Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Dr. M. Veerappa Moily Minister for Petroleum & Natural Gas and Smt. Panabaaka Lakshmi, Minister of State for Petroleum & Natural Gas to give away Oil Sefety Awards 2011-12




R C JOSHI

PRESS INFORMATION BUREAU

Director (M&C) (P&NG)

GOVERNMENT OF INDIA

Tel: 2338 8517

ROOM NO.128 ?A? WING

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SHASTRI BHAWAN

?

NEW DELHI

?

July 17, 2013

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Dear Sir/Madam,

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????????? ????????? You are invited to attend/cover the following:

?

?

Function????????

Dr. M. Veerappa Moily Minister for Petroleum & Natural Gas ?and Smt. Panabaaka Lakshmi, Minister of State for Petroleum & Natural Gas to give away Oil Sefety Awards 2011-12

Date

July? 19, 2013 (Friday)

Time??

4.00 P.M.

Venue ??

Sovereign ?Hall, ?Hotel Le Meridien, Janpath New Delhi

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?

???????????

?????????????????? ??????????????? ?

Yours sincerely,

?

?

(R. C. Joshi)

To

1.????? DG (News), Doordarshan Kendra, New Delhi

2.????? DG (News), NSD, All India Radio

3.????? Director (Photo Division)

4.????? All Accredited Correspondents/Camerapersons (Still & Video)

?

?

?


(Release ID :97253)

Source: http://pib.nic.in/release/release.asp?relid=97253

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California Court Rejects Request To Stop Gay Weddings

The California Supreme Court, without comment, on Monday declined a request to immediately block the issuance of marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples as it considers a broader request to reinstate Proposition 8, considered unlikely by most legal experts.

Last week, Protect Marriage, the group that sponsored the 2008 voter-approved constitutional amendment which defined marriage as a heterosexual union, asked the state's highest court to reinstate the ban, arguing that Democratic Governor Jerry Brown did not have the authority to end enforcement of Proposition 8.

Protect Marriage lawyer Austin Nimocks vowed in a statement to continue fighting for the ban.

?Although we would have preferred for the California Supreme Court to issue a stay so that the state's marriage amendment would be respected sooner rather than later, the proponents of Proposition 8 will continue to urge the court to uphold the rule of law,? he said.

Proposition 8 tumbled after the Supreme Court ruled that interveners lacked standing to defend the law, leaving in place a 2010 circuit court ruling declaring it unconstitutional.

Within days after the Supreme Court ruled, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals lifted its stay in the ruling, allowing same-sex marriages to resume in California.

However, Protect Marriage argues that a provision in the California Constitution prohibits state officials from refusing to enforce a law unless it has been deemed unconstitutional by an appellate court.

Protect Marriage also argues that the 2010 ruling only applies to the two counties where plaintiffs live, not the entire state.

On June 28, Brown ordered clerks in all 58 counties to resume issuing marriage license to gay couples.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OnTopMagazineHeadlines/~3/q1l8V_qTH_s/article.aspx

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Man found in California motel awakens with amnesia, speaking only Swedish

This June 28, 2013 photo shows Michael Boatwright, who refers to himself as Johan Ek, a 61-year-old Florida man who awoke with no memory of his past speaking only Swedish and no English, in Palm Springs, Calif. Police transported Boatwright to the Desert Regional Medical Center in Palm Springs, Calif. after he was found unconscious in a Motel 6 room in February. (AP Photo/The Desert Sun, Jay Calderon) RIVERSIDE PRESS-ENTERPRISE OUT; NO SALES; NO FOREIGN ( Jay Calderon )

PALM SPRINGS -- Doctors are looking into the mystery of a Florida man who awoke speaking only Swedish, with no memory of his past, after he was found unconscious four months ago at a Southern California motel.

Michael Boatwright, 61, woke up with amnesia, calling himself Johan Ek, The Desert Sun reported (http://mydesert.co/145PNGw ).

Boatwright was found unconscious in a Motel 6 room in Palm Springs in February. After police arrived, he was transported to the Desert Regional Medical Center where he woke up.

Hospital officials said Boatwright may have been in town for a tennis tournament in the Coachella Valley. He was found with a duffel bag of exercise clothes, a backpack and tennis rackets. He also carried four forms of identification -- a passport, a California identification card, a veteran's medical card and a Social Security card -- all of which identified him as Michael Thomas Boatwright.

Palm Springs police have documented his information in case anyone lists Boatwright as missing or wanted, authorities said.

In March, doctors diagnosed Boatwright with Transient Global Amnesia, a condition triggered by physical or emotional trauma that can last for several months.

The rare mental disorder is characterized by memory loss, "sudden and unplanned travel," and possible adoption of a new identity, according to the Sun.

After an extensive search, medical personnel and

social workers have been unable to locate Boatwright's next of kin. Authorities are still unsure of his birthplace, listed on his identification as Florida. Photos show him in Sweden at a young age.

The Desert Sun (http://mydesert.co/190FGEU ) reported it had located Boatwright's sister in Louisiana but she was unable to shed any light on what had happened to him.

"I haven't talked to him in years. He just disappeared," Michelle Brewer said Monday in a telephone interview.

Brewer estimated she had last spoken to her brother about 10 years ago and couldn't even get in touch with him when their mother died last year.

"He's always been just a wanderer," Brewer said. "Then he'd come back when he needed some money or something from somebody. Then he'd take off again."

Swedish public records show Boatwright lived in the Nordic country on and off between 1981 and 2003. Several Swedes on Tuesday said they knew of him as an American with a big interest in medieval history and jousting.

Swede Olof Sahlin said he met Boatwright around 1985 through their joint interest in medieval history. He said he saw the American at jousting events regularly in the 1980s and

sporadically in the early 1990s.

"He was nice, sympathetic and talented at fighting in plate armor," Sahlin told The Associated Press. "A little bit reserved maybe."

Sahlin said he never knew how Boatwright made a living during his time in Sweden but has now heard from other friends that he briefly worked as a personal assistant and in the construction sector.

Sahlin said their last contact was in 1999 and he doesn't know what happened to him after that.

Boatwright doesn't recall how to exchange money, take public transportation or seek temporary housing like homeless shelters or hotels, the social worker assigned to his case, Lisa Hunt-Vasquez, told the Sun.

He doesn't remember his son and two ex-wives, either.

He has no income or insurance, further complicating his treatment at Desert Regional. And he has little money he can access -- only $180. He also has a few Chinese bank accounts but can only access one account, which holds $7, according to the newspaper.

Doctors don't know how much longer he will be able to stay at the center. Aside from his amnesia, Boatwright is in good health. The hospital is currently looking for alternatives that would keep him off the streets. For now, Boatwright is unsure of both his past and his future.

"Sometimes it makes me really sad and sometimes it just makes me furious about the whole situation and the fact that I don't know anybody, I don't recognize anybody," Boatwright told the newspaper.

Last year, a North Dakota college student who disappeared for nearly a week before turning up in Arizona said she had a bout of amnesia and didn't know who she was.

Amber Glatt, 22, a Valley City State University student, vanished on the Fourth of July, prompting aerial searches. She contacted her mother five days later from the Grand Canyon. Her mother said Glatt has had recurring amnesia since suffering a head injury years ago.

Glatt told WDAY-TV (http://bit.ly/NmbSnR) that after she lost her memory she met a man in a bar who let her tag along on his trip to the Grand Canyon. She said the man eventually saw online that she'd been reported missing and alerted her.

Glatt regained most of her memory.

Source: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ci_23669621/man-found-california-motel-awakens-amnesia-speaking-only?source=rss_viewed

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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Mintz Levin: European Union Antitrust Law and License Agreements: Proposed changes to the Technology Transfer Block Exemption Regulation threatens several widely-used contract terms

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Source: http://www.mycorporateresource.com/newjoomla3/index.php/geography/aaaeurope/eu-antitrust-a-competition/technology-transfer-block-exemption/133934-mintz-levin-european-union-antitrust-law-and-license-agreements-proposed-changes-to-the-technology-trans

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Retirement Daze: At home in the kitchen

Retirement Daze: At home in the kitchen skip to main | skip to sidebar

At home in the kitchen


Nate the chef (Photo: Walter Skupien) The sight above greeted me as I was enjoying a morning cup of tea during a recent visit to our Georgia tribe. Grandson Nate, almost nine years old, had quietly assembled a skillet, mixing bowl, spatula, and egg carton from the refrigerator. I noticed him after he had pulled the family ?time-out chair? in front of the stovetop and set to work. During the family?s June beach vacation, a cousin about two years Nate?s senior had introduced his younger relative to the joys of preparing scrambled eggs. Culinary confidence in action? (Photo: Walter Skupien) A male at home in the kitchen is not unusual in our family. Nate is following in the footsteps of his dad Walt; Baboo, his dad?s dad; and his uncle, our younger son Jeremy. Nate earns spot among our family's male cooking enthusiasts. (Photo: Walter Skupien) ?? The camera had no effect on Nate?s poise or progress. He finished cooking, plated the three scrambled eggs and chowed down.

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Source: http://www.retirementdaze.com/2013/07/at-home-in-kitchen.html

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Team USAs World University Games website profiles Arash Soofiani the countrys sole competitor in the sport of sambo Soofiani...

SbB LIVE FROM LA (Jul 15, 2013 @ 1:26pm ET)

1:15 PM: LPGA golfer Natalie Gulbis is reportedly engaged to Josh Rodarmel, a former Yale QB who now co-owns an athletic wristband company.

1:00 PM: NASCAR driver Kyle Busch called Ryan Newman "the biggest stupid idiot out there" and an "ogre" after Newman got involved in a wreck with Kurt Busch during Sunday's race in New Hampshire.

12:45 PM: A spokesman for SAP, the German software company that recently purchased naming rights for the San Jose Sharks' home arena, says he isn't worried about fans calling the building the "Sap Center": "Nobody says 'Ibbum,' it's IBM. And everyone's figured out it's GE, not 'Gee.'"

12:30 PM: Forbes magazine has ranked Spanish soccer club Real Madrid as the world's most valuable sports franchise with a value of $3.3 billion. The other top five teams are Manchester United, Barcelona, the New York Yankees & the Dallas Cowboys.

12:15 PM: Photos of Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn joining boyfriend Tiger Woods on the course at Muirfield on Monday as he prepares for the British Open.

12:00 PM: Former Boston Celtics player & current Golden State Warriors assistant Brian Scalabrine spent his Friday night working for the Lowell Spinners minor league baseball team. Scalabrine worked at the souvenir stand & as part of the grounds crew.

11:45 AM: Texas A&M QB Johnny Manziel reached a plea deal Monday over charges stemming from a June 2012 fighting incident in College Station. Manziel was fined $2,000 for failing to identify himself to police but had his disorderly conduct charges dropped.

11:30 AM: Horse jockey Terry Thompson won his 3,000th career race by riding Ifoundmy Mojo to victory Sunday at Prairie Meadows in Altoona, Iowa.

11:15 AM: 34-year-old British woman Susan Taylor died Sunday while trying to swim across the English Channel. Taylor was attempting the swim to help raise money for the Rainbows children's hospice & Diabetes UK.

11:00 AM: Former New Jersey Devils player Ilya Kovalchuk, who retired from the team last week, has signed with Russian club SKA St. Petersburg in a four-year deal reportedly worth $15 million a season.

10:45 AM: Chris Wondolowski became the first U.S. men's soccer team member since 1993 to score multiple goals in back-to-back games when he scored three against Belize & two against Cuba in the Gold Cup tournament last week.

10:30 AM: About 700 people took part in a stair climb at Green Bay's Lambeau Field on Sunday in honor of the firefighters who were killed in the September 11 attacks and to raise money for the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation.

10:15 AM: Adidas announced Monday it has suspended its endorsement deal with Tyson Gay after the sprinter admitted to testing positive for a banned substance.

10:00 AM: At least 18 people died in a stampede at a stadium in eastern Indonesia after spectators rioted following a loss by a local boxer in a championship bout.

8:00 PM: Edmonton Eskimos head coach Kavis Reed was a little bit emotional after Saturday's 17-3 loss to the B.C. Lions.

Source: http://www.sportsbybrooks.com/sbblive?eid=53957

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Monday, July 15, 2013

Civil rights case vs. Zimmerman won't be simple

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Calls for the Justice Department to look into the shooting death of Trayvon Martin reverberated as soon as George Zimmerman was acquitted of state charges in a Florida courtroom, but it may be even tougher to mount a federal case against Zimmerman.

The department says it's reviewing evidence to determine whether criminal civil rights charges are warranted, but legal experts see major barriers to a federal prosecution ? including the burden of proving that Zimmerman, the former neighborhood watch leader, was motivated by racial animosity ? and say Justice officials would likely be saddled with some of the same challenges that complicated the unsuccessful state case.

"The Justice Department would face significant challenges in bringing a federal civil rights case against Mr. Zimmerman," said Alan Vinegrad, the former U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of New York. "There are several factual and legal hurdles that federal prosecutors would have to overcome: They'd have to show not only that the attack was unjustified, but that Mr. Zimmerman attacked Mr. Martin because of his race and because he was using a public facility, the street."

The department opened an investigation into Martin's death last year but stepped aside to allow the state prosecution to proceed. It said in a statement Sunday that the criminal section of its civil rights division, the FBI and federal prosecutors in Florida are continuing to evaluate the evidence generated during the federal investigation, plus evidence and testimony from the state trial. The statement came as the NAACP and others called on the Justice Department to open a civil rights case against Zimmerman for the shooting death of the unarmed black 17-year-old.

Zimmerman was acquitted Saturday night in a February 2012 shooting that tapped into a national debate about racial profiling, equal justice and self-defense. Civil rights leaders, Martin's parents and many others said Zimmerman had racially profiled Martin when he followed the teenager through a gated townhouse community and shot him, but Zimmerman said he was physically assaulted by Martin and shot the teenager in self-defense.

Though the Justice Department does have an established history of using federal civil rights laws to try to convict defendants who have been previously acquitted in related state cases, experience shows it's almost never easy getting guilty verdicts in such high-profile prosecutions. In this case, federal prosecutors pursuing a civil rights case would need to establish, among other things, that Zimmerman was motivated by racial animosity, even though race was barely mentioned at the state trial.

Lauren Resnick, a former federal prosecutor in New York who secured a conviction in the killing of an Orthodox Jew during the 1991 Crown Heights riots in Brooklyn, said the Justice Department could conceivably proceed under a theory that Zimmerman interfered with Martin's right to walk down a public street based on his race. But even that is difficult since the conflict occurred in a gated community, which may not fit the legal definition of a public facility. Prosecutors would also probably need to prove that trailing Martin on the street constituted interference, she said.

"One could argue it did, if it freaked him out and he couldn't comfortably walk down the street ? there's an argument here," said Resnick, who now specializes in white-collar defense and commercial litigation.

But she said federal prosecutors were likely to encounter the same hurdles as state prosecutors in establishing that Zimmerman was driven by racial animus and was the initial aggressor, as opposed to someone who acted in self-defense.

"When you have a fact pattern where one person's alive, and one person's not, and the person alive is the efendant, it's hard to prove things beyond a reasonable doubt," she said.

Samuel Bagenstos, a former No. 2 official in the Justice Department's civil rights division, said: "This is an administration that hasn't shied away from bringing hate crimes cases that are solid prosecutions based on the facts and the law, but from what I've seen this would be a very difficult case to prosecute federally because the government would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that George Zimmerman acted because of Trayvon Martin's race. If you're trying to prove racial motivation, you are usually looking for multiple statements related to why he is engaging in this act of violence. I think it's a difficult case to prove."

Another federal case, the Rodney King prosecution, illustrates just how difficult it can be for the federal government to come in behind a state prosecution that ended in acquittal, even when there's videotaped evidence of the crime.

King was beaten by Los Angeles Police Department officers after a high-speed car chase in 1991, but the four police officers charged in the incident were acquitted on state charges of assault with a deadly weapon and three of the four were acquitted on a charge of use of excessive force. The jury deadlocked on the excessive force charge against the fourth officer.

Federal prosecutors obtained an indictment on charges of violating King's civil rights. Two of the officers were found guilty and were imprisoned. The other two officers were acquitted.

In a 1970 prosecution, the Justice Department charged three white Detroit police officers and one black private security guard with allegedly conspiring to deprive eight black youths and two white girls of their civil rights during the 1967 riots in Detroit.

The officers had gone to the Algiers Motel in a reported search for snipers. Three black teenagers were slain at the motel. One of the police officers had been acquitted earlier of a state charge of first-degree murder in the case; another officer had been found innocent in a separate state trial on a charge of felonious assault.

The federal case took place in Flint, Mich., an hour's drive north of Detroit, after the defense complained that the defendants could not get a fair trial in the city where the slayings occurred. A jury acquitted all four defendants.

In prosecuting the law enforcement officers, the Justice Department invoked an 1871 civil rights law. Prosecutors alleged that the officers had lined up the people staying at the motel and slugged them with clubs and rifle butts. There was testimony that several of the guests were taken into separate rooms where shotguns were fired into the ceiling in an effort to get those in a nearby hallway to disclose the identity of the alleged snipers and the location of firearms.

In a defense that turned out to be successful, defense attorneys emphasized that the charge against their clients was conspiracy, not assault, coercion, intimidation or murder. Lawyers for the two officers previously charged in the state cases also argued that their clients were being charged with serious criminality even though they had already been acquitted.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/civil-rights-case-vs-zimmerman-wont-simple-072336718.html

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