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Monday, December 21, 2009

About face with new recognition software

Posted by Jeanine Kay-Illinois

From: http://futurity.org/

recognition

Researchers have developed a new face recognition program that uses a new mathematical model that increases the accuracy of recognition even in cases of disguise, varying expressions, or poor image quality. The sparse representation algorithm can match an image to one in a database regardless of major facial occlusions or image corruption.

U. ILLINOIS—An engineering team has developed a face recognition system that is remarkably accurate in realistic situations.

Unlike existing face recognition programs that try to find “optimal” facial features, the new program uses sparse representation. One of the program’s developers, Yi Ma, an associate professor at the University of Illinois, contends that the choice of features is less important than the number of features used.

“Face recognition is not new, but new mathematical models have allowed researchers to identify faces so occluded that it was previously thought impossible,” says Ma.

People can learn upwards of tens of thousands of different human faces during their lifetime. Various real-world situations such as lighting, background, pose, expression, and occlusion may complicate human recognition, but are incredibly difficult problems for traditional face recognition algorithms to conquer.

Ma’s sparse representation algorithm randomly selects pixels from all over the face, increasing the accuracy of recognition even in cases of disguise, varying expressions, or poor image quality.

The algorithm also increases accuracy by ignoring all but the most compelling match from one subject.

Experiments using sparse representation support the approach. In an experiment that uses two established databases of faces, the Yale B and the AR, the new face recognition method is remarkably accurate. Applying this approach to the Yale B database shows 98.3% accuracy using mouth-region images. The AR database shows 97.5% accuracy on face images with a sunglasses disguise and 93.5% accuracy with a scarf disguise.

The technology is jointly owned by the University of Illinois and the University of California, Berkeley, and could have applications for personal and corporate use.

“The computer can identify images that the human eye can’t,” says Ma, who sees a future where people can capture someone’s face with their camera phone, upload the image to a web-based service, and have a match sent to them seconds later.

University of Illinois news: http://news.illinois.edu/

8 Kinds of Drug Dealers

1. The One Who Wants to Be Your Friend


He's a master of entrapment. Trying to break free of his sticky weed-web will only get you further entangled. He'll do anything to hang out with you, even if it means locking the door and making bagel bites. You say to yourself, "alright, maybe this one time." It's hard to say no, but you know you can't be seen with this guy. He's a f***ing drug dealer.
Tagline: "You and I make a good team. We should hang out more!"





2. The Late One


You called him three hours ago. He's still not here. You're friends are getting antsy and the Death Cab show starts in 45 minutes. All drug dealers have a skewed concept of time, but this species is particularly out of sync with the rest of the world. He'll get you your product, but say goodbye to any movie previews or opening bands you were planning on seeing.
Tagline: "I'll be there in five minutes".





3. Earthy One


Rather than living by the code of the traditional drug dealer, the earthy one believes he's doing you a service in the name of mother nature. Aside from taking his job a little too seriously, he'll be totally useless after the transaction, unless you have any interest in learning about the fungus that he's cultivating in his dreads.
Tagline:"I mean, how are you going to get any closer to gaya without it?"





4. The Sketchy One


Suddenly, you're wondering if you should be buying drugs from this guy. He's spilling shit everywhere, he talks too loud, and he clearly hasn't heard the term "never get high on your own supply." Turn off your cell phone around this guy, the Drug and Firearms officials could be listening.
Tagline: "Shit! Everything is totally fucked, dude!"






5. The Girl


She's hot. She's in charge. She sells you drugs. All sorts of conflicting feelings are coursing through your veins. She transports weed in places that none of your other male dealers could...like her purse. It takes you three visits to realize she's totally not into you and she's a damn good saleswoman.
Tagline: "Baby, I know $150 for an eighth sounds expensive..."






6. The Entrepreneur


You're going to college so you can sit in an office someday and get a paycheck. He's selling drugs so he can...uh... sell drugs for the rest of his life. This guy has more gadgets than James Bond and his utility belt puts Batman to shame. He takes himself so seriously that he's pretty sure someone will make of movie of his life if they aren't already. His favorite movie is Blow, eventhough he's never seen it all the way through.
Tagline: "I've got to call you back, my other Blackberry is ringing."




7. The One You Really Shouldn't Be Buying Drugs From


This includes but is not limited to: family members, friend's family members, police officers, children, Quiznos employees, hockey players, creatures of ancient lore and people in suits. These are the people that your conscience has a serious problem with; but it's late and you're desperate, so you dive into that moral grey area head first. You'll regret it the next day, or the next time you order a bacon cheddar ranch sandwich.
Tagline: "Make sure you don't forget, Aunt Janets's birthday is the 14th."




8. The One Who's Out of Your League

The entrance to this guy's house has a few too many unnecessary roman columns and/or marble fountains. His sports cars are fanned out in front of his compound like he's filming an episode of MTV Cribs. There are multiple scary dogs at the front door and just as many scary people in suits at attention. He laughs when you say how much you want to buy, no matter how much it is. He deals drugs out of metal briefcases and wears bathrobes everywhere. This man is known around town as a"force". He is way out of your league. He usually sells white and brown drugs and eats the green ones for breakfast.
Tagline: "Hello my friend. I apologize for the strip search, but a man of my status can never be too careful."

How to Get Free Inflight Wi-Fi This Holiday Season

Holiday travel can be a tiresome experience. If you want to relax with a little Wi-Fi on the plane, MyMoneyBlog.com has compiled a list of the codes you can use to get free internet access during your holiday excursions.

Yesterday we showed you the inflight Wi-Fi cheat sheet, and according to the chart there are really only four airlines where you even have a chance of finding the internet: Delta, AirTran, American Airlines and Virgin America. The first three require a code to get free Wi-Fi, but Virgin America doesn't.

According to FlyerTalk and MyMoneyBlog.com, these are the codes you'll need to use on Delta, AirTran or AA. All expire on December 31:
Delta: DELTATRYGOGO
AirTran: AIRTRANTRYGOGO
American Airlines: AATRYGOGO

Edit: Reader Fo just reminded me that these codes are for new users only, and work once per email address. The same likely applies for the codes below. (But if you have a Gmail account, you can insert random periods in the username to create "unique" addresses that all go to your account.)

Edit 2: And a friendly reminder: If you end up using inflight Wi-Fi, check out how to join our Mile High Club

If those don't work for whatever reason, FlyerTalk and MyMoneyBlog.com also reference these three codes. They should be valid until January 7:

• 2287548427snk
• 2472564126dvu
• 2285632980tlk

If you're flying Virgin America, you don't have to do anything. Google partnered up with the airline to provide free Wi-Fi throughout the holidays until January 15.

Those are your best bets. Hopefully free Wi-Fi will make your holiday travels a little more tolerable. [My Money Blog, Virgin America]


Send an email to Chris Jacob, the author of this post, at cjacob@gizmodo.com.

15 Scary Looking Foot Bridges

Published by djmick
From: http://www.djmick.co.uk/

Scary Foot Bridges

If you aren’t too keen on heights then the look of these 15 foot bridges will fill you with fear. Even for someone with a head for heights they are still pretty scary looking.

I wonder how many of them can take two or three people at the same time? My guess is a few but not all.



Amazing HS Lip Dub-- Shot BACKWARDS!


youtube.com When Washington State's Shorecrest High challenged Shorewood High to make a Lipdub video they didnt know what they were getting themselves into. Beat THAT, Shorecrest!

First Skate at Fenway Park

Posted by Matt Pepin, Boston.com Staff
From: http://www.boston.com/

Former Boston Bruins greats Bobby Orr (left) and Terry O'Reilly (right) help Milt Schmidt off the ice while participating in the First Skate at Fenway Park event in Boston, Massachusetts December 18, 2009, in advance of the NHL Winter Classic game
(Bobby Orr, Milt Schmidt, and Terry O'Reilly / Reuters)

Years ago, Ray Bourque got the chance to take batting practice at Fenway Park.

Cranked four over the Green Monster, he said.

But what would he have said if someone that day had told him one day he'd go ice skating at Fenway Park?

"You're crazy," Bourque said Friday after being one of the first to go ice skating on the rink that has been constructed at Fenway for the NHL's Winter Classic on Jan. 1.

"But I really think the NHL has a great thing going here. Never would I have thought I would see a rink in the middle of Fenway Park," said Bourque, who played 1,518 games from 1979 to 2000 for the Bruins and had 1,506 points and 395 goals.

It was hockey weather indeed at the historic ballpark on Yawkey Way, and Bourque was one of many Bruins legends who donned sweaters with the spoked B and skates despite extremely chilly temps.

The lineup included Cam Neely, Ken Hodge, Terry O'Reilly, Rick Middleton, Bob and Don Sweeney, and Bobby Orr. A youth hockey team from Somerville also participated, and even Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek laced up a pair of loaners and tested the ice.

"It's nice. The ice is only going to get better," Bourque said. "It's a special place to play that game. I'm jealous."

The significance of the Winter Classic not only coming to Boston but involving two of the city's historic franchises was not lost on Neely, who played 525 games for the Bruins from 1986 to 1996.

"Two organizations that are kind of original within their respective sports, it's kind of neat to see them come together like this," Neely said.

Many players were asked if skating outdoors at Fenway brought back memories of playing outdoor hockey as youths.

"It's similar, but different," Neely said. "We're used to skating with a bunch of trees around you and you've got to watch out for leaves in the ice, but it does bring it back, skating outdoors."

One current Bruin, Milan Lucic, also attended, although he did not skate because he is still recovering from an ankle injury. However, he said he'll give his teammates -- who begin a three-game road trip tonight in Chicago -- some intel on the rink, including sun glare and other issues they may have to deal with on gameday.

Little girl can type 119wpm

Lisa Katayama


This little girl can type 119 wpm. It's not just a skill, it's a hobby. She started playing on the computer at age 4 and spends her weekends typing. Her goal right now? "I'd like to get to at least 200(wpm)."

While this may sound strange, I can understand the allure of the type test — when I was in middle school, I used to procrastinate from studying by taking type tests on my super old Apple machine. It's really not that different from any other addictive game — most of us now associate it with work, but back then I was constantly trying to beat myself in speed and accuracy. By the way, if you're curious to know how fast you're typing, you can take a one-minute typing test here.

[via Mashable]

How to sync passwords, files and bookmarks

Unify logins, files and favourite sites between all your computers


dropbox

You can use Dropbox for a whole host of things apart from just synchronising files

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Staying synchronised across several different PCs can be a challenge. Updating files manually isn't a great idea, especially if you do so regularly, because it takes only one mistake to cause serious problems.

Obviously keeping regular backups will protect you against data loss, but managing multiple versions of files can be very tricky.

The best option is to use an automated system that backs your files up remotely and synchronises each PC whenever you're connected to the internet, so you don't have to worry about transfer drives.

Dropbox handles this automatically and you can use 2GB of space with a free account. All internet transfers are encrypted. When you set up Dropbox, you can specify the location of its folder.

Everything inside it will be uploaded to its servers and mirrored on any computer that you install the program on. It comes in Windows, Mac and Linux variants, so you can sync data across operating systems.

Once you've signed up for an account and installed the software, simply place anything you want mirrored across your PCs into the Dropbox folder. As long as your computer is online, it will receive the most up-to-date version of the files. Changes made to files while offline will be updated when you connect to the net again.

Password manager KeePass uses a database file to store encrypted copies of your passwords and log-in information. You can opt to save this file wherever you like; just ensure this resides within your Dropbox folder to keep it up-to-date on all your computers.

KeePass has Mac and Linux versions that use the same database files as the Windows version, giving you a cross platform password synchronising solution.

The main limitation of Dropbox is that it doesn't synchronise data that isn't stored within its folder. This makes it unsuitable for synchronising files that need to be stored in a specific location, such as bookmarks and some calendar files.

However, you can persuade it to sync outside its folder by using a little hack and symbolic links. In Windows Vista onwards, you can use a command called mklink to link an external folder to your Dropbox.

So, to sync Firefox bookmarks, first ensure that hidden files are shown by typing folder options into the Start menu search, selecting the View tab and choosing 'Show Hidden Files and Folders'. Click 'OK'.

On a PC, browse to 'C:\ Users\\AppData\ Roaming\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\xxxxxxxx.default\' where '' is your Windows account username and the 'xxxxxxxx' represents a string of eight numbers and letters that differ from account to account. Make a note of the folder name.

Now choose 'Start | All Programs | Accessories' and right-click 'Command Prompt'. Select 'Run as Administrator'.

At the command prompt, enter mklink /D "D:\My Documents\Dropbox\xxxx xxxx.default" "C:\ Users\\ AppData\Roaming\Mozilla\ Firefox\Profiles\xxxxxxxx. default\".

Remember to substitute the location of your dropbox folder and your folder settings for your Firefox profile. You'll need to set up symbolic links like this one on each PC that you want to sync.

There are easier ways to synchronise bookmarks, but this principle works for any program that needs to store its data in a specific place.

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First published in PC Plus Issue 288

Georgia's answer to 'The Simpsons'

By Shaun Walker in Moscow


Shorena Samsonadze, the Georgian version of Lisa Simpson

Shorena Samsonadze, the Georgian version of Lisa Simpson

    Tap Dancing to Super Mario Bros.


    Tap Dancing to Super Mario Bros. - Watch more Game Trailers

    Broadway performer CK Edwards tap dances to various Super Mario Bros. tunes with funky precision.

    Abandoned newborn has gift for rescuers 20 years later

    A college student connects with two then-teens who found her in 1989.
    By Michael E. Ruane
    The Washington Post

    Mia Fleming, at 6 months old

    WASHINGTON — Christopher Astle and Emily Yanich were teenage pals strolling back from a 7-Eleven that summer afternoon — two ordinary kids on an ordinary Wednesday after school — when they found the abandoned baby.

    It was Sept. 6, 1989. They discovered the newborn wrapped in towels at the front door of a townhouse in their suburban Fairfax County, Va., complex and took the infant to Emily's, where her stepfather called police.

    Authorities took the baby girl, who was later adopted. Chris and Emily, both 15, went on with their lives, although Emily often cried when she told people the story, and the two called each other every Sept. 6.

    Twenty years passed.

    Then, on Dec. 2, a college student

    College junior Mia Fleming, 20, had been trying to find her rescuers through Facebook for several years. It all came together for her Dec. 2. (Nikki Kahn, The Washington Post)
    named Mia Fleming sent them both a message via Facebook: Might they be the same Chris and Emily who had once found a baby left at a stranger's door? If so, she just wanted to say thanks.

    After all these years, the little girl they had found had found them.

    Chris and Emily, both 35, remained close as they grew up, moved and married, bound by their rescue of the baby.

    Mia, once she learned her story, never forgot them, and after numerous tries over several years managed at last, through the power of the Internet, to track them down.

    "I didn't know how they would feel," she said.

    Emily said: "It's like a miracle. . . . My heart is filled now. There was always a little spot missing."

    Chris said, "It's the best Christmas present I have ever gotten."

    A reunion is being planned so the three can see one another again.

    Two typical teens

    The saga began that day in September about 4 in the afternoon. Chris, of South Riding, Va., was a C student and heavy-metal music fan who wore Metallica T-shirts — "an average, ordinary high school kid trying to find his way through life," he said.

    Emily, now Yanich-Fithian of Lewisberry, Pa., sang in the

    Emily Yanich-Fithian (Courtesy of Emily Yanich-Fithian)
    school chorus and had a job at the mall. She recalled that they had probably gone to the 7-Eleven to buy cigarettes.

    Chris and Emily had just returned to their complex when they heard the baby crying.

    The cries were coming from the front landing of a townhouse, where it looked like no one was home. Chris started up the steps and spotted a bundle of orange towels.

    "I walked over and carefully unfolded the towels, and here's a naked newborn baby girl, just crying," he said. "She still had part of her umbilical cord attached. . . . She had a full head of hair. I picked her up and held her. She kept on crying. . . . I was completely freaked out."

    He and Emily banged and kicked on the door and

    Chris Astle stands where Mia was found in Fairfax County, Va. Astle and Emily Yanich-Fithian bought the baby a teddy bear, which she still has. The two often wondered about the girl's fate. (Nikki Kahn, The Washington Post)
    rang the bell. No one answered.

    Had someone forgotten the baby? Was she hungry? Should they go back to the 7-Eleven and get some food? Should they leave the baby? Should they take her? Would they get in trouble? They decided to take her home.

    As they walked up the driveway to Emily's house, her stepfather, Bill DeLancey, joked, "What did you guys bring home this time?"

    "Bill," Emily said, "we found a baby."

    "He about fell out of his chair," Chris recalled.

    The teens explained, and Bill called 911. Police, medics and firefighters came quickly.

    "The next thing we know, the paramedics took the baby, and she was gone," Chris said.

    It turned out that the baby was less than 12 hours old, officials said later. She weighed 6 pounds, 10 1/2 ounces and was 19 inches long. She had dark eyes and dark hair, and was in excellent health. There was no trace of her mother.

    The teens later bought the baby a teddy bear — possibly at the 7-Eleven, Chris said — visited her in the hospital and went back to high school.

    Emily's family moved to Pennsylvania about a year later. She married, had two kids and got a job driving a school bus. Chris became a computer engineer and also married. But they always wondered who had left the infant, and why.

    A child's discovery

    Mia had been adopted by a British couple living in suburban Washington. At about 9, she was going through the scrapbook her mother kept about her childhood and found an envelope. Inside was a newspaper story.

    At first, Mia said, it bothered her that she had been abandoned, but then she became curious about the two teenagers who had saved her and whose teddy bear she still had.

    She knew their names from the newspaper and said she began trying to find them on Facebook when she was in high school. But there were many Chris Astles on Facebook, and she was leery of trying them at random.

    On Dec. 1, Mia, a reserved and soft-spoken junior with dark hair and a tattoo of a bull on her left shoulder, discovered on Facebook a person who looked as though she might be Emily. She spotted Chris' name on Emily's list of friends. This had to be them.

    That night, she "friended" them on Facebook. Neither recognized her name. The next day, both messaged back saying, essentially, "Who are you?" Mia agonized about her response.

    "I was so nervous thinking about what I would say to them and how they would react," she said in an e-mail. "I was . . . afraid that they wouldn't want to hear from me, or would think I was some sort of crazy person."

    That evening she wrote back to Chris and Emily, then ran off to class, worrying what they might think.

    "Hi, I'm sorry to bother you," she wrote to Chris, "but if you are the Chris Astle I was looking for then I just want to thank you. You and Ms. Yanich found me on someone's doorstep when I was an infant. I don't really know what else to say, but thank you. If I've gotten the wrong person then I apologize! — Mia"

    In his office, Chris read the message and exclaimed out loud. A buddy down the hall heard him and called, "Are you all right?"

    Chris said he was fine.

    The Best Playboy Holiday Covers of All Time

    By Brian Fairbanks

    Playboy has never known what to do about the holidays. Each year, the magazine recycles jokes our grandfather learned in The Great War about Santa Claus coming down the chimney and joining the orgy around the Christmas tree. They usually have Santa looking in on Eliot Spitzer and Ashley Dupre, saying, "Ho ho ho!" But once in a while, the magazine gets the holidays right: dressing up the Playmates as young Mrs. Clauses, complete with lingerie and a present in the bedroom, if we would just follow their come-hither looks.

    January 1954
    . Playboy was a tad on the late side for its holiday cover that season, but maybe because the December '53 issue was its first ... and featured Marilyn Monroe on the cover. While the follow-up isn't quite as memorable as the premiere, it still demands a place on this list for featuring the Playboy Bunny character gleefully eyeballing a pair of boobs.


    December 1960. While it took Playboy a few years to find the courage to combine eroticism and Christmas (and this was before the days when Bill O'Reilly would have have thrown a temper tantrum over it), the last cover of the first year of the swingin' 60s was at least a step forward. Sadly forgotten model Teddi Smith is shown standing up in her finest sexy Santa suit, and that's all she needs to do to sell us on this issue: stand there.


    February 1970. This one's cheating a bit, but we missed it on our Best Playboy Covers of the 1970s list. Sure, February is a bit past the holiday season, but it probably went out to subscribers right after New Year's and has a Valentine's Day theme, so that counts, right? None of that matters, anyway, when there is a naked ass to enjoy.


    December 1970. Who would have guessed that a naked model in a Santa hat would be sexier than just a plain ol' naked model? Shay Knuth knew this before we did, and thankfully Playboy gave her to us for Christmas in 1970.



    December 1972. As the rest of the country joined the sexual revolution that Playboy helped jump-start, the magazine decided to buck the trend and step back into the past with its December '72 edition. The cover featured a play on the classic Coca-Cola Christmas ads, except with an illustration of a hot naked chick playing Santa Claus. The only way you'll ever get to see anything like this nowadays is by joining us at Santacon.


    December 1974. Mother of God, what is Playmate Robyn Douglass going to do with that candy cane? The outrage, the scandal, the sacrilege! I'll take two copies, please.


    January 1976. We'll give you 12 reasons why this cover makes our list: Lynnda Kimball, Mesina Miller, Lillian MĂĽller (Yuliis Ruval), Azizi Johari, Ingeborg Sorensen, Victoria Cunningham, Lynn Schiller, Laura Misch, Jill de Vries, Bridgett Rollins, Janet Lupo, Nancie Li Brandi. One for every lonely night of Christmas.


    January 1993. Four boobs, one cover. You would be forgiven for having high expectations for 1993 after receiving this in your mailbox.


    December 1996: Playboy's holiday covers bounced back in a big way in '96 with this Jenny McCarthy-led edition -- you know, before she was spoiled by Jim Carrey.


    December 1999. As awful as Naomi Campbell's outfit is on the cover of Playboy's 1999 holiday issue, the supermodel at least had the hotness to make it work. But ... hang on a second ... isn't a landline phone what Ms. Campbell launched at her assistant that one time?


    December 2000. This is exactly what you should get me for Christmas this year, Mom: a miniature naked Carmen Electra, trapped inside a tree ornament.


    Spielberg on 'Avatar': the most evocative sci-fi movie since 'Star Wars'

    Cameron_spielberg_341 James Cameron (pictured left) held a private screening of "Avatar" on Dec. 4 for a few friends of his. Among the attendees were Arnold Schwarzenegger and Steven Spielberg (pictured right), a filmmaker who is also experimenting with motion-capture technology. (Spielberg and Peter Jackson are in the middle of mo-cap pic "Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn.")

    At the premiere last night, I heard that Spielberg's reaction was overwhelmingly positive.

    Today I was able to confirm through his reps that after the screening, Spielberg called "Avatar" "the most evocative and amazing science-fiction movie since 'Star Wars.'"

    Not too shabby of an endorsement, eh?

    Polish police retrieve damaged Auschwitz gate sign

    This two photo combination shows above: a Polish Police handout showing the
    AP – This two photo combination shows above: a Polish Police handout showing the entrance to the former Nazi …


    WARSAW, Poland – Polish police found the infamous "Arbeit Macht Frei" sign that was stolen from the gate of the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz after an intensive three-day hunt and arrested five suspects, police said early Monday. The sign was found cut into three pieces.

    Police spokeswoman Katarzyna Padlo told The Associated Press that the sign was found Sunday night in northern Poland, the other end of the country from the southern Polish town where the Auschwitz memorial museum is located and where it disappeared before dawn Friday.

    Padlo said police detained five men between the ages of 25 and 39 and took them for questioning to Krakow, which is the regional command of the area that includes the Auschwitz museum.

    Another police spokesman, Dariusz Nowak, said the 16-foot (5-meter) sign, made of hollow steel, was found cut into three pieces, each containing one of the words. The cruelly ironic phrase means "Work Sets You Free" and ran completely counter to the purpose of Auschwitz, which began as a concentration camp for political prisoners during the Nazi occupation of Poland and evolved into an extermination camp where Jews were gassed to death in factory-like fashion.

    The police refused to divulge any details of the circumstances in which the sign was found or to speculate on the motive of the perpetrators. They were expected to disclose more at a news conference in Krakow planned for 0800 GMT (3 a.m. EST) Monday.

    The sign that topped the main gate at the Auschwitz memorial site was stolen early Friday, setting off an international outcry at the disappearance of one of the most chilling and best known symbols of the Holocaust. State authorities made finding it a priority and appealed to all Poles for assistance.

    Museum authorities welcomed the news with huge relief despite the damage done to the sign. Spokesman Pawel Sawicki said conservation experts will have to determine how best to repair it and that the museum authorities hope to restore it to its place as soon as possible.

    Sawicki said the museum staff did not yet know who carried out the theft or why and were themselves waiting for more information from police.

    More than 1 million people, mostly Jews, but also Gypsies, Poles and others, died in the gas chambers or from starvation and disease while performing forced labor at Auschwitz, which Nazi Germany built in occupied Poland during World War II. The camp was liberated by the Soviet army on Jan. 27, 1945.

    Earlier on Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called on Poland to act to find "these twisted criminals that desecrated the place where over a million Jews were murdered."

    "The sign is of the deepest historical importance to the Jewish people and the whole world, and is a tombstone for more than a million Jews," Netanyahu said.

    _____

    Associated Press Writer Vanessa Gera contributed to this report.


    Brittany Murphy Dies

    R.I.P.

    by TMZ Staff

    Brittany MurphyBy TMZ Staff

    Brittany Murphy died early this morning after she went into full cardiac arrest and could not be revived, multiple sources tell TMZ.

    She was 32.

    A 911 call was made at 8:00 AM from a home in Los Angeles that is listed as belonging to her husband, Simon Monjack, the Los Angeles City Fire Department tells TMZ.

    We're told Murphy was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center where she was pronounced dead on arrival. Her time of death was listed as 10:04 AM.

    Murphy starred in such films as "Clueless," "8 Mile," and "Don't Say a Word." Murphy was reportedly fired from last film, "The Caller," after reports she was problematic on set.

    UPDATE 3:11 PM ET -- Sources tell TMZ Brittany Murphy's mom discovered her unconscious in the shower. We're told when paramedics arrived, they quickly determined Murphy was in full cardiac arrest and immediately administered CPR. They continued CPR in route to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center -- several miles away -- and Murphy was unresponsive. She was pronounced dead at the hospital.

    We're told the LA County Coroner's is picking up Murphy's body from Cedars later today and will launch a death investigation.

    UPDATE 4:00 PM ET -- We're also told the LAPD has launched a death investigation.

    UPDATE 4:07 PM ET -- A rep for Murphy tells TMZ, "In this time of sadness, the family thanks you for your love and support. It is their wish that you respect their privacy."

    UPDATE 5:21 PM ET -- Two LAPD officers were just spotted going into Murphy's home.

    UPDATE 5:34 PM ET -- A neighbor of Brittany's tells TMZ she saw Brittany getting taken out on a stretcher with paramedics performing CPR. The neighbor said Brittany "looked dead."

    UPDATE 10:00 PM ET -- Through Brittany's rep, the family released a statement: "The sudden loss of our beloved Brittany is a terrible tragedy. She was our daughter, our wife, our love and a shining star. We ask you to respect our privacy at this time."


    Read more: http://www.tmz.com/2009/12/20/brittany-murphy-dies-cardiac-arrest/#ixzz0aL9nXi3u