Saturday, December 31, 2011

North Korea not the only offender: 6 official photo fudgings (The Christian Science Monitor)

North Korea not the only offender: 6 official photo fudgings - Yahoo! News Skip to navigation ? Skip to content ? The Christian Science Monitor By Arthur Bright Arthur Bright ? Thu?Dec?29, 3:30?pm?ET Follow Yahoo! News on , become a fan on Facebook
  • '; Y.one("#yn-title").insert(slideshow_code,'after'); Y.one("div.photo-big").setStyle("display","none"); break; } } }); });

  • '; Y.all("div.yn-story-content p").item(snippets[videoId][i][1]).insert(video_code,'after'); break; } } } }); });

  • '; Y.all("div.yn-story-content p").item(snippets[videoId][i][1]).insert(video_code,'after'); break; } } } }); });
  • ' Y.one("#yn-featured").insert(facebookCode,'before'); } }); });
  • Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/nkorea/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20111229/wl_csm/442554

    joe paterno fired joe paterno fired glen campbell matt nathanson matt nathanson rick perry oops rick perry oops

    Canada overlooks a major market in western Japan

    Don Cayo was the 2011 winner of a fellowship for Canadian journalists that is offered by the Foreign Press Centre of Japan. He travelled to Japan last month as their guest.

    OSAKA, Japan

    It?s hard to imagine that savvy Canadians, regardless of whether they work in government or in private enterprise, would be content to ignore the huge economic potential of a big international player like, say, the whole of South Korea or two-thirds of India.

    Yet that?s the size of the opportunity that is all but slipping through Canada?s fingers in the Kansai region of western Japan. In any compilation of who?s who among international suppliers and customers doing business in this intensely productive part of the world, we Canadians don?t even rate a mention at the bottom of the list.

    Yet, although this region may have only 0.3 per cent of Canada?s land area, it has well over half as many people and half the gross domestic product.

    Kansai also punches above its weight among the other regions of Japan. Although it contains only about one-twelfth of the land area of the country, it is home to nearly 20 per cent of its universities and 21 per cent of its research institutes. Its thousands of companies specialize in two high-growth areas ? environmental technology and medical advances ? and the region is similarly strong in its track record for collaboration between researchers and businesses, and for filing patent applications. It?s also an active trader, more dependent for its prosperity on international suppliers and markets than on the substantial Japanese domestic market.

    Canada is heavily engaged in trade with other regions of Japan. The country is B.C.?s second-largest trading partner, purchasing almost 14 per cent of our total exports. Until it was recently knocked into third place by fast-growing China, Japan was also the second-largest trading partner for Canada as a whole.

    Yet Canadians? collective response to all this activity seems to be a yawn.

    Although Premier Christy Clark has promised to try to make good with an official visit in the spring, those who pay attention to these things saw it as a snub that she over-flew Japan to go straight to China and India last month on her first, and so far only, trade mission trip.

    But even if she had decided to stop in Japan, she wouldn?t have been able to conveniently land here. Because, while almost a hundred flights a week link Kansai International Airport to the United States and several hundred more fly in and out of other parts of the developed world, the former scheduled flights to Vancouver and Toronto have been scrubbed.

    As well, the consulate Canada used to maintain in Osaka was closed several years ago and, although it was recently replaced with a less prestigious trade office, this appears to be so low profile that only one of the many business leaders interviewed for this series of stories on Japan seemed to know it existed.

    When the people who were helping with logistics on this assignment sought to arrange an interview with Osaka?s Canadian Chamber of Commerce, they drew a blank and concluded that it was inactive.

    Kansai is a long way ? almost as far as you can get and still be in Japan ? from the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami area, so it suffered no physical damage at all. Nor did its economy take much of a hit, says Noriko Mimura, manager of the investment promotion division of Kankeiran, a federation of Kansai regional companies. Aside from a brief blip caused by disruptions of the supply chain from factories in the east that were damaged or washed away, production in this region barely faltered.

    However, nor did Kansai get the economic boost it expected as a result of a shift of production from the devastated east to the untouched west, says Katushiro Miyamoto, a professor at the graduate school of economics at Kansai University.

    Initially after the quake, quite a few businesses were gearing up to bolster their operations here, Miyamoto said, but the reality of power supply problems set in ?and people realized there is no point shifting production to Kansai region.?

    The power issue stems not from nuclear plant damage, but from the reluctance of local governments, who?ve been spooked by the damage at Fukushima from the tsunami, to allow them to continue producing. The problem is particularly acute in Kansai, because the region is even more dependent on reactors than is the rest of Japan. Fully half the power here was nuclear-generated, compared to about 30 per cent nationwide, so the impact of legislated conservation measures was felt more keenly by industries here.

    Canada is too late into the game to compete as a supplier of liquid natural gas to meet the short- or even medium-term demand in Kansai for a buffer to produce energy while the future of nuclear is being decided and other sources of supply are being developed. We have a lot of gas, but no way to get it to the Japanese market before 2015, when the nation?s first LNG terminal is expected to open in Kitimat.

    dcayo@vancouversun.com

    Blog: vancouversun.com/economy

    ? Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

    Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F56/~3/ypYIps_OOIg/story.html

    19 kids and counting 2011 election results 11/11/11 11 11 11 activision blizzard acrylamide advent calendar

    Transistor Made From Cotton Yarn

    Ahem, what about the not so insignificant details such as transistor speed, performance, scalability, yield, and reliability?

    To get transistors to the level they're at, they've had to be very carefully shrunk and the silicon carefully controlled for resistance and impurity level, something that these deposited semiconductors will be many, many orders of magnitude worse in each and every parameter.

    There's not a whole lot of point making transistors that are 1,000 times larger, 1,000,000 more power-hungry, ha

    Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/vTWHzUrxP0I/transistor-made-from-cotton-yarn

    ravens bengals new england patriots nfl nfl jets air jordans

    Friday, December 30, 2011

    No radiation threat in fire on Russian nuclear sub (AP)

    MOSCOW ? A massive fire engulfed a Russian nuclear submarine at an Arctic shipyard Thursday, but there has been no radiation leak, or injuries, officials said.

    The fire at the Yekaterinburg nuclear submarine occurred while it was in dock for repairs at the Roslyakovo shipyard in the Murmansk region, said Irina Gretskaya, a spokeswoman for the Emergencies Ministry's branch in the area.

    "No one has been hurt and there has been no radiation leak," she said.

    Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov told The Associated Press that all weapons had been unloaded from the sub and its reactor had been shut down before the repairs.

    Konashenkov said the fire had started on the wooden scaffolding and then engulfed the submarine's outer hull. Most modern submarines' outer hulls are covered with rubber to make them less noisy and more difficult for an enemy to detect.

    He said the fire has now been contained, and there was no danger of it spreading inside.

    The Yekaterinburg is a Delta-IV-class nuclear-powered submarine that normally carries 16 nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles. It was built in 1984.

    Russian television stations showed footage from the scene, with flames reaching far into the night skies over the massive dock. Meanwhile, plumes of smoke engulfed the area.

    The fire sparked radiation fears and talk of the possible evacuation of local residents, but officials insisted that it posed no danger. A dozen firefighting crews and a fire boat were fighting the blaze.

    Military prosecutors have launched a check into the causes of the fire.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_submarine_fire

    brining a turkey who won dancing with the stars 2011 five iron frenzy wild horses lyrics sweet potato recipes green bean casserole recipe karina smirnoff

    Gene identified in increasing pancreatic cancer risk

    ScienceDaily (Dec. 29, 2011) ? Mutations in the ATM gene may increase the hereditary risk for pancreatic cancer, according to data published in Cancer Discovery, the newest journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.

    Pancreatic cancer is one of the most morbid cancers, with less than 5 percent of those diagnosed with the disease surviving to five years. Approximately 10 percent of patients come from families with multiple cases of pancreatic cancer.

    "There was significant reason to believe this clustering was due to genetics, but we had not, to this point, been able to find the causative genes that explained the cluster of pancreatic cancer for a majority of these families," said lead author Alison Klein, Ph.D., associate professor of oncology at the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins and director of the National Familial Pancreas Tumor Registry.

    Klein and colleagues used next-generation sequencing, including whole genome and whole exome analyses, and identified ATM gene mutations in two kindreds with familial pancreatic cancer.

    When these initial findings were examined in a large series for patients, ATM mutations were present in four of 166 subjects with pancreatic cancer but were absent in 190 spousal control subsets.

    Klein said that knowledge of the presence of the ATM gene could lead to better screening for pancreatic cancer, the fourth most common cause of cancer-related death. However, there are currently no recommended screening tests.

    Many doctors use endoscopy as a screening tool for pancreatic cancer, but researchers are still evaluating this technique in clinical trials.

    Recommend this story on Facebook, Twitter,
    and Google +1:

    Other bookmarking and sharing tools:


    Story Source:

    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Association for Cancer Research.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

    Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

    Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111229091834.htm

    iowa caucus new years rachel uchitel strait of hormuz new years eve party ideas mars needs moms gary johnson

    Thursday, December 29, 2011

    Community rallies to help victims of Christmas fire

    Published: Monday, December 26, 2011 at 5:36 p.m.
    Last Modified: Monday, December 26, 2011 at 5:36 p.m.

    A Christmas Day fire has left an Edneyville family homeless and in need of help.

    Gary Moore, his wife, Sabrina, and the couple's three children were not at home when the blaze broke out around 2:30 p.m. Sunday. The fire completely engulfed the singlewide mobile home on Skipper Lane off Pilot Mountain Road in Edneyville, said Edneyville Deputy Fire Chief Mark Reagan.

    "The home is gone," he said Monday, adding that the fire's cause has not yet been determined. "It's still under investigation by the Henderson County Fire Marshal."

    Offers of help were already coming into the Henderson County American Red Cross office Monday, said Executive Director Mike Williams.

    A man called the office and said that he noticed smoke in the trailer park while he was there visiting relatives and went to offer assistance, Williams said.

    "When he saw the smoke, he went to the trailer and got the back door open and hollered for people, but no one answered," Williams said. "But there was a little black dog there, so he got the dog out."

    The dog ran off, but Williams said the man wanted the family to know that the dog was unharmed by the fire.

    The agency put the family up at a local hotel temporarily until other housing arrangements could be made.

    The Moores lost everything in the fire, including Christmas presents for the three children, ages, 5, 7 and 11, he said.

    "We sent out our disaster response team to provide immediate assistance," Williams said, adding that most likely other local agencies, such as the Salvation Army, will be providing assistance in the days to come.

    Offers of help were already coming in the day after the fire, said Reagan.

    "Toys for Tots contacted us this morning and expressed interest in replacing the toys," he said. "There's a lot of positive coming out of this already."

    The Edneyville Fire Department has set up a collection box where donations may be dropped off at any time, said Fire Chief Robert Griffin. The box is located in the foyer of the fire department at 1 Firehouse Drive (off U.S. 64) in Edneyville.

    The fire department is collecting clothes, toys, food and household items for the family. Clothing sizes are 7-8 Misses and 8 1/2 shoe for one of the daughters; 14 girls and 7 1/2 shoe for another daughter; and a child's size 6 with a 13 size shoe for the son. Adult clothing sizes needed are men's pants size 32, shirts size large and shoes size 11 1/2 shoe; and women's pants size 20, shirts size 2XL and shoes size 10.

    Firefighters from the Dana, Bat Cave. Gerton and Hendersonville fire departments responded to the fire, along with the Henderson County Rescue Squad, EMS and the Henderson County Sheriff's Office, Reagan said.

    Reach Kelley at 828-694-7871 or at leigh.kelley@blueridgenow.com.

    Source: http://www.blueridgenow.com/article/20111226/articles/111229869

    ncaa bowl schedule occupy dc trisomy 18 oklahoma state farrah abraham whats going on venus williams

    1909 1911 Polar Bear T206 CY YOUNG Cleveland Indians Naps Vintage Baseball Card

    Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

    Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5663472606

    great pumpkin charlie brown the strangers all hallows eve all saints day all saints day bernard madoff ct news

    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    windpoweruk: First Solar Outspent BP in California While Cultivating Political Support: The federal government provided $3 bi... http://t.co/6uKXaRaa

    • Passer la navigation
    • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
    • Passer cette ?tape
    • Connexion
    Loader Twitter.com
    • Connexion
    First Solar Outspent BP in California While Cultivating Political Support: The federal government provided $3 bi... bit.ly/uCKLyg windpoweruk

    Tipi Man

    Pied de page

    Source: http://twitter.com/windpoweruk/statuses/151749082711470080

    world series of poker joe walsh zsa zsa gabor heavy d dead heavy d dead alaska weather alaska weather

    Saturday, December 24, 2011

    Nun famous for kissing Elvis prays for miracle (AP)

    BETHLEHEM, Conn. ? In the little town of Bethlehem, a cloistered nun whose luminous blue eyes entranced Elvis Presley in his first on-screen movie kiss is praying for a Christmas miracle.

    Dolores Hart, who walked away from Hollywood stardom in 1963 to become a nun in rural Bethlehem, Conn., now finds herself back in the spotlight. But this time it's all about serving the King of Kings, not smooching the King of Rock and Roll.

    The former brass factory that houses Mother Dolores and about 40 other nuns cloistered at the Abbey of Regina Laudis needs millions of dollars in renovations to meet fire and safety codes, add an elevator and make handicap accessibility upgrades.

    Like 73-year-old Mother Dolores, the order's nuns have taken a vow of stability with the intent to live, work and die at the complex. The order was established in 1947 in Bethlehem, a small burg in Connecticut's rolling western hills.

    Now, the historically self-supporting nuns have launched a fundraiser for the $4 million renovation project dubbed "New Horizons." They don't have much money, but they have Mother Dolores: a starlet-turned-supplicant whose unique story might lure the attention and donations of generations of movie fans, particularly those who adore all things Elvis.

    "This work may not be in my lifetime that it's finished, but we're sure trying," Mother Dolores said of the upgrades, which are budgeted to run about $2 million for the fire code and accessibility compliance work and another $2 million for improvements to the housing and other facilities.

    They hope to break ground in January.

    They're not in imminent danger of needing to move out, but many of the older nuns can no longer navigate the narrow steps to the main building's third floor and must live in another building. And without adequate fire escapes, the monastery has caught the eye of local inspectors, though they've worked closely with the nuns on the improvement plans and haven't ordered them to close the building.

    For Mother Dolores, the monastery has been home since she was a 24-year-old actress in 1963 and walked away from Hollywood for a life of contemplation and prayer as a postulant.

    The abbey's chapel, workshops, livestock pastures and other features are part of her soul now, and its wood-paneled monastery is the only home she's known for 50 years. Its theater holds a special place in her heart, harkening to the former career that landed her on talk shows, in magazines and twice as Elvis Presley's co-star.

    Dolores Hart was a vivacious, quick-witted blond starlet when she charmed Hollywood in the 1950s and early 1960s. She shared a kiss with Presley in the 1957 Paramount film, "Loving You" ? a modest liplock over which Mother Dolores still fields frequent questions about whether the King was a good kisser.

    "I don't know why they ask me. It's right there on the screen to see; it's right there for the looking," she said Thursday.

    Hart acted in 10 movies alongside stars including Montgomery Clift, Myrna Loy, Connie Francis and Anthony Quinn.

    She said she was engaged to be married before joining God's service and leaving the acting world behind. She broke off her engagement, though her fiance remained a close friend and was a frequent visitor and supporter of the abbey until his recent death.

    The nuns also received support and help over the years from Mother Dolores' longtime friend and fellow actress Patricia Neal, who was buried at the abbey after her death in August 2010.

    Mother Dolores is still a voting member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, receiving copies of movies to watch in her small room ? or cell, as they're known in the order ? to help select yearly Oscar winners.

    Her own movies, including the highly popular "Where the Boys Are," were made before stars routinely could negotiate to collect later royalties, she said, so that's not a potential source of income for the upgrades to the abbey.

    The abbey is financially independent from the Archdiocese of Hartford and supports itself through the sale of everything from artisan cheeses and hand-crafted pottery to recordings of its choir. Mother Dolores even recently signed autographs at a New Jersey convention, a rare foray out of cloistered life as a favor for a friend, and one that helped boost the fundraising efforts.

    Sister Angele Arbib, a coordinator of the New Horizons renovation and fundraising efforts, said the order is applying for grants and the nuns are trying to spread the word among the abbey's supporters, but are not disclosing publicly how much they've raised so far.

    Unlike some orders, the Abbey of Regina Laudis has retained a steady number of nuns and new postulants, including two starting in the next few weeks ? but that can't continue if the housing and other facilities keep eroding with age.

    "We have focused on building our community, which has been wonderful, but now it's time that we really have to address our space," said Sister Angele, 63, who left a thriving career of managing opera singers when she was 50 to join the order.

    "None of this, not one single thing we're doing, is an extravagance," she said of the upgrades. "It's to make it possible for us to grow, for the elderly among us to live with as much independence as possible and to allow us to live together in surroundings that let us continue our service."

    Sister Angele said the nuns are not in any imminent danger of needing to move out, though she acknowledges they'd be in dire straits if they had not anticipated the problems early enough to prepare the upgrade plans and launch the fundraising efforts.

    As word has spread of their needs, supporters of the nuns and those who've visited the abbey, prayed in its chapel and picked up items in its gift shop have tried to help in ways of their own.

    Liz Carpenter, a Watertown resident who owns the Children's Dance Workshop, said its children have raised $600 to help through a raffle. She's been a grateful supporter since the nuns helped her through a cancer battle about 10 years ago and now volunteers to clean the church once a week.

    "I wanted to teach the kids that it's important to give back," she said of their fundraiser, "especially for a place that does as many wonderful things as this one does."

    __

    Tax-deductible donations to New Horizons may be sent to the Abbey of Regina Laudis, 73 Flanders Road, Bethlehem, Conn., 06751. The order also plans to soon offer online donation services through its website, www.http://www.abbeyofreginalaudis.com.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111223/ap_en_mo/us_elvis_and_the_nun

    del rio das racist das racist ginger white conrad murray sentencing conrad murray sentencing urban meyer

    TripAdvisor Spins Off From Expedia, Takes Flight On The NASDAQ As A Public Company

    tripIn April, Expedia announced its intentions to spin off trip reviews site TripAdvisor as a public company. And this morning, TripAdvisor debuted on the NASDAQ under the symbol 'TRIP' trading at. The company is trading at $29 which is actually higher than Expedia, which is trading at $27.72, down 50 percent. TripAdvisor, which was founded in 2000, was originally bought by IAC in for $212 million in 2004. IAC spun off Expedia, which included TripAdvisor, in 2005. With 50 million unique monthly visitors and 20 million members, TripAdvisor is the giant in the travel reviews space. The site publishes 25 new contributions every minute and also features over eight million candid traveler photos. The reviews site operates in 30 different countries, including in China under the site Daodao. IAC chairman and CEO Barry Diller will serve as the TripAdvisor's chairman.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/gl4QMKWqjOc/

    bob costas jerry sandusky chelsea clinton kat von d tiki barber minnesota vikings packers vs vikings packers vs vikings

    Friday, December 23, 2011

    2 men rob Portland credit union

    December 22, 2011 03:06 EST

    Today is Thursday, Dec. 22, the 356th day of 2011. There are

    nine days left in the year. Winter arrives at 12:30 a.m. Eastern

    time.

    Today's Highlight in History:

    On Dec. 22, 1941, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill

    arrived in Washington for a wartime conference with President

    Franklin D. Roosevelt.

    On this date:

    In 1775, Esek Hopkins was appointed the commander-in-chief of

    the Continental Navy.

    In 1808, Ludwig van Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op.

    67, Symphony No. 6 in F major, Op. 68, and Piano Concerto No. 4 in

    G major, Op. 58, had their world premieres in Vienna, Austria.

    In 1864, during the Civil War, Union Gen. William T. Sherman

    said in a message to President Abraham Lincoln: "I beg to present

    you as a Christmas-gift the city of Savannah."

    In 1894, French army officer Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of

    treason in a court-martial that triggered worldwide charges of

    anti-Semitism. (Dreyfus was eventually vindicated.)

    In 1910, a fire lasting more than 26 hours broke out at the

    Chicago Union Stock Yards; 21 firefighters were killed in the

    collapse of a burning building.

    In 1944, during the World War II Battle of the Bulge, U.S. Brig.

    Gen. Anthony C. McAuliffe rejected a German demand for surrender,

    writing "Nuts!" in his official reply.

    In 1968, Julie Nixon married David Eisenhower in a private

    ceremony in New York.

    In 1977, three dozen people were killed when a 250-foot-high

    grain elevator at the Continental Grain Company plant in Westwego,

    La., exploded.

    In 1984, New York City resident Bernhard Goetz shot and wounded

    four youths on a Manhattan subway, claiming they were about to rob

    him.

    In 1991, the body of Marine Lt. Col. William R. Higgins, an

    American hostage slain by his terrorist captors, was found dumped

    along a highway in Lebanon.

    Ten years ago: Richard C. Reid, a passenger on an American

    Airlines flight from Paris to Miami, tried to ignite explosives in

    his shoes, but was subdued by flight attendants and fellow

    passengers. (Reid, who later pleaded guilty, is serving a life

    sentence in federal prison.) Hamid Karzai (HAH'-mihd KAHR'-zeye)

    was sworn in as prime minister of Afghanistan's interim government.

    Five years ago: Rape charges were dropped against three Duke

    University lacrosse players, but kidnapping and sexual offense

    charges remained. (Those charges were later dropped as well.) Space

    shuttle Discovery returned to Earth after a smooth, 13-day flight

    to rewire the international space station.

    One year ago: President Barack Obama signed a law allowing gays

    for the first time in history to serve openly in America's

    military. The Senate ratified the New START treaty with Russia

    capping nuclear warheads for both nations and restarting on-site

    weapons inspections. Auburn's Cam Newton was named AP Player of the

    Year. "The Lone Ranger" announcer Fred Foy died in Woburn, Mass.,

    at age 89.

    Today's Birthdays: Former House Speaker Jim Wright is 89. Actor

    Hector Elizondo is 75. Country singer Red Steagall is 73. Former

    World Bank Group President Paul Wolfowitz is 68. Baseball

    Hall-of-Famer Steve Carlton is 67. ABC News anchor Diane Sawyer is

    66. Rock singer-musician Rick Nielsen (Cheap Trick) is 65. Rock

    singer-musician Michael Bacon is 63. Baseball All-Star Steve Garvey

    is 63. Singer Robin Gibb is 62. Golfer Jan Stephenson is 60.

    Actress BernNadette Stanis is 58. Rapper Luther Campbell is 51.

    Country singer-musician Chuck Mead is 51. Actor Ralph Fiennes (rayf

    fynz) is 49. Actress Lauralee Bell is 43. Country singer Lori

    McKenna is 43. Actress Dina Meyer is 43. Actress Heather Donahue is

    38. Actor Chris Carmack is 31. Actor Logan Huffman is 22.

    Rhythm-and-blues singer Jordin Sparks is 22.

    Thought for Today: "Winter is not a season, it's an

    occupation." -- Sinclair Lewis, American author (1885-1951).

    Source: http://www.wgme.com/template/inews_wire/wires.regional.me/3eb85038-www.wgme.com.shtml

    trans siberian orchestra trans siberian orchestra little big town little big town bennett bennett daniel day lewis

    Occupy protesters sue over free speech, force

    FILE - In this Nov. 18, 2011 file photo, University of California, Davis Police Lt. John Pike uses pepper spray to move Occupy UC Davis protesters while blocking their exit from the school's quad in Davis, Calif. Most major Occupy Wall Street encampments in the U.S. have been dispersed, but they live on in a flurry of lawsuits in which protesters are asserting their constitutional rights to free speech and assembly and challenging authorities' use of force to break up tent cities. (AP Photo/The Enterprise, Wayne Tilcock, File)

    FILE - In this Nov. 18, 2011 file photo, University of California, Davis Police Lt. John Pike uses pepper spray to move Occupy UC Davis protesters while blocking their exit from the school's quad in Davis, Calif. Most major Occupy Wall Street encampments in the U.S. have been dispersed, but they live on in a flurry of lawsuits in which protesters are asserting their constitutional rights to free speech and assembly and challenging authorities' use of force to break up tent cities. (AP Photo/The Enterprise, Wayne Tilcock, File)

    FILE - In this Oct. 25, 2011 file photo, debris is strewn throughout the Oakland Occupy encampment at Frank Ogawa Plaza after Oakland Police disbanded the tent community in Oakland, Calif. Most major Occupy encampments have been dispersed, but they live on in a flurry of lawsuits in which protesters are asserting their constitutional rights to free speech and assembly and challenging authorities? mass arrests and use of force to break up tent cities. (AP Photo/The Tribune, Jane Tyska)

    FILE - In this Oct. 25, 2011 file photo, Occupy Oakland protesters run from tear gas deployed by police at 14th Street and Broadway in Oakland, Calif. The National Lawyers Guild and the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California sued the Oakland Police Department in federal court in November, saying police and other agencies violated demonstrators? Fourth Amendment rights by using excessive force _ including ?flash-bang? grenades _ against demonstrators who posed no safety threat. The suit says officials also violated their First Amendment rights to assemble and demonstrate. (AP Photo/Darryl Bush, File)

    Most major Occupy encampments have been dispersed, but they live on in a flurry of lawsuits in which protesters are asserting their constitutional rights to free speech and assembly and challenging authorities' mass arrests and use of force to break up tent cities.

    Lawyers representing protesters have filed lawsuits ? or are planning them ? in state and federal courts from coast to coast, challenging eviction orders and what they call heavy-handed police tactics and the banning of demonstrators from public properties.

    Some say the fundamental right of protest has been criminalized in places, with protesters facing arrest and charges while doing nothing more than exercising protected rights to demonstrate.

    "When I think about the tents as an expression of the First Amendment here, I compare it to Tahrir Square in Egypt," said Carol Sobel, co-chairwoman of the National Lawyers Guild's Mass Defense Committee.

    "Our government is outraged when military forces and those governments come down on the demonstrators. But they won't extend the same rights in this country," she said. "They praise that as a fight for democracy, the values we treasure. It comes here and these people are riffraff."

    A handful of protesters began camping out in September in a lower Manhattan plaza, demanding an end to corporate excess and income inequality, and were soon joined by scores of others who set up tents and remained around the clock. Similar camps sprang up in dozens of cities nationwide and around the world, but patience wore thin, and many camps ? including the flagship at Zuccotti Park and in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, Oakland, Philadelphia and Portland, Ore. ? were forcibly cleared.

    Public officials and police unions have generally defended moves to break up the camps, citing health and safety concerns. They also said that responding to problems at Occupy encampments was draining crime-fighting resources.

    Protester lawsuits are now beginning to wend their way through the legal system, and attorneys say more are likely on the way.

    The National Lawyers Guild and the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California sued the Oakland Police Department in federal court in November, saying police and other agencies violated demonstrators' Fourth Amendment rights by using excessive force ? including "flash-bang" grenades ? against demonstrators who posed no safety threat. The suit says officials also violated their First Amendment rights to assemble and demonstrate.

    Oakland Mayor Jean Quan on Wednesday announced an independent investigation into the police response.

    In Austin, Texas, this week, a federal judge has been hearing the case of two Occupy protesters who were arrested and later barred from City Hall under a policy their attorneys call overly broad and say amounts to a ban on speech. The Texas Civil Rights Project says around 106 people have been banned since the protests began, in some cases for up to a year. The policy says a criminal trespass notice may be issued for "unreasonably disruptive" conduct.

    Yvette Felarca is among those suing campus police and administration officials at the University of California, Berkeley, after officers forcefully dispersed a group of Occupy protesters and others rallying for public education last month.

    Felarca, a middle school teacher and organizer with the civil rights organization By Any Means Necessary, which filed the suit, says she was standing, arms linked with other demonstrators', before a line of police officers who moved in after some tents were set up on a lawn. She said she was chanting and yelling when a police officer hit her in the throat with his baton. She said she was also hit in her ribs, abdomen and back and watched others bear repeated blows.

    "The brutality was absolutely designed to chill the speech of students in the movement and literally try to beat and terrorize our right to criticize, to think critically and to act on that criticism," Felarca said.

    The university has called it "disconcerting" that the suit contains "so many inaccuracies."

    Sobel, of the National Lawyers Guild, said a lawsuit is also planned in the case of the pepper-spraying by campus police of peaceful protesters at the University of California, Davis, video footage of which went viral.

    Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, called the lawsuits an important check on police power. She noted that authorities haven't been uniformly excessive around the country, but pointed in New York City to mass arrests on the Brooklyn Bridge ? which are under litigation ? as well as the pepper-spraying of several women and the dark-of-night breakup of Zuccotti Park.

    She said that her group has been concerned for years about police tactics, but that the response to the Occupy movement shines a light on them in a way that "engages and offends a new sector of the public."

    She predicted there will be other lawsuits about excessive force, civil rights violations and mostly likely people's rights to get back into Zuccotti, which she said police have blocked from public usage with their pens.

    "I think what's been happening with Occupy is so reminiscent of what happened during the Republican National Convention" in 2008, she said. "When people get together to engage in that most American of pastimes ? protest ? it almost always generates a defensive and repressive response from law enforcement. Occupy is no exception."

    Gene Policinski, executive director of the First Amendment Center in Nashville, Tenn., said police overreacted to the Occupy movement in some cities, which probably earned protesters some new support. Still, he noted, protesters' First Amendment rights are not without limitation.

    "We've always had to balance our rights," he said. "No one can really claim you have an unfettered unlimited First Amendment rights. The courts are there to say, wait a minute, that goes too far, or that's OK. It is part of that give and take. Of course we all wish our rights were never intruded upon."

    ___

    Niedowski reported from Providence, R.I. Associated Press writer Deepti Hajela in New York contributed.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-22-Occupy-Lawsuits/id-88adc6ae6b3b40e792b7146492a5147d

    joe frazier dead joe frazier dead topamax lexapro trazodone voting sharon bialek

    Monday, December 19, 2011

    The euro zone's treaties: That clever Mr Legal | The Economist

    THIS will be my last blog post this year. But although Charlemagne is taking a break, the EU machinery, perhaps unusually, is working overtime over the festive season. It is trying to gift-wrap the new treaty that leaders agreed to draw up over the head of Britain's prime minister, David Cameron. ?

    My piece this week on the British row argues that the bust-up could yet go either way: towards a progressive deterioration in relations that might ultimately see Britain leave the union, or towards a reconciliation that sets aside the rancour of the night of December 8th-9th. The past few days have seen evidence of both possibilities.?

    First there was the war of words started by French leaders as they openly incited markets and credit-rating agencies against Britain, arguing that perfidious Albion was more deserving of a downgrade than France. For two countries with similar debt levels, Britain has a higher budget deficit and is running higher inflation. The difference is that the Bank of England, unlike the European Central Bank, acts as the lender of last resort to the sovereign, so investors are less worried about losing the face value of their bond.

    The French charge was led by the central-bank governor, Christian Noyer, and quickly followed up by Fran?ois Fillon, the prime minister, and Fran?ois Baroin, the finance minister. Even the daily Le Monde seemed surprised by the vehemence of the attack, asking "what has bitten the French government?" The answer, it seems, is the need to prepare the country for the imminent loss of its AAA rating.?

    On the reconciliation side of the ledger is the news that Herman Van Rompuy, who, as president of the European Council, chairs summits, has invited Britain to join the treaty-drafting sessions as an "observer". British officials say that they will even have the right to speak (although not to vote). The readiness to take up the olive branch suggests that Britain recognises it made a mistake in casting a veto. At the same time, several of the countries that had abandoned Britain are now having qualms about the treaty.

    The EU bureaucracy has already produced a working draft of the new treaty. The aim is to have a version ready for a European summit at the end of January or early February, and to complete it in time for signature in March.?

    The arrangement is inelegant: the treaty involves all, or nearly all, of the EU's members, but is separate from the EU's current treaties. Still, this is not the first time such an intergovernmental treaty has been grafted on to the EU. The creation of the Schengen open-border region was originally set up through an intergovernmental treaty. But Schengen was something entirely new. The new euro-zone treaty must somehow amend a substantial body of existing legislation, without formally amending it. "It's a dog's dinner," says one diplomat.?

    The agreement will test the ingenuity of Hubert Legal, the aptly named legal adviser to the Council of Ministers. The French lawyer has already displayed a considerable degree of flexibility that has not been to the liking of all.?

    On the eve of the summit he had told a meeting of sherpas, the envoys of national leaders who were preparing the meeting, that an intergovernmental treaty would be nigh-on impossible. Any change would have to be done with the agreement of all 27 EU members. This oral opinion did much to convince British officials that they had a strong hand with which to demand concessions.?

    But the following night Mr Cameron's fellow leaders decided that they would not grant him a special protocol giving Britain a veto over key aspects of financial regulation. If Britain decided to block a change to the EU treaties, the euro zone would draft a new one, along with anybody else who wanted to participate. Mr Cameron asked Mr Legal to offer a view. To the surprise of many, Mr Legal said that such a roundabout arrangement would be possible after all. The second surprise for Mr Cameron was the alacrity with which all non-euro members announced their readiness to participate.?

    Later on, Mr Legal's close associates defended him from the charge that he had changed his opinion. Not at all, they claim; he had merely told the sherpas that a treaty at 27 was preferable. When the second-best option became the only avenue, he made it clear that there were options to try to make it work.?

    EU treaty negotiations are notoriously arduous, given the need to secure agreement among all member states, and the near-certainty that somebody will refuse to ratify. Ireland, which may be obliged to hold a referendum on the new arrangements, is among those countries arguing that it needs concessions if it is to win ratification.

    So Mr Legal and his team have come up with an innovation: under his draft, the treaty would come into force once nine members of the euro zone (ie, a simple majority) have ratified it. Euro-zone countries that do not ratify it will not be bound by its terms. But like Greece last month after it announced (then cancelled) a plan to hold a referendum, refuseniks would no doubt come under severe political pressure to choose whether they want to stay in or out of the euro. Countries outside the euro zone could voluntarily agree to be bound by the budget strictures of the new treaty.?

    A separate intergovernmental treaty introduces two complications, in particular.?

    First, the aim is to make it harder for politicians to meddle with proposals by the European Commission to place countries under the "excessive deficit procedure", under which they can face sanctions if they run annual deficits higher than 3% of GDP. Under current rules, this requires approval by a qualified (weighted) majority vote (QMV) of member states. The treaty seeks to change this vote to a "reverse QMV" procedure, whereby the proposals are accepted unless a qualified majority of ministers vote against it. How to change this without changing the existing EU treaty? Well, under the terms of the intergovernmental treaty, the minister would agree to behave as if the reverse QMV rule existed. In other words, it is a gentleman's agreement without real enforcement provisions.?

    Another difficulty is the role of the European Court of Justice. Germany wanted profligate states to be forced to account for themselves before the ECJ. Now the court will only have oversight of whether countries have correctly adopted EU-mandated rules on balanced budgets into their constitutions or other legal instruments. Moreover, because the new treaty is only intergovernmental, the European Commission will not be able to sue countries; instead, it will be up to member states to take each other to court, something that does not happen often.?

    The new draft treaty includes a paragraph in the preamble mentioning a separate treaty, on establishing a permanent euro-zone bail-out fund, known as the European Stability Mechanism (ESM). There is no link made in the operative paragraphs. Yet it is a reminder of the bargain that Germany demands of its euro-zone partners: it will stand ready to rescue countries in trouble (up to a point); in exchange, countries must accept far greater budgetary rigour.?

    The ESM treaty, still to be completed after multiple changes (see my post on how it undid last year's Franco-German deal at Deauville), has an interesting peculiarity: it too will enter into force with less than unanimity. But in this case it requires ratification by countries representing 90% of its capital (shared according to the ECB capital key). Moreover, in urgent cases decisions within the ESM can be taken by a majority of 85%.?

    All this sets up not just a two-tier EU (with Britain in the outer edge), but perhaps also a two-tier euro zone. On the current draft, Ireland will not be able to veto the new intergovernmental treaty. But wealthy Germany alone can block the ESM treaty, and can block decisions to grant aid to any country.?

    When in doubt, EU governments and Brussels officials love nothing more than wrangling over the texts of treaties. The question, as ever, is whether it impresses the markets. The answer so far is: no. ?

    We should expect 2012 to be even more difficult than 2011. Italy and Spain have large piles of debt to refinance in January; the most creditworthy states of the euro zone could soon start to be downgraded, weakening their already underpowered temporary rescue fund (the European Financial Stabiility Facility); the plan to leverage this fund is deflating like a botched souffl?; and so is the idea of boosting the IMF's resources to help the euro zone. ?

    For the euro zone to survive, a long list of things needs to go right?at a time when so much can go wrong. So enjoy the holidays while they last.?

    Source: http://www.economist.com/blogs/charlemagne/2011/12/euro-zones-treaties

    john wayne gacy amr jack del rio fired jack del rio fired made in america made in america icam

    Sunday, December 18, 2011

    Samsung Stratosphere review

    Once upon a time, in the not-so-distant past, Verizon was still in phase one of its LTE lineup, which consisted of nothing but 4.3-inch slate phones with questionable battery life and very little to stand out from the rest of the competition. Now that we're seeing the second generation of devices coming into the 4G fold, Big Red appears to be pushing choice -- not just in terms of size and feel, but price as well. The Pantech Breakout was the first to, well, break out of the mold, offering a smaller form factor for a much more reasonable cost. It was nothing to write home about, but the fact that it existed gave us hope that we'd see a slew of phones in the same price range, finally making high-speed connectivity a more affordable option.

    Shortly afterward, the Samsung Stratosphere sneaked up and snatched the spotlight away from Pantech, offering the very first QWERTY keyboard on an LTE-capable device for a cost similar to that of the Breakout. But when we first saw the phone, something felt eerily familiar: it looked almost exactly like the Epic 4G, a Galaxy S-era device that was released on Sprint's WiMAX lineup nearly a year and a half ago. Looks are one thing, but what about the internals? Does the brand new Stratosphere perform like an old phone, or does it give a completely fresh perspective on a 2010 classic? Read on for the full scoop.

    Continue reading Samsung Stratosphere review

    Samsung Stratosphere review originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Dec 2011 09:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


    Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/kTnhQW_xjDI/

    askew cory smoot do a barrel roll jimmy kimmel tilt do a barrel roll. florida state football

    For Mo. students, cellphone debate isn't academic (AP)

    ST. JAMES, Mo. ? The text was about something innocuous: A request to go to the county fair. It set off a highway pileup that took two lives, injured dozens and left two school buses and a pickup truck in a crumpled heap.

    As the nation debates a federal recommendation to eliminate cellphone use in cars, the high school band students from St. James who were involved in the wreck last year have already done it themselves. After losing one of their classmates, many of the teens made a vow: Using a cellphone behind the wheel is something they just won't do.

    The young man who was on the other end of the pivotal text exchange, who says he didn't know his friend was driving, is still haunted by the catastrophic result of what began as a simple message about their plans.

    "I pretty much feel like it was my fault," said the young man, who spoke to The Associated Press on condition that his name not be used because he fears retaliation from people who might blame him.

    He was texting with 19-year-old Daniel Schatz, who investigators say set off the accident by slamming into the back of a semi cab that had slowed for road construction. The buses then crashed into the wreckage. Schatz and a 15-year-old girl on one of the buses, Jessica Brinker, were killed instantly.

    The National Transportation Safety Board has cited that accident in its push to ban drivers from using cellphones ? even hands-free devices. That recommendation has already met with resistance from lawmakers around the country who fear an unprecedented reach into people's driving habits.

    But young people in St. James, a sleepy town of about 3,700 near the Mark Twain National Forest, have already changed their behavior.

    "The majority of us will refuse to text and drive because of this," said Ian Vannatta, 16, who was on one of the buses and is a new driver. "It's the difference between life and death."

    Emily Perona, now an 18-year-old senior, survived the bus crash with a broken pelvis despite sitting just one seat ahead of Brinker.

    "If a text or a call is that important, it should be no problem pulling over to the side of the road and then take care of what you need to," Perona said. "No life is worth texting your friend or anybody back while you're behind the wheel."

    The events of Aug. 5, 2010 ? spelled out in a chilling Missouri State Highway Patrol report ? convinced her of that.

    Vannatta and Perona were among about 50 St. James band students piled onto separate buses ? one for boys, the other for girls ? on their yearly pilgrimage to Six Flags St. Louis.

    Conditions were clear, though several stretches along the freeway were under repair. The buses made their way through two work zones before rolling up to a third at Gray Summit, about 40 miles southwest of St. Louis.

    Michael Crabtree, a 43-year-old trucker bound for St. Louis for a load, had just gotten onto Interstate 44 driving a semi cab without a trailer. Near Gray Summit, along a straight, uphill ribbon of highway, he slowed for road work when he saw in his rearview mirror a silver pickup barreling down on him. He braced for impact.

    The 2007 GMC driven by Schatz ? a former University of Missouri reserve quarterback and a Republican state lawmaker's son from nearby Sullivan ? hit Crabtree's cab at 55 mph.

    Tour bus driver Eugene Reed saw the wreck from behind, pulled over and scrambled out to warn other approaching drivers. That's when both of the St. James buses rolled by.

    The lead bus driver told investigators she straddled the eastbound lanes' center line to get around the tour bus. She glanced in the mirror to see what Reed was doing when her bus, carrying the girls in the band, rammed the pickup truck from behind.

    Perona recalls everything just shaking, then thinking, "God, help me." In a confused haze, she peered out the left window and saw the bus had tilted skyward.

    "It's almost like I blacked out," she remembers. "Then all of a sudden, I was struck."

    The second St. James bus had just crashed into the pileup with such force that its front cab broke through the back of the first and into the very back seat, where Brinker sat directly behind Perona.

    "I waited, and I prayed," Perona said.

    The violent impact sent the first bus up onto the pickup truck, crushing it, and even atop the semi cab, where the bus came to rest pointed up, almost like a rocket ready to launch.

    On the second bus, Vannatta recalls the impact as merely a blur.

    "All I remember is seeing the glass shatter, hitting the seat and hearing screaming," he said of the collision that sent him lurching into the seat ahead of him, leaving him with a compression spinal fracture that damaged four of his vertebrae.

    Retiree Dan Schrock, who was traveling with his wife from their home in Crescent, Okla., to visit their son in Cincinnati, saw debris flying and stopped to help.

    He found the front door of the lead bus too high off the ground for the girls to escape, and the back door was jammed against the pavement. Schrock and other rescuers improvised. Another man managed to climb in as Schrock stood outside a passenger window, ankle-deep in diesel fuel spilling from the bus, and helped lift the girls to safety.

    "They just looked like they were in shock," said Schrock, now 76. "They really weren't screaming or crying, just total shock."

    Vannatta remembers sitting along the roadside, where a hasty triage was unfolding: The unhurt in one group, those with minor injuries in another. "Those majorly hurt were shipped off as fast as they could," the teenager said.

    While both school bus drivers were charged with careless driving, their cases have not yet gone to court.

    In the end, it was Schatz's texting that caused the wreck, the patrol and the NTSB determined.

    The friend with whom Schatz was texting had known him since childhood. Their exchange that morning was about plans to spend the day at a county fair, the friend told AP. He said he thought Schatz was at work.

    Phone records obtained by the Highway Patrol showed that the friend first texted Schatz at 9:58 a.m. An exchange of 10 other texts followed. When the friend sent a final text at 10:09 a.m., Schatz never replied.

    "I just figured he got busy," said the young man. He learned later his friend died at about that moment.

    Perona waved away any blame for the wreck.

    "Everyone makes mistakes," said Perona, who has rebounded from the broken hip and a damaged nerve that until last August left her with a dragging foot, forcing her to drop out of band her senior year as a clarinet player because she couldn't march. "You just need to learn from them."

    Trumpet-playing Vannatta, who before the tragedy had never been in a wreck, has taken caution to another level. He puts the phone away when behind the wheel ? no exceptions. And he avoids the freeway in his Ford F-150 pickup, taking an outer road to his warehouse job some 15 minutes from home.

    Around St. James, the NTSB's call for a total ban on behind-the-wheel cellphone use has blunted the community's efforts to move on from losing a girl whose burial plot includes plaid pink socks ? homage to Brinker's always-colorful attire that friends say matched her cheery character.

    "I still go to her grave on occasion, where I pray and talk to her," Vannatta said. The tragedy "is something that will stay with this community for a very, very long time. It's going to and has changed all of our lives."

    ___

    Salter reported from St. Louis.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111217/ap_on_re_us/us_texting_while_driving_town_s_grief

    payroll tax payroll tax lady gaga marry the night video lady gaga marry the night video pac 12 championship game pac 12 championship game bobby valentine

    Saturday, December 17, 2011

    Stock market down 3 percent for the week

    After an early rally, the Dow fell 2.42 points Friday to close at 11866 as worries resurfaced about a breakup of the Euro

    An early rally faded on the stock market Friday, leaving indexes down about 3 percent for the week as worries resurfaced about a breakup of the euro. BlackBerry maker Research in Motion plunged after slashing its forecast for holiday sales.

    Skip to next paragraph

    The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 2.42 points Friday, less than 0.1 percent, at 11,866.93. It had been up as many as 99 points after the Italian government won a confidence vote on austerity measures. It turned mixed around midday as Fitch warned that it might downgrade the debt of Italy, Spain and four other countries that use the euro.

    Materials and industrial companies rose, signaling that traders expect the economic recovery to remain on track. Utilities, health care and consumer staples companies lagged the market as traders sold stocks that are considered to be safer when the economy is weak.

    The Dow Jones industrial average broke a three-day slump Thursday on news that claims for unemployment benefits plunged last week and measures of manufacturing in the Northeast improved dramatically. The Dow lost 360 points over the first three days of the week as investors questioned whether Europe's agreement to closer coordinate fiscal policy would be enough to save the euro from a catastrophic breakup.

    Some analysts believe nervousness about Europe this fall and winter pushed stock prices lower than their fair value. Investment adviser Uri Landesman, president of Platinum Partners, expects stocks to rise into next year because of the growing likelihood that economic news and European headlines will remain positive.

    "The odds are, the news is going to be better than the market is discounting," Landesman said. He said the market is near the low end of its recent trading range, and a dose of positive news could set off a mini-rally. Any market moves next week could be sharp as trading volume thins out before the Christmas holiday, Landesman said.

    The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 3.89, or 0.3 percent, to 1,219.65. The Nasdaq composite index rose 14.32, or 0.6 percent, to 2,555..33 The Dow is down 2.6 percent for the week; the S&P 2.8 percent. The Nasdaq lost 3.5 percent.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury note plunged to 1.85 percent from 1.93 percent earlier Friday after the government said consumer prices were unchanged last month, suggesting that inflation remains low. Low inflation makes bonds more attractive because it doesn't diminish the buying power of the fixed return a bond provides over time.

    The gains were broad. Eight of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index rose, led by materials and industrial companies. U.S. factories in some regions have seen shipments and orders rise this month, according to two surveys released Wednesday. Materials companies are benefiting from soaring commodity prices.

    Research In Motion Ltd. plummeted 11 percent after the company said late Thursday that new phones seen as critical to its future will be delayed until late next year. RIM also is taking a big loss on unsold tablet computers and predicted that its BlackBerry sales will fall sharply during the holiday sales season.

    Online game developer Zynga Inc. fell 5 percent in its first day of trading on the Nasdaq. The maker of Farmville's initial public offering was priced late Thursday at $10 per share, raising $1 billion. That means the San Francisco company can boast the biggest Internet IPO since Google Inc. first offered shares in 2004.

    Among the other companies making big moves:

    ? New York-area cable TV provider Cablevision Systems Corp. plunged 9 percent following the sudden departure of its chief operating officer, Tom Rutledge.

    ? Adobe Systems Inc. jumped 6.6 percent after the software maker reported earnings and revenues that were far better than what analysts had expected. Analyst Walter Pritchard at Citigroup said the quarter was a "blow-out when most expected weakness."

    ___

    AP Business Writer Joshua Freed contributed to this story.

    Follow Daniel Wagner at www.twitter.com/wagnerreports.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Z8UJ-8V1x7E/Stock-market-down-3-percent-for-the-week

    teddy roosevelt kim richards rita hayworth rita hayworth lakers rumors kellie pickler alfa romeo giulietta

    Local budgets: The crisis that didn't happen (yet)

    State revenues have rebounded, and there was no municipal bond default crisis. But given the furor over public pensions and labor compensation more generally in 2011, the coming year could be one of conflict in state capitols and city halls.

    The year?s top story in state and local government was ?hundreds of billions of dollars? in municipal bond defaults.? Oh wait, that didn?t happen.?

    Skip to next paragraph TaxVox

    The Tax Policy Center is a joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution. The Center is made up of nationally recognized experts in tax, budget, and social policy who have served at the highest levels of government. TaxVox is the Tax Policy Center's tax and budget policy blog.

    Recent posts

    It was ?states coming to Congress as mendicants, seeking relief from the consequences of their choices.?? No, although the Dickensian imagery may fit with the holiday decorations, that didn?t happen either.? To the contrary, governors spent much of the year fretting about federal inaction on the budget and debt limit.

    What did happen is that state revenues rebounded.? After falling further and faster than in any recession since the Great Depression, taxes started coming back in early 2010.? They continued growing through the third quarter of 2011.?

    However, tax revenues still haven?t regained peak 2008 levels.? The latest data also suggest growth may be moderating, and some states are reporting monthly collections below projections.?

    2011 was also the year that local property taxes finally dropped.? The resilience of property tax revenues until now may seem puzzling given 30 plus percent housing price declines.? The explanation is that it typically takes 2 to 3 years for lower prices to show up as lower assessed values and property tax bills.?

    In the meantime, some local governments have been able to raise property tax rates to compensate for depressed home values.? Others benefited from lags in adjustment from home prices to tax revenues, just as homeowners benefitted from these delays in boom years.

    The other big story of 2011 is state and local government job cuts.? Although the private sector added jobs in 2011, state and local governments have been shedding them since 2008.? Overall, state and local governments have cut 640,000 jobs (3.2 percent of payroll) since August 2008 and they show no signs of hiring again anytime soon.?

    What?s next for 2012?? Making New Year?s predictions is a mug?s game, but there are a few trends worth watching.?

    First, chickens will come home to roost.? It?s hard to imagine voters will fail to notice cumulative effects of real cuts to state and local government spending per capita in 2009 and 2010.? Tracking government outputs and service quality is always tricky.? However, news reports suggest longer waitlists, uninvestigated crime reports, shorter school years, etc.? If the economy does not pick up steam and voters continue to resist tax increases, we can expect more of the same in 2012.

    Of course, there may have been room for efficiency improvements before the recession.? But state and local governments specialize in exactly the kinds of labor-intensive services (education, health care, public safety) that are notoriously resistant to productivity gains.? What?s more, voters tend to reward politicians for more ? not fewer ? teachers in the classroom, cops on the street, and so forth.

    Next, there will be more cracks in the edifice of federal-state-local government cooperation.? Governors may not have come begging to Washington in 2011, but they did implore Congress? super committee to leave states alone as it sought to stabilize the federal debt.? Now, although the committee?s failure triggered automatic spending cuts starting in 2013, these cuts will exempt Medicaid and other big ticket items.? Still, communities that depend on federal wages, contracts, or grants will be affected.

    Finally, state and local governments will continue attempting to tackle their long run fiscal challenges ? pensions and retiree health costs ? which happen to look a lot like the federal government?s own challenges.? New government accounting standards to be released in June 2012 may accelerate this trend.? Given the furor over public pensions and labor compensation more generally in 2011, this could be another year of conflict in state capitols and city halls.

    In other words, fasten your seatbelts, it?s going to be a bumpy 2012.

    Originally posted at the Brookings Institution Up Front Blog.

    The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on taxvox.taxpolicycenter.org.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/D82vvSll_d4/Local-budgets-The-crisis-that-didn-t-happen-yet

    vanessa bryant vanessa bryant hurd hurd christopher hitchens ron paul 2012 extremely loud and incredibly close

    Spector Pro 2011


    The features found in parental control and monitoringutilities cover a very wide spectrum. They all aim to protect kids from Internet dangers, but the degree to which they monitor online activity varies. Way out in the ultraviolet end of the spectrum you find products strongly focused on monitoring, like Spector Pro 2011 ($99.95/direct). With this type of utility in place, absolutely everything that happens on the child's computer is recorded.

    What's New
    I reviewed an earlier version of this product, Spector Pro 2009 ($99.95 direct, 4 stars), several years ago. When I first installed the 2011 edition, I hardly saw any difference. I checked in with the company to learn just what's new.

    Just about all of the improvements are things you can't see, it turns out. This version is updated for efficient in-program activity capture in all the latest browsers and chat clients. It's also up to date with the latest versions of Facebook and MySpace?at least, until they change again.

    SpectorSoft CEO Jeani Park explained, "Our recorder does a better job of capturing everything, on a broader set of applications, in shorter timeframes. So, the recorder component is more stable, more accurate, and faster, across more applications." Park continued, "This may sound simple, but it isn't. Engineers have to reverse engineer the monitored applications to understand how they operate, so we can be sure to faithfully record, play back, and present all activity within that monitored application."

    This edition enhances the product's ability to run in stealth mode, undetected. Its screen capture feature is "triggered in more granular time elements, and saved locally for fast retrieval and playback." Once again, these enhancements aren't visible.

    Stealth Install
    During installation of the program you must agree that you'll only install it on a computer that you own, and that you'll inform those using the computer that they're being watched. Nothing stops you from lying, though. You could definitely use this monitoring power for evil, spying on a spouse or a co-worker. I'll assume, though, that you don't plan to do that. Maybe you'll even enable the option to warn users at logon that monitoring software is active.

    PC Pandora 7.0 ($109.95 direct, 3.5 stars) displays a much more detailed privacy agreement during installation. However, users accustomed to clicking past EULAs probably won't even notice it.

    A wary kid won't find an obvious monitoring process in Task Manager, or in a list of startup programs. The program filename is randomized for each installation, as are names of the data folder and data files, and even the extension for data files. Clearly stealth is important.

    To bring up the reporting module, you press a special key combination that you define yourself. This brings up a password dialog that doesn't mention Spector Pro. Unless you enter the user-defined password that's as far as you'll get. More stealth here! PC Pandora and WebWatcher ($169.95 direct, 4 stars) use a similar pairing of special keystroke combination and password for access.

    User Profiles
    By default, Spector Pro's settings apply equally to all users of the system. If you want different handling for any particular Windows account, perhaps your own, you simply associate a new user profile with that account and change its settings.

    For each profile, you can enable, disable, or fine-tune any of the ten areas that Spector Pro tracks. There's also an option to set a weekly schedule and monitor only during specific times. This might make sense if you use the computer during the day but give the kids access after work hours.

    WebWatcher doesn't support multiple profiles. With PC Pandora you can turn overall monitoring on or off for specific Windows accounts.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/O0GDBN7f044/0,2817,2397596,00.asp

    nhl realignment nhl realignment long island serial killer kristin chenoweth country music awards new earth light year

    Friday, December 16, 2011

    Miley Cyrus Shoots Down Boob Job Rumors


    In a word: No. That's basically Miley Cyrus' response to rumors that she has undergone breast enhancement surgery.

    The chatter took off yesterday after Star Magazine published quotes from supposed professionals, all of whom studied Miley's cleavage at a special CNN event this week and concluded that she most likely got a boob job.

    Miley for CNNFar From Comfortable

    "Thank you for the compliment but these babies are all mine," the singer has Tweeted. "I wish they'd realize you don't have to be fake to be beautiful!"

    We don't exactly feel comfortable discussing a 19-year old's chest, so you may study the photos above (left, which prompted this rumor; right, which was snapped in July 2010) and decide for yourself:

    Did Miley get a boob job?

    Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/miley-cyrus-shoots-down-boob-job-rumors/

    wale weather denver weather denver ambition dorothy rodham rick hendrick plane crash marco rubio

    Wednesday, December 7, 2011

    Video: Mixing words



    >>> back now with new developments in the child sex abuse scandal at penn state . tonlt, there is fresh fallout from jerry sandusky 's revealing new interview. and also new questions about sandusky 's behavior in the months leading up to his being charged. that story from nbc's national investigative correspondent michael isikoff .

    >> well, he was coming to me with a concern.

    >> reporter: it is the exchange people here at penn state are still talking about, accused child molester jerry sandusky needs help from his lawyer to explain that he's not sexually attracted to young children. he stumbled on that simple question when asked about it last month by nbc's bob costas . given a second chance by "the new york times" --

    >> i was saying, what in the world is this question? if i say no, i'm not attracted to boys, that's not the truth because --

    >> reporter: sandusky 's lawyer interrupts and coaches him off camera.

    >> boys, girls --

    >> you're attracted because --

    >> i enjoy, that's what i -- i enjoy spending time with young people , i enjoy spending time with people.

    >> reporter: his lawyer says sandusky gave the interview so people could learn more about the positive aspects of sandusky 's life. but many legal analysts say his attempts to explain himself in public while facing 40 counts of child sex abuse seems an unusual strategy, and some of what he revealed could complicate his defense.

    >> the rule of thumb for all attorneys is basically do not have them talk on camera to anyone.

    >> reporter: sandusky said he stayed in touch with some of his alleged victims, even inviting one of them to dinner after a local paper reported on the grand jury investigation.

    >> i had dinner with one of the, you know -- the summer, his father and he were in my home.

    >> reporter: but the lawyer for that lelged vict edalleged victim, victi m six, said when he got sandusky 's dinner invitation, his client was so nervous, he went straight to the police.

    >> one of the questions it raises in my mind is this an effort on his part to tamper with witnesses, was it or wasn't it.

    >> reporter: his lawyer said today that two of his alleged victims were actually at that dinner, but nothing improper took place. it was, he said, totally social in nature and pleasant. the lawyer for victim six says his client only attended the dinner because police encouraged him to. they also asked him to report back, which he did and he's now prepared to testify at a crucial hearing in sandusky 's case next week. lester?

    >> mike isikoff, thanks.

    >>> budget cuts and pandemonium across

    Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45543660/

    au pair trinidad trinidad jeff bezos slither slither schweddy balls