Saturday, July 20, 2013

Israel, Palestinians still at odds over borders ahead of talks

By Maayan Lubell

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel will not bow to the Palestinians' demand on the borders of their future state before peace talks begin but will meet their request for the release of some prisoners, Israeli officials said on Saturday.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Friday that Israel and the Palestinians had laid the groundwork to resume talks after an almost three-year stalemate, but that the deal was not final and required more diplomacy.

Remarks made on Saturday by Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon and Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz suggest the sides still face major stumbling blocks before negotiations can resume, however.

Yaalon said in a statement that Israel "had insisted it would enter negotiations with no preconditions which included the Palestinian demand on the 1967 borders ... and that is exactly what is happening now."

The Palestinians say the talks must be about establishing a future state in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, with borders approximating the boundaries that existed before Israel captured those territories in a 1967 war.

Steinitz said there had been no Israeli concession on that point nor on the Palestinian demand that Israel halt all construction of settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

"There is no chance that we will agree to enter any negotiations that begin with defining territorial borders or concessions by Israel, nor a construction freeze," he said.

A senior Palestinian official with knowledge of the talks suggested the Palestinians would not back down. "Our position remains clear: resumption of negotiations should be based on the two-state solution and on the 1967 borders."

Kerry said on Friday that the deal between Israel and the Palestinians to resume negotiations was still being "formalized" but that negotiators for both sides could begin talks in Washington "within the next week or so".

In his first public comments since Kerry's announcement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed the apparent progress but did not indicate what steps Israel would take to ensure that the talks resume, if any.

"The resumption of the peace process at this time is a vital strategic interest of Israel. It is important in itself to try and end the conflict between us and the Palestinians and it is important in light of the challenges we face from Iran and Syria," Netanyahu said in a statement on Saturday.

Israeli lawmaker Tzachi Hanegbi, a confidant of Netanyahu, suggested the United States could have found a formula that would avoid the 1967 border issue torpedoing resumption of negotiations.

"The talks should be possible when both sides feel they have not conceded their basic positions. The Americans are entitled to say whatever they want. For instance, they could say that they think the talks should be based on the 1967 borders, but that this does not bind us," Hanegbi told Israel Radio.

"I suppose they will also say that the goal of the negotiations is to reach a deal in which the Palestinians recognize Israel as Jewish state, something that at least at the moment the Palestinians are unwilling to accept," Hanegbi said.

PRISONERS

Palestinians have also long demanded that Israel free prisoners held since before 1993, when the two sides signed the Oslo Accords - an interim deal intended to lead to the establishment of a Palestinian state.

"In all meetings held by President Abu Mazen (Mahmoud Abbas) with minister Kerry and others, the Palestinian demand to release the prisoners topped the agenda," said Abbas's spokesman, Nabil Abu Rdaineh. "Freeing prisoners is a Palestinian priority that should precede any agreement.

Steinitz indicated that some of those who would be released had been convicted of violent crimes against Israelis.

"There will be some release of prisoners," Steinitz told Israel Radio. "I don't want to give numbers but there will be heavyweight prisoners who have been in jail for tens of years ... it will not be simple, but we will make that gesture." Steinitz said. "

The release would be carried out in phases, he added. It was unclear if any prisoners would be released before talks began. Some Israeli officials have said prisoners would only be freed after negotiations were underway.

There are 103 pre-Oslo prisoners in Israeli jails, according to the Palestinian Prisoners Club, a Palestinian body that looks after the interests of inmates and their families.

Israeli and Palestinian officials told Reuters on Friday the talks would take months to unfold. Steinitz said the Palestinians had agreed to enter talks that would take between nine months to a year.

He said this would stop the Palestinians from taking unilateral steps at the U.N. General Assembly in September, when they had planned to seek recognition for their statehood in the absence of direct talks with Israel.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy told a news conference on Saturday: "We support serious talks to take place with a set and precise time frame."

Kerry's drive to relaunch the peace talks was endorsed this week by the Arab League, which potentially holds out the prospect of a broader regional peace with Israel upon the establishment of a Palestinian state.

The Arab League's own peace proposals, launched over a decade ago, foundered on the issue of a return to 1967 borders, but it confirmed on Wednesday it had shifted its position to countenance "limited exchange of territory of the same value and size."

Such a formula could allow Israel to keep large settlement blocs it has said should remain in Israeli hands in any future peace deal.

(Additional reporting by Ali Sawafta in Ramallah, Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza; and Yasmine Saleh in Cairo; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-palestinians-still-odds-over-borders-ahead-talks-174138711.html

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Tips For Speaking With Your Doctor Concerning Cancer Treatment

When you are diagnosed with cancer, there are many things that you must converse with your doctor about. A complete treatment and recovery plan must be set into motion, and it must incorporate all aspects of your battle. Continue reading to learn more about some tips for speaking with your doctor concerning better understanding your cancer treatment.

Just because you get a second opinion doesn?t mean that you aren?t in agreement with your first doctor. Your doctor will understand, and it always helps to get more advice on the matter. As it is helpful because you?re talking about cancer here, and it?s a very serious matter.

You want to know what stage of cancer you?re in when diagnosed. You want to know what that stage means as far as your treatment and other factors related to your condition. You have to know how to prepare for battle.

You might find out that there is additional testing. It is different for the various types of cancers and your condition, so check to see if there can or needs to be other tests run.

Find out what all is involved in the treatment plan. You need to know what you?re going to be up against. Some cancer treatments are very intense and can take much out of you. You need to know so you can make all the necessary preparations.

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Do you know what the side effects for the treatment are? This is very important so that you know again what you?re up against. You have to gauge what you want to do and make your decision. Of course, it?s usually best to go along with what the doctor is recommending.

Know what is going to happen if the treatment you go through doesn?t work. You need to know what will be in store for you next after that. It?s always important to stay one step ahead of your plans as a whole so you know what changes need to be made if something happens.

Do you know if your insurance is going to cover the treatment for your condition? This is a very important aspect of your decision and the way things are going to play out. You must have everything laid out ahead of time.

Do you know that treatment is absolutely necessary given your age, condition, and other factors? If treatment is necessary, your doctor will definitely be vocal about this as he helps you make your decision.

Are there any specific long-term side effects of the treatment, and what are the chances of the treatment being successful and the cancer being eradicated? You need to know these things because they weigh in your decision.

You want to be able to handle your cancer diagnosis the way you need to with the right information and attitude. Remember the tips you?ve read here as you get ready to prepare for battle. Make sure you stay well-informed by talking to your doctor and doing your own research so you can make those important decisions and know what you?re talking about.

Source: http://www.7x7health.com/2013/07/19/tips-for-speaking-with-your-doctor-concerning-cancer-treatment/4203

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Friday, July 19, 2013

New TV Channel Gives Dogs Pause

Click here to listen to this podcast

TV is going to the dogs. Because soon dogs can watch a channel that caters to their canine sensibilities. DOGTV is already available in some markets and debuts nationally August 1 on DirecTV, at $6 to $10 a month. Roku users also can subscribe. Programs allegedly promote relaxation or stimulation, or simply display scenes of daily doggy life. A ?relaxation? preview on DOGTV?s site features a montage of boats on a lake and pooches lounging in exotic locales?all set to a new age score. The offerings are designed specifically for a dog?s eyes and ears. Images are colored to enhance details. Contrast, brightness and frame rate are also tweaked to accommodate canine vision. And sounds and music stay within a specific frequency range to keep canine viewers from being startled or agitated. DOGTV?s three-to-six-minute features are programmed to fit into the average stay-at-home dog?s daily routine.? If the channel is a success, it could bring new meaning to the term watchdog. ?Larry Greenemeier [The above text is a transcript of this podcast.]??
? Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2013 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tv-channel-gives-dogs-pause-014908935.html

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Disney researchers create computer models that capture style and process of portrait artists

Disney researchers create computer models that capture style and process of portrait artists [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Jul-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jennifer Liu
jennifer.c.liu@disney.com
818-905-9905
Disney Research

Data-driven approach can be used to synthesize sketches in original artist's style

By monitoring artists as they sketch human faces, stroke by stroke, scientists at Disney Research, Pittsburgh, have built computer models that learn each artist's drawing style, how they use strokes and how they select features to highlight as they interpret a face into a portrait.

A better understanding of this abstraction process, the researchers stated, not only is interesting from an artistic point of view, but also can help in developing artificial drawing tools.

"There's something about an artist's interpretation of a subject that people find compelling," said Moshe Mahler, a digital artist at Disney Research, Pittsburgh. "We're trying to capture that to create a computer model of it in a way that no one has done before."

Mahler, along with Itamar Berger and Ariel Shamir of the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, Israel, will present the findings at ACM SIGGRAPH 2013, the International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques, July 21-25 in Anaheim, Calif. Jessica Hodgins, Vice President of Disney Research, and Elizabeth Carter, a Disney Research, Pittsburgh associate, also were part of the research team.

Other computer programs can create line drawings from photos and some can mimic certain stroke styles. The Disney Research, Pittsburgh approach, by contrast, is built on a database representing abstractions of a set of artists.

To create the database, the researchers recruited seven artists. Each sketched portraits based on 24 photographs of male and female faces using a stylus pen that enabled the researchers to record each stroke. The artists created four sketches of each photo, with decreasing time intervals allowed for each 270, 90, 30 and 15 seconds. The result was a dataset of 672 sketches at four abstraction levels.

The dataset contains about 8,000 strokes for each artist, with each stroke categorized as shading strokes or contour strokes, with contour strokes subdivided into complex and simple strokes.

"Watching these strokes accumulate was an interesting part of this project," Berger said. Some artists started with the eyes, others with the outlines of the face. One of the artists had no discernible pattern, starting "wherever."

The analysis did not only focus on strokes style but also on the geometric interpretation of the face by the artist and how it is conveyed in the drawing. For instance, one artist consistently spaced eyes closer together in the sketches than they appear in reality, while another tended to draw wide jaws. Identifying these tendencies may help artists correct bad habits, Shamir said, though in other cases these variations may simply be recognized as artistic tendencies or style.

The researchers also used their system to synthesize sketches based on new face photos. In a perceptual study, test subjects were then asked to match sketches based on style, to match synthesized sketches with those of the actual artist and to try to identify which sketches were real and which were synthesized. The results demonstrated that the sketch generation method produced multiple, distinct styles that are similar to hand-drawn sketches.

What the program can't do, Mahler emphasized, is replicate the spontaneity of an artist and their ability to balance the drawing as they work. "Our approach only understands the trends of how an artist might work," he added. And, because all of the artists based their work on photos, even the hand-drawn sketches were more constrained and reflected less personality than would have been the case if based on living, breathing subjects.

Future work could extend these techniques to subjects beyond faces or people, to other drawing techniques and might also include time-based animation, Shamir said.

###

This project was partly supported by the Israel Science Foundation. For more information and a video, visit the project website at http://www.disneyresearch.com/project/portraitsketching/.

About Disney Research

Disney Research is a network of research laboratories supporting The Walt Disney Company. Its purpose is to pursue scientific and technological innovation to advance the company's broad media and entertainment efforts. Disney Research is managed by an internal Disney Research Council co-chaired by Disney-Pixar's Ed Catmull and Walt Disney Imagineering's Bruce Vaughn, and including the directors of the individual labs. It has facilities in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Boston and Zrich. Research topics include computer graphics, video processing, computer vision, robotics, radio and antennas, wireless communications, human-computer interaction, displays, data mining, machine learning and behavioral sciences.


[ 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.


Disney researchers create computer models that capture style and process of portrait artists [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 19-Jul-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jennifer Liu
jennifer.c.liu@disney.com
818-905-9905
Disney Research

Data-driven approach can be used to synthesize sketches in original artist's style

By monitoring artists as they sketch human faces, stroke by stroke, scientists at Disney Research, Pittsburgh, have built computer models that learn each artist's drawing style, how they use strokes and how they select features to highlight as they interpret a face into a portrait.

A better understanding of this abstraction process, the researchers stated, not only is interesting from an artistic point of view, but also can help in developing artificial drawing tools.

"There's something about an artist's interpretation of a subject that people find compelling," said Moshe Mahler, a digital artist at Disney Research, Pittsburgh. "We're trying to capture that to create a computer model of it in a way that no one has done before."

Mahler, along with Itamar Berger and Ariel Shamir of the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, Israel, will present the findings at ACM SIGGRAPH 2013, the International Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques, July 21-25 in Anaheim, Calif. Jessica Hodgins, Vice President of Disney Research, and Elizabeth Carter, a Disney Research, Pittsburgh associate, also were part of the research team.

Other computer programs can create line drawings from photos and some can mimic certain stroke styles. The Disney Research, Pittsburgh approach, by contrast, is built on a database representing abstractions of a set of artists.

To create the database, the researchers recruited seven artists. Each sketched portraits based on 24 photographs of male and female faces using a stylus pen that enabled the researchers to record each stroke. The artists created four sketches of each photo, with decreasing time intervals allowed for each 270, 90, 30 and 15 seconds. The result was a dataset of 672 sketches at four abstraction levels.

The dataset contains about 8,000 strokes for each artist, with each stroke categorized as shading strokes or contour strokes, with contour strokes subdivided into complex and simple strokes.

"Watching these strokes accumulate was an interesting part of this project," Berger said. Some artists started with the eyes, others with the outlines of the face. One of the artists had no discernible pattern, starting "wherever."

The analysis did not only focus on strokes style but also on the geometric interpretation of the face by the artist and how it is conveyed in the drawing. For instance, one artist consistently spaced eyes closer together in the sketches than they appear in reality, while another tended to draw wide jaws. Identifying these tendencies may help artists correct bad habits, Shamir said, though in other cases these variations may simply be recognized as artistic tendencies or style.

The researchers also used their system to synthesize sketches based on new face photos. In a perceptual study, test subjects were then asked to match sketches based on style, to match synthesized sketches with those of the actual artist and to try to identify which sketches were real and which were synthesized. The results demonstrated that the sketch generation method produced multiple, distinct styles that are similar to hand-drawn sketches.

What the program can't do, Mahler emphasized, is replicate the spontaneity of an artist and their ability to balance the drawing as they work. "Our approach only understands the trends of how an artist might work," he added. And, because all of the artists based their work on photos, even the hand-drawn sketches were more constrained and reflected less personality than would have been the case if based on living, breathing subjects.

Future work could extend these techniques to subjects beyond faces or people, to other drawing techniques and might also include time-based animation, Shamir said.

###

This project was partly supported by the Israel Science Foundation. For more information and a video, visit the project website at http://www.disneyresearch.com/project/portraitsketching/.

About Disney Research

Disney Research is a network of research laboratories supporting The Walt Disney Company. Its purpose is to pursue scientific and technological innovation to advance the company's broad media and entertainment efforts. Disney Research is managed by an internal Disney Research Council co-chaired by Disney-Pixar's Ed Catmull and Walt Disney Imagineering's Bruce Vaughn, and including the directors of the individual labs. It has facilities in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Boston and Zrich. Research topics include computer graphics, video processing, computer vision, robotics, radio and antennas, wireless communications, human-computer interaction, displays, data mining, machine learning and behavioral sciences.


[ 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/2013-07/dr-drc071913.php

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New York heat wave: So hot, even ice cream can't tempt people outside

New York is making it through its heat wave with minimal disruptions so far. But suit jackets have been dispensed with, shawarma isn't selling, and even ice cream vendors want things to cool off.

By Harry Bruinius,?Staff writer / July 18, 2013

A woman uses a magazine to fan herself while waiting for the trains at the Barclays subway station Thursday in New York. A heat advisory remains in effect for the New York metropolitan area.

Mary Altaffer/AP

Enlarge

When it?s as hot as it has been this week, some clammy wag will quip one of those you-know-you?re-a-real-New-Yorker-when observations: In a summer heat wave, you consider the rush of wind from an approaching subway car to be ?a nice breeze.?

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And it?s true. As New York endures its fourth day of a heat wave climbing steadily towards triple digits, the roar of an oncoming train can sometimes provide a second or two of relief for a few of New York?s some 5 million subway riders.

But many of them stayed home Thursday, and subway platforms and cars appeared to carry fewer shoulder-to-shoulder rush-hour commuters than usual. Yet, while the tongue-hanging weather is altering some of the normal rhythms of the city ? the humidity-calibrated "heat index" is already making it feel 101 degrees Thursday, and it?s supposed to get up to 105 degrees on Friday, The Weather Channel says ? there have been few widespread problems.

At the hottest part of the day on Thursday, Con Ed is reporting only a handful of active outages affecting only 78 customers citywide ? and not a single outage in Manhattan. And though the company said it might break all-time usage records this week, it has extra crews on call to handle possible power losses.

"What we're doing right now is, we've basically got all hands on deck, we've buttoned up the system, and now we're just ready to respond to whatever comes our way,? said John Miksad, Con Ed's senior vice president for operations, in a video statement earlier this week.

But as workers around the city are changing some of their daily routines to adjust to the heat, blasts of air-conditioned cool abound.

Just after noon on Thursday, George Spencer and Kevin Talbot, two Jamaican pipe fitters from the Bronx, step onto a Manhattan-bound subway platform in dusty jeans and sweat-soaked T-shirts. Fluorescent-green hard hats hang on heavy tool bags on their shoulders.

?I?m used to it ? I?m used to working in these boiler rooms in all these hot basements,? says Mr. Spencer. ?The humidity, though ? it?s different here.? He and Mr. Talbot started at 6 a.m. to avoid the heat ? and the subway crowds.

?It can get claustrophobic at times,? Talbot says, as they step onto the train to end their work day early. ?But right now, it?s nice.? There are only 13 people in the subway car, and the air conditioning makes it feel almost Arctic.???

The city, too, is telling people, ?Use air conditioning to stay cool, drink water to avoid dehydration, limit strenuous activity? on its website. And the city is providing about 425 cooling centers in air-conditioned public community centers and public libraries to offer residents relief from the heat ? especially the elderly.

Alex Duenas, a Venezuelan vendor from Queens, sits in a tightly-sealed Fun-Time Frostee ice cream truck on the corner of 51st and 6th Ave. in Manhattan. It?s refrigerator-cool inside as a generator hums on the roof.

?People are staying in their office, out of the heat,? says Mr. Duenas, after sliding his window open a crack. ?People think I make more money when it?s hot, selling ice cream, but it really doesn't start to pick up until after 5.? He works 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. at this corner, six days a week. ?You have to put in the hours to make money, but, really, it?s a lot harder when it?s so hot.?

On the street near him, a few hurried New Yorkers in white button-down shirts and suit pants ? no jackets or ties today ? linger a moment in front of hotel as a blast of A/C pours out the open doors. Two vendors at a halal shawarma cart crouch in the shade with wet towels on their heads. For 15 minutes during the height of lunch hour they get no customers interested in spicy lamb and rice.

Farther downtown, the heat, too, prompted some cheeky theologian at The Gustavus Adolphus Lutheran Church in Manhattan to arrange a lettered message in its old, glassed-in outdoor bulletin: ?The Devil called. He wants his weather back.?

But it?s only going to get hotter Friday.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/oJwrTVeLl1A/New-York-heat-wave-So-hot-even-ice-cream-can-t-tempt-people-outside

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

Classical music: Wisconsin-born and Vienna-based dramatic soprano Elizabeth Hagedorn will replace Julia Faulkner at the University of Wisconsin-Madison for the next school year. But Faulkner?s leave of absence could become longer or even permanent.

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Source: welltempered.wordpress.com --- Wednesday, July 17, 2013
By Jacob Stockinger As I have written before, the University of Wisconsin School of Music is facing some serious challenges in terms of staffing in the near future and probably over the long-term. One of the challenges that The Ear has just learned about is that the acclaimed dramatic soprano Julia Faulkner, who has been at the UW since 1994, will be spending the next academic year on a leave of absence. She will spend it teaching at the Lyric Opera of Chicago where she will be on the faculty of the program for Young Artists. Anyone want to bet that the Lyric will see a good deal and offer her a permanent position? That is a major temporary loss for the UW and for Madison since Faulkner (below), like many of the professors at the UW, is both an accomplished performer and a popular teacher with very successful students. (I have sat in on her impressive classes.) Just read the ratings and remarks from her students at this link: http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=424180 As a performer, Faulkner, who remains on the roster of the Metropolitan Opera , has sung often with the Madison Opera and with the Madison Symphony Orchestra , whose music director John DeMain admires her work and her professionalism. Faulkner, who possesses a large voice and beautiful tone, has also sung with the UW Choral Union and the UW Chamber Orchestra among other local and University groups. Here is a link to Faulkner?s impressive bio and disc ...

Source: http://welltempered.wordpress.com/2013/07/18/classical-music-wisconsin-born-and-vienna-based-dramatic-soprano-elizabeth-hagedorn-will-replace-julia-faulkner-at-the-university-of-wisconsin-madison-for-the-next-school-year-but-faulkners/

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California wildfire burns 7 homes, threatens more

IDYLLWILD, Calif. (AP) ? A wildfire in mountains west of Palm Springs burned seven homes and led to the evacuation of dozens more, officials said.

The blaze destroyed three houses, damaged another and destroyed three mobile homes, a cabin, a garage and about a half-dozen vehicles, the U.S. Forest Service said in a statement Tuesday.

The wildfire started Monday between Palm Springs and Hemet, near the rural Riverside County community of Mountain Center, and a day later had surged to about 14 square miles.

More than 2,200 firefighters and 25 aircraft had the blaze 10 percent contained.

It was mostly moving east toward the desert and away from small communities of homes, summer cabins and ranches in the San Jacinto mountains. But a shift in the wind could easily sweep it back toward homes, authorities said.

"It's a rapidly changing animal," Forest Service spokesman Lee Beyer said.

Most of the damage occurred late Monday and early Tuesday as the fire more than doubled in size, but it was not assessed until later in the day.

"Honestly, we thought that the structure destruction was greater than it is," Forest Service spokesman John Miller said.

Miller said officials were especially surprised that the Zen Mountain Center survived, and credited firefighters.

"We really thought it was gone," Miller told the Riverside Press-Enterprise. "The crews hung on and saved it."

About 50 homes were evacuated along with Camp Ronald McDonald, which hosts programs for children with cancer and their families.

The fire also led authorities to close a pair of state highways and the Pacific Crest Trail.

A public pool about 20 miles away in Indio was closed because of ash falling on the water.

The fire raged in thick brush and trees at an elevation of 5,000 to 7,500 feet, sending flames 100 feet high. Some of the area had not burned in 35 years and the vegetation was dried out, Beyer said.

"We only had 40 to 50 percent of normal precipitation" over the winter and no rain at all since early April, he said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-wildfire-burns-7-homes-threatens-more-082925696.html

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