbourne Downs Golf Club, has been held in Marlborough.

Prospect Hospice is a registered charity, and it costs more than ?5m to provide the care patients and their families depend on each year.

The hospice?s end of life care last year reached more than 1,600 people living with cancer and serious conditions in Swindon, north Wiltshire, Fairford and Lechlade.

?We have four or five events a year which raise between five and ?10,000,? said Ben.

?Every event we do is vital to us. There are only a limited number of events we can run every year and we need to make money from every one of them.?

Fundraising for Prospect Hospice will continue today when 100 people are due to abseil down Jurys Inn in the town centre.

For information about raising funds for Prospect phone 01793 813355.

Source: http://www.thisiswiltshire.co.uk/news/headlines/9817158.Fundraising_golf_day_suits_hospice_to_a_tee/?ref=rss

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Source: http://hotnews.blogspages.com/2012/07/13/denver-internet-marketing-agency/

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Friday, July 13, 2012

Nick Cooper: Let Us Help People! (Offthekuff)

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When did Romney leave Bain? (CNN)

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Tart cherry crop in Midwest destroyed by weather

In this June 28, 2012, photo Dale Seaquist, one of the owners of Seaquist Orchards in Sister Bay, Wis., stands in front of one of his 120,000 cherry trees. They only plan to get about 10 percent of a full crop this year after frost got the buds that developed early from a warm winter and spring. (AP Photo/Carrie Antlfinger)

In this June 28, 2012, photo Dale Seaquist, one of the owners of Seaquist Orchards in Sister Bay, Wis., stands in front of one of his 120,000 cherry trees. They only plan to get about 10 percent of a full crop this year after frost got the buds that developed early from a warm winter and spring. (AP Photo/Carrie Antlfinger)

In this June 28, 2012, a cherry hangs on a tree on with very few other cherries in the orchards of Seaquist Orchards in Sister Bay, Wis. The company only expects to get about 10 percent of a full crop this year after frost got the buds that developed early from a warm winter and spring. (AP Photo/Carrie Antlfinger)

(AP) ? Walk into Cherry Republic's store in the heart of the nation's biggest tart cherry producing region, and you could end up with jam or salsa with fruit that had to be imported from Poland.

Cherry Republic can't get enough tart cherries from its local orchards because 97 percent of Michigan's crop was destroyed this year by a freak weather pattern. An unseasonably warm March that caused trees to bud was followed by an April freeze that killed the blossoms.

Trees in New York and Wisconsin, which have smaller but still significant tart cherry harvests, suffered the same weather damage.

Prices usually skyrocket when farmers take that kind of a loss, or in severe cases consumers might just have to give up on a fruit for a season. But that won't happen in this case because of some unique factors in the tart cherry industry. As a result, cherry processors are scrambling to get what fruit they can, sometimes from Poland or Turkey, and taking a financial hit in an effort to keep prices low.

Tart cherries are different from sweet cherries, the variety sold fresh at farmers markets and in grocery stores. Most tart cherries are dried or canned and used as ingredients in pies, granola and trail mix. While sweet cherries are mainly grown on the West Coast, 70 percent of the nation's tart cherries come from Michigan.

The problem for tart cherry growers and the companies that dry or can the fruit is that it can be easily replaced by cranberries, blueberries or raspberries ? and each group of fruit growers has its own industry marketing group ready to capitalize on the others' failures.

When tart cherries had a poor harvest in 2002 and dried cherry prices went up, companies that make granola, scones and other foods simply substituted other fruit, said Terry Sorenson, the president of the Wisconsin Cherry Growers Association.

"It took us a long time to bring sales back after 2002. That's definitely a concern this year," he said. To avoid a repeat, the cherry industry will try to keep its prices as stable as possible this year. Companies hope to make a profit, but if not, to at least keep their customers.

Businesses such as Kellogg Co., which makes cherry Nutri-Grain bars, and Kashi, which produces cherry dark granola bars, wouldn't say whether they are scouting for cherry alternatives or considering raising their prices due to the shortage.

Companies such as Cherry Republic in Glen Arbor, Mich., however, don't have the option of switching fruit since their whole focus is tart cherries. Owner Bob Sutherland said he plans to import cherries from Poland to get through the year.

"The Polish variety is a little darker, a little firmer after cooking but it's very similar in flavor" to the U.S. variety, Sutherland said. "For me, going to Poland was a no-brainer."

He raised the prices on a 1-pound bag of dried cherries from $14.50 to $18.95, and chocolate-covered cherries went from $13.95 to $16.95. But Sutherland held prices steady on his other cherry products: salsas, jams, salad dressings and barbecue sauces.

"We might have smaller margins," he said, "but we want to keep our customers."

Jamie Roster, the owner of the Cherry Stop in Traverse City, Mich., faced the same dilemma. She ended up raising her price for dried cherries from $10 per pound to $15.95 because she felt she couldn't afford to take a loss. In the weeks since, she has seen sales fall 10 percent.

"That's been our biggest price increase by far," said Roster, who is also considering buying cherries from Poland. "Since we've owned the business for the past seven years, prices have maybe gone up $1 per pound. So a $6 increase over one month is pretty phenomenal."

Those most likely to profit from the mess in the Midwest are tart cherry growers in Utah. The state is typically the nation's No. 2 tart cherry producer, but this year it will be No. 1 because its trees are mostly in good shape. And, the prices paid to farmers are skyrocketing.

Dale Seaquist, whose family produces about 60 percent of the tart cherries grown in Wisconsin and owns a processing plant, said he expects growers to get more than $1 a pound for their fruit this year, more than twice as much as usual.

"The buyers are crazy to get them," he said. "They want them real bad."

He kept a close watch on the temperature this spring but said there wasn't much he could do to save the crop developing on the approximately 120,000 trees his family owns throughout Door County, a popular Wisconsin tourist area.

"It's sort of a sickening feeling when ... you're watching the thermometer and the temperature is going down, down, down," Seaquist said. "And you know if it goes down another degree or two, it's going to take care of the profit for the rest of the year."

Some orchards were OK, but most were not. The crop was uneven, with some trees completely bare, while others right next to them were filled with cherries.

Seaquist figures his family will end up with 10 percent of what they'd get in a typical year. A federal forecast predicts Wisconsin's total harvest will be about 7 percent of what it was last year.

Sutherland, in Michigan, said the year has been so bad that he's even calling a truce with the growers he considers his main competition. He now suggests cherry recipes that include half cherries and half cranberries.

"We have signed a temporary truce with cranberries for one year only," he said, somewhat in jest. But, he added, "Our century-old battle with cranberries will never be over. In 2013, we will be back knocking them silly in the marketplace."

___

Online:

Cherry Republic: http://www.cherryrepublic.com

Cherry Stop: http://www.thecherrystop.com

Seaquist Orchards: http://www.seaquistorchards.com

___

Dinesh Ramde, who reported from Milwaukee, can be reached at dramde(at)ap.org.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-07-13-Food%20and%20Farm-Tart%20Cherries/id-61a702745b6d495c97d4f3e144eabebb

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Little Movement in Virginia U.S. Senate Race (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Thursday, July 12, 2012

?Seven Minutes of Terror? Video Grabs Online Audience for NASA

[unable to retrieve full-text content]A dramatic video previewing a rover?s journey to Mars has succeeded in an area where NASA has a mixed record: using social media.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c6617ea12ee934e71f158ec0e716c040

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Corn flour's gooey trick revealed

Scientists are finally getting to the bottom of the mechanism behind the familiar "kitchen chemistry" experiment using water and corn flour.

A thick mixture of the two pours like a liquid but is hard when struck; the same idea is used in some body armour.

But exactly what is going on within these mixtures has remained a mystery.

Now researchers reporting in Nature have shown how compression of the particles just below the strike area jam together when under a force.

The corn flour (corn starch in the US) and water mixture is just one example of what are known as non-Newtonian fluids, whose viscosities (resistance to flow) behave differently from the more familiar, "Newtonian" fluids from everyday life.

For the case of corn flour - or quicksand, or the familiar example of the wet sand just ahead of a receding wave - the behaviour arises because of interactions between particles that are just millionths of a metre across.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

The big picture is that this is a kind of material that knows how to change its properties, which is very powerful?

End Quote Scott Waitukaitis University of Chicago

These mixtures will pour or drip, but when exposed to fast movements, they seem to get radically thicker - leading many to attempt the "trick" of walking on pools of corn flour mixture - or even make "corn flour monsters" using a speaker cone.

"The corn starch grains are like tiny little rocks bobbing around in the water, very densely packed but not so densely that they're touching each other," explained lead author of the study Scott Waitukaitis of the University of Chicago in the US.

Just what is going on when such mixtures are struck by a foot or scooped quickly with a spoon has been explained away as a "solidification" process, but Mr Waitukaitis told BBC News that "this hasn't ever been articulated very well".

"If you asked them, a lot of people - even in our field - would have said that if you hit corn flour and water you're just transmitting stress to the bottom of the container via some solid-like object - but that doesn't answer how this object forms."

To find out, Mr Waitukaitis and Prof Heinrich Jaeger set up a hi-tech version of the familiar kitchen experiment, equipping an aluminium rod with an accelerometer and firing a laser line across the surface of a bowl of corn flour mixture.

A slow-motion camera captured what happened as the rod struck the surface of the mixture, and sensors measured where the forces were distributed at the bottom of the bowl.

The pair also used "tracer particles" within the mixture to take slow-motion X-ray images of what was going on in the middle of the bowl, finding that two effects were at work in the process.

"The simplest way to look at it is that if I hit the surface really hard, I cause a build-up of grains in front, kind of like a snow plough," Mr Waitukaitis explained.

"If you push a shovel through loose snow it gets harder and harder as you go, because you're getting more and more snow building up in front of you - the solidification is kind of a snow plough of these grains smashing into each other."

This solid region has the same "footprint" as the impacting object, and extends to a depth as much as 20 times as wide as the object itself - but not necessarily all the way to the edge of the container.

"The second thing that happens is that as you create this snow plough, it's being pushed through this surrounding fluid. I can't push one solid region of the fluid without pulling on the surrounding regions."

The slow-motion video showed how a depression surrounding the rod grew with time, drawing some of the mixture down and appearing to sink into the surface.

A similar effect can be seen when walking on a beach where a wave has just receded; the weight-bearing foot is surrounded by a dry-looking area as the water around the impact region is drawn downward.

Understanding just what is going on in these systems has wider implications beyond the kitchen, Mr Waitukaitis explained.

"It's a lot more than just running across pools for game shows in Japan," he said. "The big picture is that this is a kind of material that knows how to change its properties, which is very powerful.

"You can think of industries ranging from construction, working with new kinds of cements, to using them as an addition to things like bullet-proof vests that conform to a person's shape but gets as hard as it needs to be depending on how hard it's hit."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18800017#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Moderate drinking may reduce risk of rheumatoid arthritis

ScienceDaily (July 10, 2012) ? Moderate consumption of alcohol is associated with a reduced risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis, suggests a study published on the British Medical Journal website.

The results show that women who regularly consume more than three alcoholic drinks a week for at least 10 years have about half the risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis compared with non-drinkers.

After adjusting for factors such as age, smoking and dietary habits, women who reported drinking more than three glasses of alcohol per week in both 1987 and 1997 had a 52% reduced risk of rheumatoid arthritis compared with never drinkers at both assessments.

These findings add to a growing body of evidence that long term moderate alcohol consumption is not harmful and may protect against a chronic disease like rheumatoid arthritis, say the authors. However, they stress that the effect of higher doses of alcohol on the risk of rheumatoid arthritis remains unknown.

Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic inflammatory joint disorder that usually develops between the ages of 40 and 50. About 1% of the world's population is affected -- women three times more often than men. Some studies have shown that drinking alcohol is associated with a lower risk of rheumatoid arthritis, whereas others have found no association.

The relation between alcohol intake and rheumatoid arthritis remains controversial. So a team of researchers based in Sweden set out to analyse this association among 34,141 Swedish women born between 1914 and 1948.

Detailed information about alcohol consumption, diet, smoking history, physical activity and education level was collected in 1987 and again in 1997.

Participants were followed up for seven years (Jan 2003 to Dec 2009) when they were aged 54-89 years, during which time 197 new cases of rheumatoid arthritis were registered.

The age-standardized rate of rheumatoid arthritis was smaller among women who drank more than four glasses of alcohol a week (7 per 10,000 person years) than among women who drank less than one glass a week (9.1 per 10,000 person years) as reported in 1997.

After adjusting for factors such as age, smoking and dietary habits, women who reported drinking more than three glasses of alcohol per week in both 1987 and 1997 had a 52% reduced risk of rheumatoid arthritis compared with never drinkers at both assessments.

One standard glass of alcohol was defined as approximately 500 ml beer, 150 ml of wine or 50 ml of liquor.

The reduced risk was similar for all three types of alcoholic drink.

Further analyses made little difference to the results, supporting the theory that a moderate amount of alcohol may be a protective factor for rheumatoid arthritis. The authors suggest that this is most likely to be due to alcohol's ability to lower the body's immune response.

This is relevant because rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease -- it causes the immune system, which usually fights infection, to attack the cells that line the joints.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by BMJ-British Medical Journal, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. D. Di Giuseppe, L. Alfredsson, M. Bottai, J. Askling, A. Wolk. Long term alcohol intake and risk of rheumatoid arthritis in women: a population based cohort study. BMJ, 2012; 345 (jul10 2): e4230 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.e4230

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/muxa41fYXE4/120710185434.htm

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Health care options for young, healthy and broke

FILE - In this July 9, 2012 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama's health care law says almost all Americans should get insurance coverage by 2014. What about uninsured young people who feel healthy and don't have money to spare? Some will probably skip coverage and pay financial penalties that will be much cheaper than insurance premiums. But health care advocates urge caution. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File )

FILE - In this July 9, 2012 file photo, President Barack Obama speaks in the East Room of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama's health care law says almost all Americans should get insurance coverage by 2014. What about uninsured young people who feel healthy and don't have money to spare? Some will probably skip coverage and pay financial penalties that will be much cheaper than insurance premiums. But health care advocates urge caution. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File )

(AP) ? They're young, healthy and flat broke ? and now the government says they have to buy thousands of dollars' worth of medical insurance. What should tapped-out twentysomethings do?

Well, some may just do nothing. The annual fine for shrugging off the new federal insurance requirement, which is to begin in 2014, starts out at a relatively low $95, depending on income. That would be far cheaper than paying premiums.

But that doesn't necessarily make blowing off the mandate a good idea for the fit and frugal. Millions of young people will qualify for good deals on health care if they take time to sort through the complicated law.

Many will get Medicaid coverage at virtually no cost. Others will qualify for private insurance at a fraction of the full premiums. And health plans offered under the law will limit individuals' out-of-pocket expenses to about $6,250 per year or less ? a bulwark against gigantic, unexpected medical bills.

"It doesn't have to be cancer or a heart attack or even a bad car accident," said Karen Pollitz, a health policy expert at the Kaiser Family Foundation whose own son needed $15,000 worth of surgery after he broke his wrist while skateboarding at age 20. "Once you show up in the ER, it starts to cost you some money."

The plans also will cover at no charge preventive care such as HIV tests, screening for depression or alcoholism, flu shots, hepatitis vaccine, contraception and pregnancy care. And insurers will no longer be able to exclude or charge extra for people who already have health problems.

"It's the 15 percent of young people who have chronic conditions like asthma or diabetes, and the young women looking to have a baby," said Aaron Smith, 30, co-founder of Young Invincibles, which advocates for young adults' health care. "That discrimination won't fly in 2014."

Young Americans are the least likely to be insured: almost three of 10 adults who are under 35 aren't covered. And they go to emergency rooms more than any other group except seniors.

It's still possible President Barack Obama's health care law won't be around in 2014, when the big changes are to kick in. Congressional Republicans and GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney want to repeal "Obamacare" if they win the November elections. Still, with open enrollment for the law's new state-based insurance markets scheduled to begin in October of next year, it's prudent to start considering the options for getting covered.

GOT A JOB? START THERE

More than half of Americans already are covered through their jobs. But young adults have the nation's highest unemployment rate and also are more likely to toil in low-wage jobs without benefits.

Some employers, especially smaller businesses paying lower wages, may now drop their plans and expect their workers to get government help. Other businesses, but not quite as many, will probably begin coverage in response to the law's penalties and incentives for employers, the Congressional Budget Office predicts.

UNDER 26? LEAN ON MOM OR DAD

One of the law's most popular provisions, already in effect, ensures that parents with family plans can keep their adult kids enrolled until they turn 26, if the children don't have a suitable workplace option. Pollitz's skateboarding son is one of them.

The government estimates that 3.1 million uninsured young people already have gained coverage this way.

CONSIDER MEDICAID

Right now, Medicaid mostly covers children and low-income adults who are disabled, pregnant or raising kids. But the health care law will push states to expand Medicaid to also cover other adults with incomes up to around $15,000, adjusted for inflation in 2014. That's designed to account for about half of the 30 million people expected to gain insurance coverage under the overhaul.

It may fall short, however. The Supreme Court recently ruled that the federal government can't coerce states into joining the Medicaid expansion. Some states may decline to add people to their rolls.

THERE'S OTHER HELP

Most people with incomes up to four times the poverty level ? which currently comes out to $44,680 for an individual or $92,200 for a family of four ? will qualify for some help paying for private insurance. Aid drops off sharply as income climbs, and younger people get smaller subsidies than older folks whose insurance rates are higher.

The lowest earners shouldn't have to pay more than 2 percent of their incomes toward insurance premiums for mid-level plans; those at the high end would have to contribute 9.5 percent. These plans also have significant co-pays and deductibles, but some help is available there, too.

For example, a single 26-year-old earning $16,000 might pay $537 toward the annual premium for a mid-level "silver" plan, according to estimates from the Kaiser Family Foundation. The rest of the premium would be covered by a $2,853 tax credit. (Deductibles and co-pays could cost up to an additional $2,083, depending on how much care the person needs.)

A 26-year-old earning $35,000 would pay $3,325 in premiums ? $277 a month ? for the same plan, after only a $66 tax credit. (And that patient might be on the hook for another $4,167 in out-of-pocket costs.)

A CHEAPER BUT SKIMPY CHOICE

For those under 30 there's a special option to buy "catastrophic" insurance with the lowest premiums but scant coverage until a deductible of about $6,250 is met. While it may be tempting, caution is advised.

"We really encourage folks to do their homework and look at the details of the plan," said Smith, who's organizing efforts to help young people learn about their choices. "It's not just the premium. You have to look at what's being covered, what the deductibles are."

GO BARE?

People who would have to spend more than 8 percent of their income to buy basic insurance are exempt from paying a penalty if they go without.

For others who feel they can't afford or just don't want coverage, the penalties start off relatively low in 2014.

Private insurers have yet to set the prices for their 2014 plans, because coverage that will comply with the law is still being developed. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that premiums for the bare-bones plan, called "bronze" level, might average between $4,500 and $5,000 per year. Family plans might cost $12,500 per year.

Rates for young adults would be lower. Kaiser's cost calculator gives a ballpark estimate of about $3,400 for an average single 26-year-old who doesn't get subsidies.

In contrast, the first year's minimum penalty for an individual is $95; that's what a worker making $16,000 would pay. A $35,000 earner would owe $255 ? not even a tenth of the estimated $3,325 in premiums.

In 2016, the minimum penalty rises to $695 and it's capped at a little less than 2.5 percent of taxable income. That's about a $1,600 fine for someone making $75,000 per year.

Even for the wealthiest folks the law says the penalties can never exceed the average cost of a "bronze" plan. But most of those people already have insurance, anyway.

The Internal Revenue Service could withhold the penalties from taxpayers' refunds if they don't show proof of insurance. About 4 million people are expected to end up paying the penalties.

"For many young people, this is the first time they've had to deal with health insurance and the health care system," said Smith. "There will be a learning curve."

___

Online:

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: http://www.healthcare.gov/

Kaiser Family Foundation's health care subsidy calculator: http://healthreform.kff.org/subsidycalculator

Young Invincibles: http://younginvincibles.org/

___

Follow Connie Cass on Twitter: http://www.Twitter.com/ConnieCass

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-07-10-US-Health-Care-Young-and-Broke/id-33448edddddf418db0ee2ebad7412b74

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Motion Computing announces CL910 tablet for enterprise, promises Windows 8 upgrades

Motion Computing announces CL910 tablet for enterprise, promises Windows 8 upgrades

Microsoft's slick Surface slates might be the Windows tablet consumers have been waiting for, but business folks? Motion computing hopes to keep their attention, refreshing its enterprise slate with a 1.6GHz dual-core Intel Atom N600 processor, a 128GB SSD and Bluetooth 4.0 support. The 10.1-inch slab, dubbed the CL910, retains the 15.5mm frame of its predecessor, as well as the old hardware's USB port, SD card slot and Gorilla Glass protected 1,366 x 768 panel. $1,260 buys a tablet loaded with Windows 7 Professional, but will be eligible for an upgrade when Redmond's Metro overhaul hits shelves. Hit the break for the official press release, or check out the slate for yourself at the source link below.

Continue reading Motion Computing announces CL910 tablet for enterprise, promises Windows 8 upgrades

Motion Computing announces CL910 tablet for enterprise, promises Windows 8 upgrades originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Jul 2012 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/10/motion-computing-announces-cl910-tablet-for-enterprise-promises/

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Tuesday, July 10, 2012

The murder suspect on the run for six months with 1,500 Facebook friends and a 'fan page' in his honour

  • John Anslow thought to be on run in Spain or Northern Africa
  • Logged onto Facebook two weeks ago to add 400 new friends
  • Posted photos of him swimming with dolphins since his escape

By Ian Garland

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A murder suspect who's been on the run from the police for six months has become a Facebook 'celebrity' with 1,500 'friends' and a fan page in his honour.

John Anslow, was broken out of a prison van by a gang of balaclava-clad men on his way to court in January - making him the first category A prisoner to escape in 17 years.

The 32-year-old from Tipton, West Midlands - who is believed to have fled to Spain or Northern Africa - broke cover from his hiding place last month to read messages of support from loved-ones and 'fans' and accept 400 news Facebook friends. Anslow smiles while swimming with dolphins in a photo posted on Facebook since his release

Anslow smiles while swimming with dolphins in a photo posted on Facebook since his release

Anslow has gathered over 1,500 on his personal Facebook page - adding 400 when he logged onto the site from his hiding place in June.

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A special Facebook fan site has also been set up in his honour, set up just three days after he escaped in Janyar.

Named 'John Anslow is A Innocent MAN Being SET UP' it has over 300 likes and messages of encouragement from wellwishers.

Both pages feature photos of Anslow posing swimming with dolphins.

His taunting tactics have earned him messages of support from friends. One, named Ricky Donnelly, wrote: 'Keep up the good work.

A police source told The Sun: 'This is embarrassing for the police. He thinks he's untouchable now and it's like he's playing to crowd.'

Others suspect Anslow may be at risk of being harmed by the people who helped him escape, who fear he may name them to the police.

A reward of ?10,000 has been offered to anyone who can help bring Anslow to justice.

Police suspect Anslow may be at risk from those who helped him escape prison

Police suspect Anslow may be at risk from those who helped him escape prison

Police are offering a ?10,000 reward for information that leads to Anslow's recapture

Police are offering a ?10,000 reward for information that leads to Anslow's recapture

The 32-year-old is the first category A prisoner to escape in 17 years

The 32-year-old is the first category A prisoner to escape in 17 years

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Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2170580/The-murder-suspect-run-months-1-500-Facebook-friends-fan-page-honour.html?ITO=1490

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Texas Wal-Mart Made into Public Library Nets Award

The McAllen Public Library in Texas used to be a Wal-Mart. Recently selected as the winner of the International Interior Design Association?s 2012 Library Interior Design Competition, the 124,500-square-foot building is believed to be the largest single-story library in the U.S.

The second-largest, according to the city of McAllen, is in Overland Park, Kan. It?s a cramped 90,000 square feet.
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After the retailer abandoned the building last year, McAllen hired Meyer, Scherer & Rockcastle Ltd. to renovate it. More than 2,000 people gathered for the new library?s grand opening in December 2011. Within the first month of opening, new user registration for the library had increased 23 percent.

?This is an investment in the future,? McAllen Mayor Richard Cortez said, reported The Monitor. ?Everyone knows that a society is empowered through knowledge and education. We?re hoping that the community, especially the children will take advantage and further their education.?

McAllen?s old main library opened in 1950 and only had a third of the floor space of the new location even though it had three floors. The extra room at the Wal-Mart location has allowed the city to more than double the number of computers available to the public. Other new amenities include: a teen area, cafe, auditorium, quiet reading room, self-checkout units, art gallery, electronic classrooms, meeting rooms with audiovisual services, an expanded children's area, used bookstore and an automated materials handling system.

Photos of the new library are here and here.

Video: Take a tour of the library as it was under construction last year.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/govtech/topics/health_human_services/~3/O99vjZUyEd0/Texas-Wal-Mart-Public-Library-Nets-Award.html

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Monday, July 9, 2012

Putin orders probe into Russia flood deaths

KRYMSK, Russia (AP) ? Russia's president moved quickly to address anger over the deaths of at least 171 people in severe flooding in the Black Sea region that turned streets into swirling muddy rivers and inundated thousands of homes as many residents were sleeping.

Vladimir Putin, who was criticized in past years for a delayed or seemingly indifferent response to disasters, flew to the region in southern Russia committed to showing he was taking charge of the situation.

He ordered the head of Russia's investigative agency to establish whether enough had been done to warn people about the floods. Federal prosecutors also said they were investigating whether the population had been properly protected from "natural and technological catastrophes."

Russia has seen a series of natural and man-made disasters in recent years, many of them blamed on aging infrastructure or lax safety rules.

Torrential rains dropped up to a foot of water in less than 24 hours, which the state meteorological service said was five times the monthly average. The water rushed into the hard-hit town of Krymsk early Saturday with such speed and volume that residents said they suspected that water had been intentionally released from a reservoir in the mountains above. Local officials denied this, saying it was not technically possible to open the sluices.

Federal investigators, however, acknowledged Sunday that water had been released naturally from the reservoir, but they insisted it did not cause the flooding and the dam had not been breached. They said the problem was the heavy and sudden rainfall.

Krymsk received a total of 221 millimeters (almost nine inches) of rain overnight, but 50 millimeters (two inches) of that came in less than an hour late Friday, the meteorological service said.

Many residents remained unconvinced, however. During an outdoor meeting with the regional governor, who tried to persuade them that the reservoir was not the source of the flooding, residents shouted that they did not believe him and repeatedly interrupted him. The governor then agreed to allow five citizens and a journalist to fly over the dam in a helicopter.

Putin had already sent his emergencies minister on an inspection mission, a further indication of the concern over the condition of the reservoir. Vladimir Puchkov later reported that he had flown over the dam and seen no evidence of any damage.

Putin, however, did not meet with any residents affected by the floods, perhaps not willing to risk being the target of their anger.

Workers and volunteers scrambled to distribute food, drinking water and clean clothes throughout Krymsk, since much of the city of 57,000 was without electricity and potable water. As the flood waters receded, residents tried to remove mud from their homes and salvage possessions.

Even heavier rain fell in Gelendzhik, a popular seaside vacation spot about 200 kilometers (120 miles) up the coast from Sochi, where preparations are under way for the 2014 Winter Olympics. Novorossiisk, a major Black Sea port, also was affected.

The Interior Ministry said Sunday that 171 bodies had been recovered, 159 of them in and around Krymsk and 10 in Gelendzhik, including five who were electrocuted after a transformer fell into the water. The majority of the dead were elderly who were unable to escape the sudden deluge.

Residents of Krymsk described a wave of water that washed over the hoods of cars and inundated one-story homes. Some sought refuge on roofs and in trees.

Viktor Nikolyuchiny said he and his wife were roused by their daughter, who lives a block away.

"I came out and the water was already up to my waist," he was quoted by the RIA Novosti news agency as saying Sunday. "My wife has difficulty walking, and if not for our neighbor she would have drowned." He said they waited out the storm at the neighbor's home, which unlike theirs has a second story.

Putin arrived Saturday evening and viewed the damage from the air. Television footage of Krymsk shot from Putin's helicopter showed the city partially submerged in muddy water. The city stadium looked more like a lake.

Across the Krasnodar region, more than 5,000 homes were flooded.

Gov. Alexander Tkachev said during the meeting with Krymsk residents on Sunday that the first warnings of possible flooding came at 10 p.m. Friday, and the heaviest rainfall was from 1 a.m. to 3 a.m. Saturday. Tkachev

"Do you think my dears ... that we could have warned each of you? With what forces? That's one. And two, would you have gotten up and left your homes," Tkachev said during the confrontation, which was shown on NTV television.

The city set off a siren at around 4:30 a.m., but the residents said they didn't hear it.

___

Lynn Berry reported from Moscow.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/putin-orders-probe-russia-flood-deaths-160912262.html

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Harper and Trout go from farmhands to fame

National League's Bryce Harper, of the Washington Nationals, warms up during MLB All-Star baseball batting practice, Monday, July 9, 2012, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

National League's Bryce Harper, of the Washington Nationals, warms up during MLB All-Star baseball batting practice, Monday, July 9, 2012, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Los Angeles Angels' Mike Trout, left, slides past Baltimore Orioles catcher Matt Wieters for a run on a single by Torii Hunter in the third inning of?a baseball game in Baltimore, Tuesday, June 26, 2012. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

American League's Miguel Cabrera, of the Detroit Tigers, left, Billy Butler, of the Kansas City Royals, and Prince Fielder, of the Tigers, talk during MLB All-Star baseball batting practice, Monday, July 9, 2012, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

National League's Jay Bruce, of the Cincinnati Reds, Matt Cain, of the San Francisco Giants, and Craig Kimbrel, of the Atlanta Braves, talk in the outfield during MLB All-Star baseball batting practice, Monday, July 9, 2012, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

American League's Josh Hamilton, of the Texas Rangers, warms up during MLB All-Star baseball batting practice, Monday, July 9, 2012, in Kansas City, Mo. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

(AP) ? Bryce Harper remembered back to Oct. 27, when just 414 fans were at Scottsdale Stadium to watch his Scorpions play the Mesa Solar Sox in the Arizona Fall League.

Down 7-5, Bryce Harper vowed to teammate Brandon Crawford to hit a game-winning home run.

"I'll drop a bomb and walk off the field, tell them we own this place," Harper said. "I promise you I'm going to hit a jack right here. I swear on everything."

"Yeah, OK," Mike Trout told him in disbelief.

Trout led off with a single, Scottsdale got another hit with one out and Harper followed with a home run to right-center off Jeff Inman.

"Everybody ran inside the clubhouse," Harper said. "It was a great moment."

Still tied together, baseball's youthful dynamic duo will be watched by millions on Tuesday night as the All-Star game returns to Kansas City and beautiful Kauffman Stadium for the first time since 1973.

Just 19, Harper is the youngest position player in All-Star history and a key part of the Washington Nationals' emergence as a first-place team. Trout, a year older, is leading the American League in hitting and helping the Los Angeles Angels turn around their season after a sloppy start.

Coincidentally, both came up to the majors leagues on April 28, Harper for his debut and Trout for his return following a pair of stints last year. They are among a record five rookie All-Stars, joined by Texas pitcher Yu Darvish, Oakland closer Ryan Cook and Arizona pitcher Wade Miley.

In a room full of baseball's best, even the veterans are taking notice of Harper and Trout.

"Speed. Power. Excitement. Youth. Energy," Yankees center fielder Curtis Granderson said. "If they are able to stay healthy, they can completely transform the game as they get, five, 10, 15 years of big league time."

For now, both will start Tuesday night's game on the bench.

With the result determining home-field advantage in the World Series for the 10th straight year, the AL manager Ron Washington will start reigning MVP and Cy Young Award winner Justin Verlander. The NL's Tony La Russa, the first inactive All-Star manager since the AL's Bob Lemon in 1979, chose San Francisco's Matt Cain ? coming off a perfect game last month ? over knuckleballer R.A. Dickey of the New York Mets.

Trout was on a flight from Salt Lake City to Cleveland when he saw on Twitter that Harper was being called up the same day. Trout hadn't let many people know he was joining the big league team.

"Knowing he was getting called up that same day was pretty funny," Trout said.

A son of former Minnesota minor league infielder Jeff Trout, Mike was taken by the Angels with the 25th pick on the first round of the 2009 amateur draft. Idolizing Derek Jeter, he played shortstop at Millville Senior High in New Jersey until he was moved to the outfield in his senior year. He understands why he lasted so late in the first round.

"A lot of risk. East Coast kid. Didn't play all year," he said. "You look at the teams in Florida and California, they've got perfect weather all year. They can play all year."

Harper had the greater renown, on the cover of Sports Illustrated when he was just 16 with the headline "CHOSEN ONE." With sunglasses hanging from the top of his shirt and a neatly cropped beard, he has the big league look. A hint of acne reveals he's still a teenager.

"So much pressure ? no, I'm just kidding," he said, joshing with the media.

Joining a Nationals team that already has a top youthful star in ace pitcher Stephen Strasburg, Harper has a .282 batting average with eight homers and 25 RBIs in 63 games. The only younger All-Stars were Bob Feller in 1938 and Dwight Gooden in 1984, both closer to their 19th birthdays than Harper.

"I still feel like I have that kid inside me that wants to play the game of baseball every single day," Harper said. "I got love and that passion for the game and, hopefully, I can keep it going. I hope I'll be able to play for the Nationals for a long time and be able to play in the big leagues for a long time because that's the dream."

While Harper is polished following years of interviews, Trout projects a golly-gee demeanor, with close-cropped hair and a beaming smile. After he twice crashed into the center-field fence at Denver's Coors Field last month, teammates Jered Weaver and Dan Haren suggested he turn down the enthusiasm by a few notches.

"It's a long year. We're going to need you," Trout remembered them telling him.

He's hitting .341 with 12 homers, 40 RBIs and 26 steals in 29 chances.

"I was just telling Jete, I've never seen a player hit a triple to left field, down the line," Yankees ace CC Sabathia said. "Raul (Ibanez) plays it off the wall, and he's standing on third. That's just fun to see. What he's doing is amazing."

While Trout was an All-Star shoo-in, La Russa appeared reluctant to select Harper and added him on Saturday as a replacement when Miami's Giancarlo Stanton got hurt.

Even the 67-year-old La Russa, who managed his first World Series champions before they were born, appreciates the focus on the new stars.

"It would be nice to put the National League phenom against the American League phenom," he said.

When discussing Trout, Harper sounds like a fan.

"He's fun to watch. I get pumped to watch him," Harper said.

They hope this is just the first of many All-Star appearances. For every Willie Mays, who played his 24th and final All-Star game in Kansas City, there is a Gooden, who was selected in four of his first five seasons and then flamed out because of injuries and drug use.

Harper and Trout know what they can become. They are the next generation, playing alongside the present.

"I think certain guys who have been introduced to the game of baseball early on in life," said 40-year-old Chipper Jones, who is retiring at the end of the season. "Travel ball has accelerated so much for the development of young players these days. Back when I played, we played 30 games a year, and I'd move on to football and basketball, and run a little track."

Yes, much has changed. But much is the same.

Harper wants to become just like Jones, a perennial All-Star respected by his peers.

"Any time I can do that and be that guy that's the face of baseball, I think that would be great, to be able to do that, to be able to play the game for a long time and respect everybody around me and respect the league," he said. "That would be a lot of fun."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-07-09-All-Star%20Game/id-31daf6cd02f04ead8eea2cad3465ebef

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Hillary Clinton Caption Contest: Imma Let You Finish (PHOTO)

Remember when Kanye West interrupted Taylor Swift at the MTV Video Music Awards?

This recent photo of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton brings to mind that very incident. Traveling in Japan on Sunday, Clinton looks like she's grabbing the microphone, similar to what Kanye did to Swift.

hillary clinton

Send us your best caption for this photo, either by tweeting one using the #ClintonPhotoCaptions hashtag or by leaving an idea in the comments section. Here are some of our favorites:

  • Kelly

  • Neio

  • Leesa

  • Erik Fox

  • Clarence Mac?

  • Joseph D. Lawley

  • Samantha Martin

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/09/hillary-clinton-caption-contest_n_1658807.html

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Federer beats Murray for 7th Wimbledon, 17th major

Roger Federer of Switzerland celebrates with the trophy after winning the men's singles final against Andy Murray of Britain at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, England, Sunday, July 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

Roger Federer of Switzerland celebrates with the trophy after winning the men's singles final against Andy Murray of Britain at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, England, Sunday, July 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

Andy Murray of Britain, right, congratulates Roger Federer of Switzerland, as he poses with his trophy following the men's singles final match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, England, Sunday, July 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

Andy Murray of Britain reacts as he speaks to spectators after his defeat to Roger Federer of Switzerland in the men's singles final match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, England, Sunday, July 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

Roger Federer of Switzerland plays a shot to Andy Murray of Britain during the men's singles final match at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, England, Sunday, July 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus)

Roger Federer of Switzerland reacts during the men's final match against Andy Murray of Britain at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships at Wimbledon, England, Sunday, July 8, 2012. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

(AP) ? A Grand Slam title drought did indeed end in Sunday's historic and riveting Wimbledon final, only it was Roger Federer's lengthy-for-him gap between trophies that came to a close, rather than Britain's 76-year wait for a homegrown men's champion.

Making sure everyone knows he is still as capable as ever of brilliance on a tennis court ? particularly one made of grass, and with a roof overhead ? Federer came back to beat Andy Murray 4-6, 7-5, 6-3, 6-4 indoors on Centre Court for a record-tying seventh championship at the All England Club.

"It feels nice," Federer said, clutching the gold trophy only Pete Sampras has held as many times in the modern era. "It's like it never left me."

The victory also increased Federer's record total to 17 major titles after being stuck on No. 16 for 2? years, and clinched a return to the top of the ATP rankings, overtaking Novak Djokovic, after an absence of a little more than two years. Federer's 286th week at No. 1 ties Sampras for the most in history.

"He doesn't want to stop now. He knows he's going to continue to play well and try to break seven, and he could very well end up with eight or nine Wimbledons," Sampras said in a telephone interview. "I just think he's that much better than the other guys on grass, and he loves the court the way I loved that court. He's a great champion, a classy champion, and I'm really happy for him."

After a record seven consecutive Wimbledon finals from 2003-09, winning the first six, Federer lost in the quarterfinals in 2010 and 2011, then wasted two match points and a two-set lead against Djokovic in the U.S. Open semifinals last year, raising questions about whether he might be slipping.

"A couple tough moments for me the last couple years, I guess," Federer said. "So I really almost didn't try to picture myself with the trophy or try to think too far ahead, really."

After losing in the semifinals each of the previous three years, Murray was the first British man to reach the final at Wimbledon since Bunny Austin in 1938, and was trying to become the hosts' first male title winner since Fred Perry in 1936.

Alas, Murray dropped to 0-4 in Grand Slam finals, three against Federer. Only one other man lost the first four major title matches of his career: Ivan Lendl, who is coaching Murray now and sat in his guest box with chin planted on left palm, as expressionless as he was during his playing career. While Lendl never did win Wimbledon, perhaps Murray can take solace from knowing his coach did end up with eight Grand Slam titles.

"I'm getting closer," Murray told the crowd afterward, his voice cracking and tears flowing.

"Everybody always talks about the pressure of playing at Wimbledon, how tough it is," he said. "It's not the people watching; they make it so much easier to play. The support has been incredible, so thank you."

The Scotland native was urged on by 15,000 or so of his closest friends in person, along with thousands more watching on a large video screen a short walk away across the ground ? not to mention the millions watching the broadcast on the BBC.

The afternoon's first roar from those in attendance came when Murray jogged to the baseline for the prematch warmup; there even were cheers when his first practice stroke clipped the top of the net and went over.

Any omen would do.

The British, tennis enthusiasts and otherwise, searched for signs everywhere. Murray turned 25 in May, just as Perry had turned 25 in May 1934, shortly before he won his first of three consecutive Wimbledon titles; 2012 is Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee, celebrating her 60-year reign, just as 1977, when Virginia Wade won the Wimbledon women's championship, was the Silver Jubilee, marking 25 years on the throne; on Saturday night, Jonathan Marray (paired with Frederik Nielsen of Denmark) became the first Brit to win a men's doubles title at Wimbledon since ? yes, that's right ? 1936.

Royalty ? real and of a celebrity nature ? began arriving more than a half-hour beforehand: Prince William's wife, Kate, and her sister, Pippa Middleton; British Prime Minister David Cameron; soccer star David Beckham and his wife, former Spice Girl Victoria. Also present in the Royal Box: Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, who wants Scotland to break away from Britain.

Early on, every point Murray won earned cheers as though the ultimate outcome had been decided. Every miss, even a first-serve fault, drew moans of "Awwwwwww," as though their lad had lost any chance.

Murray got off to a glorious start. Federer, appearing in his 24th Grand Slam final, appeared the tenser of the two, amazingly enough, and when he sailed a swinging forehand volley long to get broken in the opening game, spectators rose to their feet and waved their Scottish and Union Jack flags.

That said, they do appreciate greatness here, and so Federer's best offerings drew applause, too. There was plenty of clapping and yelling to go around for both men, who produced extremely high-quality play, filled with lengthy exchanges, superb shotmaking and deft volleying ? all befitting the setting and the stakes.

Murray's second break helped him take the opening set, and things were even as could be for much of the second, until deuce at 5-5. From there, Federer stepped up, in large part by winning 43 of the 57 points on his serve the rest of the way. He saved all five break points he faced after the first set.

After holding for 6-5 in the second, Federer broke. At 30-all, he won a 17-stroke point with a drop volley that Murray got to but sailed a lob attempt long. And then Federer carved ? caressed, really ? another drop volley, this one bouncing to the side after it landed for a winner, impossible to reach, closing a 20-stroke exchange.

"Roger did a good job in the second set, turning the momentum around, and really changing things a lot," said his coach, Paul Annacone, who also worked with Sampras.

A real key switch happened at 1-all in the third, when a drizzle transformed into heavy showers, causing a 40-minute delay while the retractable cover was moved over the court. The roof was installed before the 2009 tournament; this was its first use for a singles final.

Until then, Federer had won 86 points, Murray 85. Under the roof ? with no wind to alter trajectories, allowing the third-seeded Swiss star to make pure, explosive contact with the ball ? Federer won 65 points, Murray 52.

"The way the court plays is a bit different," the fourth-seeded Murray said. "I think he served very well when the roof closed. He served better."

The most monumental game, though, came with Murray serving and trailing 3-2 in the third. It was chock-full: 10 deuces, six break points for Federer, three falls to the turf by Murray, all spread over roughly 20 gloriously intense minutes.

Murray went up 40-love, then began to crack as Federer walloped two backhand returns to 40-30. On the next point, Federer conjured up another beautiful drop shot and Murray tumbled head-over-heels while giving chase; both Federer and the chair umpire went over to check on him. A few points later, Murray did a somersault at the baseline when he slipped going after a lob. And on it went. At the 10th deuce, Federer sent another lob over Murray, who hit the deck yet again, but got up in time to see the ball plop on the baseline. This set up Federer's sixth break point, the last he would need ? in the game and the set, certainly, but also in the match and the tournament, it seemed.

He converted it with an inside-out forehand that landed in a corner, and Murray could only push his reply into the net.

There would be no more shifts of control, no reasons for Federer to doubt ? or for Murray and his legion of backers to believe.

The final break for Federer made it 3-2 in the fourth, when he flicked a cross-court backhand passing winner that was powerful and perfect. Federer made a rare show of strong emotion, shaking his right fist and bellowing. That, essentially, was that, no matter how many times the fans were going to sing their choruses of "An-dy! An-dy!" and "Mur-ray! Mur-ray!"

Federer only needed to hold serve three more times, and he did, then crumbled to the court when Murray sailed one last forehand wide.

"This is, I guess, how you want to win Wimbledon ? by going after your shots, believing you can do it," Federer said, "and that's what I was able to do today."

He most definitely is back to being the best at what he does.

Federer turns 31 on Aug. 8, and is the first thirtysomething man to win Wimbledon since Arthur Ashe in 1975.

No matter. He and Sampras ? and, by now, plenty of others ? see no reason why Federer can't keep adding to all of his records.

"I'm so happy I'm at the age I am right now, because I had such a great run and I know there's still more possible. To enjoy it right now, it's very different than when I was 20 or 25," said Federer, whose twin daughters, wearing matching black-and-white dresses and frilly socks, applauded from his guest box during the trophy ceremony.

"I'm at a much more stable place in my life. I wouldn't want anything to change," he added. "So this is very, very special right now."

___

Follow Howard Fendrich on Twitter at http://twitter.com/HowardFendrich

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-07-08-Wimbledon/id-8b8582b0fa6d46d9a85019f079c4096f

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