Wednesday, 31 July 2013

Moroccan recipes: Aromatic dishes from North Africa

Experience a taste of North Africa with these authentic and flavourful Moroccan recipes.

It?s never been easier to bring the exotic and aromatic taste of Morocco to your kitchen table with these easy-to-make dishes featuring fragrant spices harissa, saffron and dukkah.

From traditional recipes such as the popular slow-cooked lamb tagine, to lighter and healthier Moroccan-inspired salads ? we have something to suit everyone?s tastes.

Perfect for your guests to sink their teeth into.?

Source: http://www.sofeminine.co.uk/world-cuisine/moroccan-recipes-som2357.html

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Massive explosions rock central Fla. gas plant

TAVARES, Fla. (AP) ? A series of explosions rocked a central Florida propane gas plant and sent "boom after boom after boom" through the neighborhood around it. Eight people were injured, with at least four in critical condition.

John Herrell of the Lake County Sheriff's Office said early Tuesday that no one died despite massive blasts that ripped through the Blue Rhino propane plant late Monday night. Officials initially scrambled to find more than a dozen employees after the explosions.

"Management is comfortable saying all of those they knew were there tonight have been accounted for," he said.

Tavares Fire Chief Richard Keith said possible causes of the explosion may be either equipment malfunction or possibly human error. Sabotage was not suspected.

One person injured in the explosion was listed in critical condition at University of Florida Health Shands Hospital and three others were listed in critical condition at Orlando Regional Medical Center. Herrell said some others drove themselves to area hospitals.

Tavares Battalion Commander Eric Wages said five workers walked up to a command center firefighters set up near the plant Monday night with skin hanging off their arms, torso and faces. He said their arms were outstretched and they were in complete shock.

The Blue Rhino plant, which is northwest of Orlando, refilled propane tanks typically used for barbecues and other uses. There were some 53,000 20-gallon tanks at the plant on Monday.

Tuesday morning, smoke still billowed from a storage container on the property, which consists of a couple of warehouses next to each other. The parking lot was littered with thousands of blackened 20-gallon propane containers.

Nearby, three 33,000-pound tanks of propane sat untouched. Lake County Battalion Chief Chris Croughwell said the hoses designed to spray water on the large tanks in case of fire, did not go off as planned because they had to be manually activated. "Most sane people don't stick around for an event like this," he added.

Tavares Mayor Robert Wolfe said Tuesday that he was surprised to learn the hoses at the plant had to be manually activated. If Blue Rhino reopens the plant, Wolfe said he plans to raise the safety issue. "That way, it's fail safe," Wolfe said. "We're lucky those tanks didn't explode."

The Florida Division of Emergency Management responded overnight and briefed Gov. Rick Scott.

Gene Williams, a third-shift maintenance worker at the plant, said he was at the back of the warehouse when he heard two loud explosions. Most of the workers were inside the facility, but there were about five in the parking lot.

When he went to look outside, there was a fireball about 20-feet-by-20-feet about 100 yards from the plant's loading dock.

After that, a forklift driver stumbled into the building. He had flesh hanging off his hands, and his legs and face were burned. Williams said he got the man in a van as the cylinders from the 20-pound tanks starting falling down around them.

He said they were doing repairs and painting the tanks when one of the paint lines had broken, but it was repaired. The workers were getting ready to go home when the explosion happened.

Based on what the forklift operator told him, the explosion was likely caused by a "combination of human error and bad practices, possibly. I don't want to speculate any further, that's what the forklift driver was telling me."

Williams said the forklift driver told him, "'I did what they told me to do, I did what they told me to do, and then this happened.'"

"Something in that area must have triggered it. I don't know if he did something or something else triggered it," Williams said.

Williams said they were able to cut off propane to the three big tanks. But they weren't able to get to the switch for the cooling hoses.

"It was too violent, too hot, to get in there and turn them on," he said.

Blue Rhino is a subsidiary of Kansas-based national propane provider Ferrellgas. Spokesman Scott Brockelmeyer said Tuesday he didn't have information available about the safety water hoses.

"It's as sobering a situation as you can possibly imagine," Brockelmeyer said. "We have folks who are injured, and we've got Blue Rhino and Ferrellgas employees across the country who are keeping them in their prayers and sending good vibes their way."

Brockelmeyer said there were 14 full-time employees and 10 part-time workers in the plant when the explosions occurred Monday night.

Croughwell said firefighters who responded to the initial fire had to wait to enter plant site because conditions were so dangerous. Just as they were finally about to go in, four tractor-trailers parked next to the large propane tanks caught fire.

If the large tanks exploded, Croughwell said, "it would have wiped us out."

Video footage on WESH-TV in Orlando showed fires burning through trucks used to transport propane tanks, which were parked at the plant. The fire sent plumes of smoke into the air hours after the blast.

Keith said the explosions shook his house several miles from the plant. "It truly sounded like a car hit our house," he said.

Herrell said about 50 homes were evacuated Monday night but residents were allowed back in about four hours later.

Marni Whitehead, 33, who lives less than a mile from the plant, said she was in bed ready to go to sleep when she heard a loud boom.

She ran outside and saw other neighbors outside and then they saw the explosions.

"We knew right away it was the plant, the propane plant," Whitehead said. "After that, it was just sort of panic."

Whitehead likened the explosions to Fourth of July fireworks. "And it was just boom after boom after boom," she said.

Herrell said officials believe the fire was contained and wouldn't spread to another part of the plant.

According to the Leesburg Daily Commercial, the plant was built in 2004 and employs fewer than 50 people.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/massive-explosions-rock-central-fla-gas-plant-071913944.html

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Tuesday, 30 July 2013

Ten charts: Why Wall Street loves Amazon and hates Apple

chart_ws_stock_appleinc_201372934043_240xaFORTUNE -- In November, the last time we compared Apple's (AAPL) and Amazon's (AMZN)?price-to-earnings ratios -- the simplest and most widely used metric to gauge the relative ?value of a pair of stocks -- ?Apple's trailing PE was 13 and Amazon's was 2,767.

We haven't been able to repeat the exercise because while Apple PE has drifted with its stock price to between 10 and 11, Amazon's trailing PE has reached, as Buzz Lightyear might put it, infinity and beyond. (Or, as the stock charts politely have it, NA.)

That's because Amazon, which reported its June earnings on Friday, hasn't turned a profit for three quarters in a row -- a performance that Wall Street rewarded by pushing its stock to an all-time-high of $312.01.

It will come as no surprise to readers here that Apple, which posted record fiscal Q3 sales (but lower earnings) three days earlier, couldn't catch more than a one-day break on the stock market.

That's because as far as Wall Street is concerned, Apple and Amazon are in completely different businesses. As a regular on Investor Village's AAPL Sanity board put it last week:

"The Street sees Amazon as the world's biggest (online) global retailer with almost limitless growth.?[It] sees Apple as a (mobile) device maker that because it is wholly dependent on its ability to innovate nonstop, expand its (ultimately saturated) markets while fighting off competition and controlling its very unstable supply chain, has limited growth."

To underscore just how much Wall Street loves Amazon and hates Apple, the reader who posts as "Merckel" has submitted for your consideration nine bar graphs and a five-year sales chart:

Screen Shot 2013-07-28 at 11.33.22 AM

Click to enlarge.

?

Click to enlarge.

Click to enlarge.

Source: http://rss.cnn.com/~r/fortuneapple20/~3/mOBZsWGzsYo/

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Maine man died from golf cart injuries; Westford driver could face new charges

Gary Belinsky faces charges in Maine following the death of a passenger in a golf cart he was driving. (CUMBERLAND COUNTY, ME. SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT)

By Samantha Allen

sallen@lowellsun.com

WESTFORD -- A Westford man charged with drunken driving in a Maine golf cart accident last weekend could face more serious charges after his passenger died Monday night.

John MacKay, 52, of Sanford, Maine, fell out of a golf cart at the Casco, Maine Point Sebago Outdoor Resort on Saturday. MacKay suffered serious head trauma and was flown to Maine Medical Center in Portland. He died Monday night, the hospital confirmed on Tuesday.

The cart's driver, Gary Belinsky, 59, of Westford, was charged on Saturday with operating under the influence (OUI). He was released on $300 bail and returned to Massachusetts.

Capt. Shawn O'Leary, of the Cumberland County Sheriff's Department, said on Tuesday that Belinsky could face new charges, but that decision is up to the county district attorney. Aggravated OUI has been considered, which is a Class C felony in the state of Maine.

"The case detective is working on compiling everything," he added, "and he'll be submitting it to the D.A.'s office for review."

O'Leary said is not clear at this time what led to MacKay falling out of the cart. Police estimate the vehicle, operating on a roadway in the resort, was not going faster than 10 mph, and when they arrived on scene, the cart had not crashed or tipped over.

O'Leary said Belinsky has been cooperative in the investigation so far. He said Belinsky has a court date at this time but if more serious charges are brought, the case could go before a grand jury. If there is an indictment, an arrest warrant will be issued.

A person who answered Belinsky's household phone line declined to comment Tuesday morning and said Belinsky could not be reached because he was in Maine.

"He lawyered up and was told not to talk to anybody," the person said.

O'Leary offered manslaughter as an example of a potential charge that could be brought against Belinsky but said he could not speculate on what charges the district attorney may consider at this point.

He said he believes Belinsky and MacKay were friends who had just returned from dinner when the incident occurred.

"It was just a tragic incident," he added. "I've been in law enforcement for over 26 years and I've never seen a golf cart fatality."

The Cumberland County District Attorney did not immediately return calls for comment Tuesday morning.

Follow Samantha Allen on Twitter @SAllen_89. Keep up with www.lowellsun.com for updates on this story.

Source: http://www.lowellsun.com/news/ci_23759375/maine-man-died-from-golf-cart-injuries-westford?source=rss_viewed

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CBS: It was de Pablo's decision to exit 'NCIS'

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) ? CBS Corp. chief executive Les Moonves says every effort was made to keep the actress who plays Ziva David on TV's highest-rated show, "NCIS."

Moonves says Cote de Pablo was offered, in his words, "a lot of money" because the network didn't want to lose her from the crime drama. Moonves says the offer was then upped.

But he says the actress decided she didn't want to continue on the show.

He noted the social media outcry from de Pablo's disappointed fans, but asserted CBS did everything possible to keep her.

A representative for de Pablo didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

"NCIS" stars Mark Harmon as head of a Navy criminal investigations division. It returns for its 11th season this fall.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cbs-pablos-decision-exit-ncis-175949945.html

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Lung cancer screening only for some smokers, ages

An influential group of government advisers has endorsed lung cancer screening for the first time ? but not for everybody. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is proposing annual CT scans, a type of X-ray, for certain current and former smokers.

To be considered for screening, the task force says people should:

?Be ages 55 through 79.

?Have smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for 30 years or the equivalent, such as two packs a day for 15 years.

People who should not be screened include:

?Those younger than 55 or older than 79.

?Those who smoked less or less often than those described above.

?Those who quit smoking 15 or more years ago.

?Those too sick or frail to withstand treatment for lung cancer.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lung-cancer-screening-only-smokers-ages-210910931.html

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Animal rights group sponsors alternative Tennessee horse show

By Tim Ghianni

NASHVILLE, Tennessee (Reuters) - An animal rights group fiercely opposed to what it calls cruel treatment of famed Tennessee Walking Horses is backing an alternative show that does not judge horses on the high-stepping gait they say is a result of an abusive practice.

The Humane Society said it contributed the maximum $1,000 to the World Versatility Show under way through Saturday in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, to highlight a better way to train and show the horses known for their exaggerated steps.

The owners and trainers of Tennessee Walking Horses, a popular breed in the American South, have been criticized for decades over a practice called "soring" - slathering the lower legs with caustic chemicals to induce pain that causes the horse to step higher. While chemical soring is officially banned, it is suspected that some trainers still use it.

In 2011, the Humane Society produced an undercover video of a celebrated walking horse trainer, Jackie McConnell, abusing horses at his stable. The video, broadcast on ABC television last year, showed the animals being beaten with sticks and poked with electric cattle prods. It also exposed that soring was used in their training.

McConnell, 61, pleaded guilty to animal cruelty charges this month, and was banned from owning and training horses for 20 years. He also was fined $25,000 and sentenced to a year's house arrest and four years probation.

Eight horses were removed from McConnell's training barn and are being kept at an undisclosed location, authorities said.

The alternative show this weekend does not include the controversial "Big Lick," an artificial movement in which the horses raise their forelegs up and forward.

The Big Lick is produced by "padding" a horse with thick front horseshoes that animal rights groups say are abusive. The alternative show will restrict the horses to light shoes, or barefoot without shoes, and the animals are judged by natural talent in events such as jumping, reining and driving.

If a horse can perform the Big Lick naturally, it is allowed at the alternative show.

"We do want to help the Tennessee Walking Horse to be the horse of the future and move away from the reliance of abusive training practices and devices that the breed has been associated with," said Keith Dane, director of equine protection for the Humane Society of the United States.

The Humane Society, along with other animal rights groups, has been aggressive in recent years in exposing cruelty to animals. They have used controversial undercover operations to expose abusive farming practices at chicken, beef and pork facilities. Some Midwestern state legislatures have banned undercover operations at agricultural facilities.

The alternative show is taking place one month before the prestigious 75th annual Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration in Shelbyville, where the Big Lick will be performed.

Mike Inman, chief executive of the National Celebration, said the event does not condone soring, but allows the use of thick shoes.

"The difference in equipment and shoeing accentuate the natural ability of the athlete, it doesn't provide the ability," he said.

Mike Dunavant, Fayette County district attorney general, who prosecuted trainer McConnell, praised the alternative show as highlighting better practices.

"(It) promotes people who engage in the humane treatment and training of Tennessee Walking Horses," he said.

(Reporting By Tim Ghianni; Editing by Greg McCune and Gunna Dickson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/animal-rights-group-sponsors-alternative-tennessee-horse-show-184612590.html

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