Wednesday, October 16, 2013

'Grown men began to weep': Wounded soldier awakens in hospital to make 'salute seen around the world'

Taylor Hargis, the wife of the wounded Army Ranger photographed in his hospital bed struggling to salute as he's awarded the Purple Heart, speaks about her husband calling him a "bad ass" and "the epitome of what a man and an American and a soldier is." WBBH's Clifton French reports.

By Jeff Black, Staff Writer, NBC News

A salute by an Army Ranger — hospitalized with serious wounds after a suicide bomb attack in Afghanistan — is warming hearts after being posted online, moving his wife to declare him a "badass" and "the epitome of what a man and an American and a soldier is."

Cpl. Josh Hargis’ commander was at a military hospital in Afghanistan right after doctors stabilized his injuries awarding the seemingly unconscious soldier a Purple Heart, pinning the medal to the blanket covering him.

And that's when Hargis surprisingly raised his bandaged arm to salute — struggling with his doctors and medical tubes to do so.

The commander sent a picture along with a letter about the incident to Hargis’ wife, Taylor, writing that "grown men began to weep" at the sight of the salute.



The commander added that it was “the single greatest event I have witnessed in my ten years in the Army.”

Hargis was wounded by shrapnel on Oct. 6 when an Afghan woman detonated a suicide bomb vest, killing four members of his 3rd Army Ranger Battalion and wounding 12 other American soldiers, according to a report on the website of the soldier's hometown newspaper in Ohio, the Cincinnati Enquirer.

The four fallen soldiers became inextricably linked with the government shutdown in the past two weeks, as their families expressed grief and outrage over the fact that the government was withholding a $100,000 "death gratuity" normally paid out to relatives to help them out financially until survivor benefits kick in.

Hargis had a breathing tube inserted and his right arm was wrapped up, according to the Enquirer. He had just come out of surgery when he was presented with the Purple Heart, his wife told the paper.

Taylor Hargis posted the picture along with the note on Facebook Oct. 12, where it has been shared more than 5,500 times. The story and picture were also distributed on the Guardian of Valor website, which called the picture the "the salute seen around the world."

"When I look at that picture, I just think of how proud I am," Taylor Hargis told NBC affiliate WBBH in Florida, near her hometown of Fort Myers. 

"He is badass and he is strong, and he is the epitome of what a man and an American and a soldier is."

The letter from the commander, according to Taylor Hargis' Facebook post, read in part:

"Josh, whom everybody in the room (over 50 people) assumed to be unconscious, began to move his right arm under the blanket in a diligent effort to salute the Commander as is customary during these ceremonies. Despite his wounds, wrappings, tubes, and pain, Josh fought the doctor who was trying to restrain his right arm and rendered the most beautiful salute any person in that room had ever seen. I cannot impart on you the level of emotion that poured through the intensive care unit that day.

It was assumed that Army Ranger Josh Hargis was unconscious during his Purple Heart ceremony in the hospital, but then he raised his arm in salute. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

"Grown men began to weep and we were speechless at a gesture that speak volumes about Josh's courage and character. The picture, which we believe belongs on every news channel and every newspaper, is attached. I have it hanging above my desk now and will remember it as the single greatest event I have witnessed in my ten years in the Army."

Hargis, 24, is a 2007 graduate of of Dater High School on the city’s west side and attended the University of Cincinnati, NBC affiliate WLWT in Cincinnati reported. He has since been moved from Afghanistan to Germany and onto San Antonio, Texas, the station said.

A reporter for another local station, WCPO, spoke to Hargis’ mother Laura Heitman, who said that Taylor and Josh Hargis are expecting their first child. Heitman also said she had recently talked to her son.



Her son, she said, “sounded amazing when I talked to him. He was in good spirits.”

Taylor Hargis said she expects a long recovery for her husband, but vowed to be by his side for it.

"Who knows what's next? These are definitely different plans than we had imagined, but we're happy we still get to have one."

Terri Wessel, who said she had taught Hargis in high school, told WCPO that the picture brought tears to her eyes.

“Seeing the picture of him saluting was the first I knew of him being injured,” Wessel told the station.”I teared up when I saw the picture but smiled at the same time as that picture summed up the type of man that Josh is. True American hero in my mind.”

NBC's Elizabeth Chuck contributed to this report.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/32816df0/sc/8/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C10A0C150C20A980A6470Egrown0Emen0Ebegan0Eto0Eweep0Ewounded0Esoldier0Eawakens0Ein0Ehospital0Eto0Emake0Esalute0Eseen0Earound0Ethe0Eworld0Dlite/story01.htm
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Mysterious elephant wins photo prize




Elephants have a mysterious and "tangible energy" according to South African photographer Greg Du Toit.


Now after a 10 year quest, his portrayal of this "energy" has been captured in an award-winning photo.


Titled "Essence of Elephants", the work has earned him the overall title in this year's Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition.


Preparation and passion, he says, were key to achieving the winning shot, taken from just over one metre away.


"There was one particular day when a baby elephant raced past right in front of my camera and I was ready. I had to be prepared for that moment," said Mr Du Toit.


He took the picture at a waterhole in Botswana's Northern Tuli Game Reserve from a hide (a sunken freight container) that provided a ground-level view. He had been going to the area five or six times a year for 10 years.


"I chose elephants because I feel a very special energy and connection when I'm around them," he told BBC News.


"But although you feel that energy it's very difficult to translate that into a camera because an elephant is such a big animal and they're not very charismatic, whereas a predator is far more charismatic."


Authentic moments

Using a very slow shutter speed on a wide angle lens "allowed all that energy to come into my camera" making him able to depict "these gentle giants in an almost ghostly way".


To achieve the cool blue hue he attached a polarising filter and set his white balance to a cool temperature.


The Wildlife Photographer of the Year (WPY) "means a lot to me for various reasons", said Du Toit, especially because photos were submitted anonymously, putting professionals and amateurs on an equal footing.


"In my mind it's one of the last places in the world you can actually look at a wildlife photo and trust that the moment is authentic."


Chair of the judging panel Jim Brandenburg said: "Greg's image immediately catapults us to African plains. This image stood out for both its technical excellence and the unique moment it captures - it is truly a once in a lifetime shot."



This year's Young Wildlife Photographer of the year is 14-year-old Udayan Rao Pawar from India.


His photo was of a fresh water crocodile with hatchlings on its head "kind of resembling a crown", explained Mr Pawar.


He crept up on the nestling colony of gharials on the banks of the Chambal River,


Grunting sounds

"When the dawn broke early in the morning I hid myself behind a rock, and when the morning light came I took those images.


"I could hear them making little grunting sounds. Very soon a large female surfaced near the shore, checking on her charges. Some of the hatchlings swam to her and climbed onto her head. Perhaps it made them feel safe."


Despite conservation efforts, the gharial fresh water crocodile is on the verge of extinction with an estimated 200 mating pairs remaining.


"The Chambal River is the gharial's last stronghold but is threatened by illegal sand-mining and fishing", added Udayan.


Wildlife photographer and Judge Tui De Roy said the composition and timing of the photograph was perfect.


"The mother's gaze seems directed at you, appealing to you to let her live and thrive in peace. This image is beautiful and thought provoking, but at the same time also wonderfully playful, making it a clear winner," he said.


WPY is one of the most prestigious competitions in world photography. Organised by London's Natural History Museum and BBC Wildlife Magazine, it is now in its 49th year.


Images are submitted anonymously by professional and amateur photographers alike. They are selected for their creativity, artistry and technical complexity and must be submitted as a raw file with no manipulations.


The winners beat 43,000 entries submitted from 96 countries. You can see more images by clicking here. Some viewers may find the last photo in the gallery distressing.


The WPY exhibition opens on Friday 18 October at the Natural History Museum.




Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24534106#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
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New 3-D method used to grow miniature pancreas

New 3-D method used to grow miniature pancreas


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 15-Oct-2013
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Contact: Anne Grapin-Botton
anne.grapin-botton@sund.ku.dk
45-29-63-43-98
University of Copenhagen





An international team of researchers from the University of Copenhagen have successfully developed an innovative 3D method to grow miniature pancreas from progenitor cells. The future goal is to use this model to help in the fight against diabetes. The research results has just been published in the scientific journal Development.


Professor Anne Grapin-Botton and her team at the Danish Stem Cell Centre have developed a three-dimensional culture method which enables the efficient expansion of pancreatic cells. The new method allows the cell material from mice to grow vividly in picturesque tree-like structures. The method offers huge long term potential in producing miniature human pancreas from human stem cells. These human miniature organs would be valuable as models to test new drugs fast and effective and without the use of animal models.


"The new method allows the cell material to take a three-dimensional shape enabling them to multiply more freely. It's like a plant where you use effective fertilizer, think of the laboratory like a garden and the scientist being the gardener," says Anne Grapin-Botton.


Social cells


The cells do not thrive and develop if they are alone, and a minimum of four pancreatic cells close together is required for subsequent organoid development.


"We found that the cells of the pancreas develop better in a gel in three-dimensions than when they are attached and flattened at the bottom of a culture plate. Under optimal conditions, the initial clusters of a few cells have proliferated into 40,000 cells within a week. After growing a lot, they transform into cells that make either digestive enzymes or hormones like insulin and they self-organize into branched pancreatic organoids that are amazingly similar to the pancreas," adds Anne Grapin-Botton.


The scientists used this system to discover that the cells of the pancreas are sensitive to their physical environment such as the stiffness of the gel and to contact with other cells.


The research results has just been published in the scientific journal Development.


Pancreas and diabetes connection


An effective cellular therapy for diabetes is dependent on the production of sufficient quantities of functional beta-cells. Recent studies have enabled the production of pancreatic precursors but efforts to expand these cells and differentiate them into insulin-producing beta-cells have proved a challenge.


"We think this is an important step towards the production of cells for diabetes therapy, both to produce mini-organs for drug testing and insulin-producing cells as spare parts. We show that the pancreatic cells care not only about how you feed them but need to be grown in the right physical environment. We are now trying to adapt this method to human stem cells," adds Anne Grapin-Botton.


###

Contact:

Professor Anne Grapin-Botton

Mobile: +45 29 63 43 98



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New 3-D method used to grow miniature pancreas


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 15-Oct-2013
[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

Contact: Anne Grapin-Botton
anne.grapin-botton@sund.ku.dk
45-29-63-43-98
University of Copenhagen





An international team of researchers from the University of Copenhagen have successfully developed an innovative 3D method to grow miniature pancreas from progenitor cells. The future goal is to use this model to help in the fight against diabetes. The research results has just been published in the scientific journal Development.


Professor Anne Grapin-Botton and her team at the Danish Stem Cell Centre have developed a three-dimensional culture method which enables the efficient expansion of pancreatic cells. The new method allows the cell material from mice to grow vividly in picturesque tree-like structures. The method offers huge long term potential in producing miniature human pancreas from human stem cells. These human miniature organs would be valuable as models to test new drugs fast and effective and without the use of animal models.


"The new method allows the cell material to take a three-dimensional shape enabling them to multiply more freely. It's like a plant where you use effective fertilizer, think of the laboratory like a garden and the scientist being the gardener," says Anne Grapin-Botton.


Social cells


The cells do not thrive and develop if they are alone, and a minimum of four pancreatic cells close together is required for subsequent organoid development.


"We found that the cells of the pancreas develop better in a gel in three-dimensions than when they are attached and flattened at the bottom of a culture plate. Under optimal conditions, the initial clusters of a few cells have proliferated into 40,000 cells within a week. After growing a lot, they transform into cells that make either digestive enzymes or hormones like insulin and they self-organize into branched pancreatic organoids that are amazingly similar to the pancreas," adds Anne Grapin-Botton.


The scientists used this system to discover that the cells of the pancreas are sensitive to their physical environment such as the stiffness of the gel and to contact with other cells.


The research results has just been published in the scientific journal Development.


Pancreas and diabetes connection


An effective cellular therapy for diabetes is dependent on the production of sufficient quantities of functional beta-cells. Recent studies have enabled the production of pancreatic precursors but efforts to expand these cells and differentiate them into insulin-producing beta-cells have proved a challenge.


"We think this is an important step towards the production of cells for diabetes therapy, both to produce mini-organs for drug testing and insulin-producing cells as spare parts. We show that the pancreatic cells care not only about how you feed them but need to be grown in the right physical environment. We are now trying to adapt this method to human stem cells," adds Anne Grapin-Botton.


###

Contact:

Professor Anne Grapin-Botton

Mobile: +45 29 63 43 98



[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

[


| E-mail



| Share Share

]

 


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.




Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uoc-n3m101513.php
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18-Foot Oarfish Livens Up A 'Leisurely Snorkel' In California





People hoist the body of an 18-foot oarfish that was discovered in Toyon Bay at Catalina Island off the California coast.



Courtesty of Catalina Island Marine Institute


People hoist the body of an 18-foot oarfish that was discovered in Toyon Bay at Catalina Island off the California coast.


Courtesty of Catalina Island Marine Institute


A snorkeler off the coast of California found more than she bargained for on the ocean floor Sunday, when she saw the large eyes of an 18-foot fish staring back at her. It turned out to be a dead oarfish, a mysterious creature known to live in waters thousands of feet deep.


The discovery at the bottom of Toyon Bay at Catalina Island came as a shock to Jasmine Santana, an instructor at the Catalina Island Marine Institute, who approached the ribbon-like animal with care before realizing it was dead. Its body was "almost perfectly intact," the institute says. It may have died of natural causes.


As Santana tried to pull the sea creature through the shallows and up to a beach, other instructors spotted her and pitched in. It took at least 15 of them to hoist the oarfish, which brought a surprise ending to what had been a "leisurely" afternoon snorkel.


The institute, which runs a camp and activities for children, has contacted ocean wildlife experts about the find. The oarfish is the longest bony fish in the world; one specimen was reported as being 36 feet in length, according to the Florida Museum of Natural History.


The animal is also called a ribbon fish, or sometimes merely the king of herrings. In 2011, a large oarfish was filmed swimming in the Gulf of Mexico, in striking images that show its single dorsal fin rippling along the length of its body.



"It is believed that oarfish dive over 3,000 feet deep, which leaves them largely unstudied," the Catalina Institute says, "and little is known about their behavior or population. They are likely responsible for sea serpent legends throughout history."


The oarfish graced the pages of NPR.org this summer, when The Two-Way noted the discovery of a "mysterious sea monster" that had washed ashore.


Update at 5:30 p.m. ET: More On The Catalina Institute


The folks at the non-profit Catalina Island Marine Institute have sent us a bit more information about themselves, which we're including here for anyone who might wonder what all those instructors were doing on the island, or who they might be instructing:


"Our parent organization Guided Discoveries has been in operation since 1979 and in that time we have introduced over 1,000,000 students and their teachers to the sciences in a unique and hands on way. Schools come to us from as far away as Nashville, and during our summer camps we have campers attend from all around the world."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/15/234736706/18-foot-oarfish-livens-up-a-leisurely-snorkel-in-california?ft=1&f=1007
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Josh Hutcherson Thinks The Laughs Are Ever In His Favor And That He's Funnier Than Jennifer Lawrence!


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Josh Hutcherson might actually have to fight Jennifer Lawrence in a battle royale to the death over recent comments he made!


In a recent interview, Josh Quarter Quelled the notion that JLaw might be the more humorous of the two, and actually went on to say that he thinks he's more on fire comically than the girl who was on fire:




"We have this debate all the time – I think it's me! This sounds mean, but it's true, and Jennifer would agree. Her thing is being shocking, goofy, and silly – which is amazing, and it takes a talented person to do that. I like to be more clever and witty. But if you had to go on who gets more laughs, I'd say she'd be the winner."



Hmm, usually whoever's funniest actually get more laughs. That's typically how that works out! Just sayin'!


The two should compete for the title of being the funniest Hunger Games actor, in a Hunger Games-style elimination, and then we'll see who can make us giggle, gaggle, and guffaw the most!


We can just imagine the jokes now: "'What's the deal with President Snow?" or'…and then I was like, 'sorry, I don't date Muttations!' Oh snap!" or "My sister Prim is such a whiner! Uh, can someone make her an Avox ASAP! Just kidding but not really!"



Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,


Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-15-josh-hutcherson-think-funnier-witty-clever-jennifer-lawrence
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Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Heidi Klum, Seal Share Friendly Kiss 18 Months After Filing for Divorce: Picture


Looks like Heidi Klum and Seal are -- in the immortal words of Tim Gunn -- making it work. The ex-lovebirds, who split in January 2012 after seven years of marriage, reunited on Saturday, Oct. 12, to celebrate daughter Lou's 4th birthday, and appeared to be back on friendly terms.


At one point in the afternoon, the Project Runway host, 40, and the "Kiss From a Rose" singer, 50, were spotted engaging in a casual chat at the party in Malibu, Calif. They even shared an affectionate kiss on the cheek.


PHOTOS: Heidi and Seal, the way they were


The sweet moment comes 18 months after the stars filed for divorce, and 21 months after they first announced their split. "While we have enjoyed seven very loving, loyal, and happy years of marriage, after much soul-searching we have decided to separate," the pair -- parents to Lou, 4, Johan, 6, Henry, 8, and Leni (Klum's daughter from a previous relationship), 9 -- said in a statement at the time. 


PHOTOS: Heidi's life as a mom


"We have had the deepest respect for one another throughout our relationship and continue to love each other very much, but we have grown apart," the statement continued. "This is an amicable process and protecting the well-being of our children remains our top priority, especially during this time of transition."


Seal later added, "Just because you decide to separate, I don't think you all of a sudden stop loving each other. I don't think you all of a sudden stop becoming friends."


PHOTOS: Heidi's amazing body


That friendship seemed at risk, however, in September 2012, when the singer was confronted by TMZ about his ex's relationship with her bodyguard, Martin Kristen. "I would have preferred Heidi show a little bit more class and at least wait until we separated first before deciding to fornicate with the help, as it were," he said.


His rep later clarified exclusively to Us Weekly that the star's words had been misconstrued. And Klum issued a statement soon after saying she had no bad feelings toward her ex.


PHOTOS: Hollywood's friendliest exes


"I cherish all the great memories Seal and I created together over the years," she said. "Our separation was based on issues between the two of us. Seal has moved on and so have I."


Indeed, the model seems happily settled into life with Kristen. In an interview with German magazine Bunte last November, she gushed that she was "in love" with the South African-born bodyguard. Seal, for his part, was linked earlier this year with Power Rangers actress Erin Cahill.


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/heidi-klum-seal-share-a-friendly-kiss-18-months-after-filing-for-divorce-picture-20131510
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Iran says makes proposal capable of defusing nuclear standoff


By Justyna Pawlak and Yeganeh Torbati


GENEVA (Reuters) - Iran said it presented a proposal in talks with six world powers on Tuesday capable of achieving a breakthrough in a decade-old standoff over its contested nuclear program that has raised the risk of a new Middle East war.


The Islamic Republic began negotiations in earnest with the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany two months after President Hassan Rouhani took office promising conciliation over confrontation in relations with the world.


After years of ideological defiance, Iran appeared keen for a negotiated settlement to win relief from sanctions that have crippled its economy, slashed 60 percent of its daily oil export revenue and wrought a steep devaluation of its rial currency.


Details of the Iranian proposal - unveiled as a nearly hour-long PowerPoint presentation - were not immediately available.


Western diplomats have cautioned in the past Tehran has refused to offer sufficient nuclear concessions to secure a deal. But both sides signaled that the atmosphere, at least, in Tuesday's initial session was positive.


Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said the powers had a "welcomed" Tehran's proposals and the details would be discussed later in the day. Negotiations led by foreign ministry political directors resumed in the afternoon.


"We think that the proposal we have made has the capacity to make a breakthrough. We had a very serious and good meeting this morning," he told reporters. "The questions that were asked regarding Iran's plan were completely serious and our answers were as well."


The West suspects Iran is trying to develop the means to make nuclear weapons behind the screen of a declared civilian atomic energy program. Tehran denies this but its refusal to limit activity applicable to producing atomic bombs, or to permit unfettered U.N. inspections, has drawn severe sanctions.


In a possible sign of the Islamic Republic's determination to meaningfully address specifics of the powers' concerns, the talks in Geneva were conducted in English for the first time.


A spokesman for the European Union foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, who oversees diplomacy with Iran on behalf of the powers, described the Iranian presentation as "very useful" in a carefully worded comment that indicated Iran had gone further than in the past in its willingness to engage.


A senior U.S. State Department official said negotiators would be examining further details of Iran's proposal in the afternoon session, hinting it was being treated as incomplete.


A State Department spokeswoman said Washington would welcome a bilateral meeting with Iran on the sidelines, suggesting U.S. officials felt a stripped down, separate session with the Iranians could be key to bridging differences.


Washington and Tehran have been locked in mutual enmity since diplomatic ties were broken in 1980 - an estrangement that has posed a significant obstacle to any nuclear deal - but the two revived high-level contact at the United Nations last month.


NEW MOMENTUM


On Monday, U.S. officials held out the prospect of quick sanctions relief if Tehran acted swiftly to allay concerns about its nuclear program, although both countries said any deal would be complex and take time.


At the core of the dispute are Iranian efforts to enrich uranium to 20 percent fissile purity, a technological advance that brings it close to producing weapons-grade fuel.


Iran has previously spurned Western demands that it abandon such work as an initial step to build confidence in return for modest sanctions relief, and repeatedly called for the most painful limits on trade, such in the oil sector, to be lifted.


Western diplomats have said their demands related to 20-percent uranium must be addressed before further progress is made. But some diplomats acknowledged ahead of the Geneva talks that their initial offer to Iran might be changed substantially depending on what concessions Iran offers.


In comments made to Iranian media, Araqchi said that any final deal should eliminate sanctions on Iran and enshrine its "right" to refine uranium, according to the ISNA news agency.


A U.S. administration official said any potential sanctions relief would be "targeted, proportional to what Iran puts on the table. No one should expect a breakthrough overnight".


Israel, Iran's arch-enemy and widely assumed to harbor the Middle East's only nuclear arsenal, has warned the West not to dilute sanctions before Iran has tackled core concerns - enrichment and lack of transparency - about its nuclear goals.


Israel's security cabinet pressed the powers on Tuesday to demand a complete rollback of Iran's enrichment program - something some Western diplomats say may no longer be realistic given its size and identification by the Iranian leadership with national pride and sovereignty.


Since 2006, Iran has rebuffed U.N. Security Council demands that it shelve enrichment and has continued to expand its nuclear fuel program, triggering ever stiffer sanctions.


Hopes of a negotiated settlement of the dispute rose last month when President Barack Obama and Rouhani spoke by telephone, the loftiest U.S.-Iranian contact since Iran's Islamic Revolution in 1979.


Iranian Foreign Minister and chief negotiator Mohammad Javad Zarif attended the morning session of talks but not the afternoon round. He has been suffering from s back ailment and told reporters on returning to his hotel: "I'm really in pain."


(Additional reporting by Fredrik Dahl, Louis Charbonneau and Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Marcus George in Dubai and Dan Williams in Jerusalem; Editing by Mark Heinrich)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iran-6-powers-resume-talks-seeking-end-nuclear-085840886.html
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