Saturday, December 31, 2011

Progressive putt-putt golf tourney planned by Canton Main Street

Canton Main Street will host its second ?Glacial Golf? fundraiser on Saturday, Jan. 21, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
The event is a progressive putt-putt golf tournament that takes place at six local bars, with prizes awarded for Best Score, Best Dressed Team, Best Golf Hole Design and Best Team Name. Brew ?N Cue, Generations Bar and Grill, Jack?s, Moore?s Pub, Official Time Out and White Oaks Sports Bar will each host golfers as they attempt to navigate miniature golf holes designed and constructed by the establishments.
Adding to the fun, participants can purchase up to two mulligans, which allow them the chance for a ?do-over? of a poor golf shot.
?It was lots of fun last year,? says Missy Towery, who is helping to coordinate the event for Canton Main Street.? ?It?s a great way to spend a cold winter afternoon with your friends, and some of the holes that bar owners came up with were a real challenge to get through. Everybody had a great time, and we raised a considerable amount of money to help with downtown area signage, once the new streetscape construction is completed.?
Registration will begin at Official Time Out at 11 a.m.? Lunch specials will be available, and the tournament will officially start at noon. Transportation will be available between Generations Bar & Grill and the downtown area taverns.
The cost for a four-person team to enter is $60.
Anyone interested in taking part in the tournament can register at any of the participating establishments, or by bring the registration fee to 45 E. Side Square, Suite 303.
Winners will be announced at the end of the tournament at Generations Bar & Grill.
This year, Canton Main Street hopes to raise as much or more in registration fees and mulligan sales, which will be used to support more projects in the downtown area.
The Main Street program is part of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a movement focused upon restoring and revitalizing downtowns throughout the country, through restoration of historic buildings and their facades; developing events and activities that will draw the residents of the community downtown; economic development that will help businesses located in the downtown area, or bring new businesses downtown; and developing a comprehensive design for the look and feel of the downtown area.
For more information on Canton Main Street, or Glacial Golf, please call (309) 647-2677.

Source: http://www.cantondailyledger.com/news/x545135877/Progressive-putt-putt-golf-tourney-planned-by-Canton-Main-Street

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Expedia touts verified hotel reviews

By Harriet Baskas, msnbc.com contributor

Travelers considering using Expedia.com to book a room at the three-star Circus Circus Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas will find rates starting at $44 and descriptive copy promising ?newly remodeled? rooms and ?world-class circus acts.?

Sounds fun. But under the ?Guest Reviews? tab, potential guests will also find two recent reviews calling the hotel ?not the best? and ?more like average average.?

Could those write-ups be the handiwork of a couple of clowns from the competition down the road?

Not likely. At least not anymore.

In a move designed to make better use of its growing database of millions of traveler-generated hotel reviews and assure users that its reviews are not faked ??an issue other sites are dealing with ? Expedia has rolled out a new hotel booking platform with a revamped ?Expedia Verified Reviews? program.

The enhanced program allows travelers to filter hotel searches in new ways (for example, by proximity to a sports stadium) and confirms that each review ? good or bad ??was written by an Expedia customer who actually booked and stayed at that hotel.

With a new review form that rolled out last week, Expedia is also gathering more information.

?We?re starting to collect interest information,? said John Kim, Expedia?s senior vice president of global products. ?We get a lot of requests for reviews that would be useful for people with dogs or for hotels that would be good for foodies. The new form we send out after a hotel stay allows customers to write reviews for a specific audience.?

The verification process may narrow the pool of reviewers, Kim said, ?but we can get high quality, narrow content that is useful because we have so many users.?

Sites such as TripAdvisor, recently spun off from Expedia, that allow user reviews was a transformational travel achievement, said Bjorn Hanson, divisional dean of New York University?s Preston Robert Tisch Center for Hospitality, Tourism, and Sports Management. ?Now the idea of verified reviews is a major enhancement,? he said.

Hanson notes that verifying a review doesn?t prevent unfair or unreasonable reviews, but ?it does prevent the work of unscrupulous competitors and consumers unhappy with a prior experience with that brand from posting a baseless review.

?It doesn?t make TripAdvisor look bad,? said Hanson. ?It makes Expedia look like it?s advancing the state of the art, which is a competitive advantage.??

More on Overhead Bin

Find more by Harriet Baskas on?Stuck at The Airport.com?and follow her on?Twitter.

Source: http://overheadbin.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9765956-expedia-touts-verified-hotel-reviews

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Great apes make sophisticated decisions

ScienceDaily (Dec. 29, 2011) ? Max-Planck-researchers have shown that chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans make decisions carefully.

Chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas and bonobos make more sophisticated decisions than was previously thought. Great apes weigh their chances of success, based on what they know and the likelihood to succeed when guessing, according to a study of MPI researcher Daniel Haun, published on December 21 in the online journal PLoS ONE. The findings may provide insight into human decision-making as well.

The authors of the study, led by Daniel Haun of the Max Planck Institutes for Psycholinguistics (Nijmegen) and Evolutionary Anthropology (Leipzig), investigated the behaviour of all four non-human great ape species. The apes were presented with two banana pieces: a smaller one, which was always reliably in the same place, and a larger one, which was hidden under one of multiple cups, and therefore the riskier choice.

The researchers found that the apes' choices were regulated by their uncertainty and the probability of success for the risky choice, suggesting sophisticated decision-making. Apes chose the small piece more often when they where uncertain where the large piece was hidden. The lower their chances to guess correctly, the more often they chose the small piece.

The researchers also found that the apes went for the larger piece -- and risked getting nothing at all -- no less than 50% of the time. This risky decision-making increased to nearly 100% when the size difference between the two banana pieces was largest. While all four species demonstrated sophisticated decision making strategies, chimpanzees and orangutans were overall more likely to make risky choices relative to gorillas and bonobos. The precise reason for this discrepancy remains unknown.

Haun concludes: "Our study adds to the growing evidence that the mental life of the other great apes is much more sophisticated than is often assumed."

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Journal Reference:

  1. Daniel B. M. Haun, Christian Nawroth, Josep Call. Great Apes' Risk-Taking Strategies in a Decision Making Task. PLoS ONE, 2011; 6 (12): e28801 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028801

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111229091636.htm

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Steven Tyler, Erin Brady Engaged?

Aerosmith?s Steven Tyler is rumored to be engaged after a massive ring was spotted on his girlfriend?s finger. Did he actually pop the question? Love could be in the air for one of the biggest rock stars in the world. Sources claim that Tyler and his girlfriend Erin Brady are more than just a creepy older couple. In fact, word has it that they are set to be married. TMZ broke the story earlier today that the 63-year-old singer did in fact propose to his 38-year-old girlfriend. I have to admit that he won me back a little bit with his work on Idol. I think he is a good fit for the show and doesn?t really come off as old and washed up as I thought he would. See the photos over at TMZ. What?s it like to be a princess at Christmas? Check out these photos to find out ? Pop Sugar. Here are some nice pics of the new upcoming Spiderman movie ? Celebuzz. Okay this is weird. Here are some old pictures of Khloe Kardashian as a blonde ? RadarOnline. This is fake, but awesome anyway. Taylor Lautner coming out as gay on a faux-PEOPLE Magazine [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/49mp24ST5L4/

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2012 in preview: College golf

Our Asher Wildman looks ahead to the spring season in college golf, with plenty of questions that will need to be answered on the men's and women's sides.

? ? ?

Can Texas' men keep it up?

With the way the fall season ended for Texas, it will be interesting to see if the Longhorns can continue to look unbeatable. Texas won its last three events by an average of 20.6 strokes. With the top two players in the game - Dylan Frittelli and Jordan Spieth - just how good is head coach John Fields' team?

? ? ?

Can Vanderbilt produce a more exciting women's national championship?

At times, last year?s women's national championship at Traditions Golf Club in Bryan, Texas, was less than exciting. Chalk it up to a course layout that covered a lot of ground and few opportunities for crowds to get excited about women?s golf. After the Mason Rudolph Fall Preview at Legends Club, however, it seems that won?t be a problem this year. The Franklin, Tenn., layout is viewer-friendly, and Vanderbilt head coach Greg Allen seems serious about drumming up some excitement for this year?s championship. We?ll see if he delivers.

? ? ?

Can the Alabama women finish the season positively this year?

The Crimson Tide were one of the dominant teams of the fall in 2010, yet they fell short of expectations during the postseason. True, Alabama won the NCAA East Regional, but the team also finished a disappointing T-8 at the NCAA Championship. After giving a convincing chase to UCLA at the Fall Preview, Alabama looks to be the team with the best chance to stand between the Bruins and a title defense at the national championship ? as long as there isn?t a repeat of last season.

? ? ?

How will UCLA's women fare without Stephanie Kono?

The Bruins enter the spring semester without their most decorated player, senior Stephanie Kono. The three-time first-team All-American turned professional after finishing T-9 at LPGA Q-School to earn her card. While UCLA won the Fall Preview without the aid of Kono, her leadership will be sorely missed when the nerves kick in this postseason. Despite the loss, the Bruins remain the deepest team in women's college golf. That's saying something.

? ? ?

How will Oklahoma State's men fare without Peter Uihlein?

What will Oklahoma State look like without All-American Peter Uihlein? Well, much like it did this fall. The Cowboys, who enter the spring at No. 23 in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings, finished 3rd-10th-9th in three starts without Uihlein, the 2011 Hogan Award winner. Somewhat alarming, to be sure, and coach Mike McGraw knows he?ll need to get more from everyone in the lineup. Yet the question remains, for this year and next: In the wake of Uihlein?s absence, who now is the leader of this team?

? ? ?

Who?s the next freshman to break through?

The list of contenders is lengthy. It could be Georgia Tech?s Ollie Schniederjans, whose best result in the fall was a T-6 at The Brickyard. Or it could be TCU?s sensational Julien Brun, who has ascended to No. 12 in the Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings. Or maybe it?s USC?s Anthony Paolucci, who has two top-20 finishes in elite starts in the fall. This much is apparent: The depth of talent in this class is the best we?ve seen in years, maybe decades.

? ? ?

Will Oregon's men continue their great play in the spring?

Oregon won two tournaments outright and shared a third title, with Cal at the Alister MacKenzie in the fall. Coach Casey Martin had high expectations for his team a year ago, but the Ducks struggled mightily. This year, with most of the same team back, the Ducks have rebounded to be a top-5 team. Is Oregon a legit national contender or just a team that got off to a hot start?

? ? ?

Are Arkansas' men being overlooked?

The Razorbacks won four times in five starts, yet we still rarely talk about this SEC team. With Texas' dominating victories in strong fields and Oregon's great play, Arkansas' fall was overshadowed. Coach Brad McMakin has made Arkansas a legitimate national contender, and one that will contend for the No. 1 overall ranking in the spring.

? ? ?

Are the Ospreys for real?

Not only is North Florida ranked fifth in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings, but the Ospreys also are the top-ranked program in Florida. That's quite an accomplishment for UNF's Scott Schroeder, who has to battle for recruits with Florida State, Florida and UCF. Getting Sean Dale back in the lineup has been a huge plus for the Ospreys, but the rest of the team is playing well, too. Kevin Phelan and Kevin Aylwin along with Dale are all ranked in top 50 individually and are helping lead the Ospreys to their best year in school history.

? ? ?

Will the Lady Blue Devils get back in the winner's circle?

Last year, Duke failed to win a tournament. The last time the Lady Blue Devils won was March 28, 2010, at the Liz Murphey. After 27-plus years leading Duke, Dan Brooks had his first season without a tournament title last year. There is no doubt that Duke is a talented team, but not having won in more than a year has to be eating at Brooks. For years, it seemed to be a foregone conclusion that Duke would intimidate at every event, but now it's tough to think that Duke could go back-to-back seasons without a "W."

Source: http://www.golfweek.com/news/2011/dec/27/2012-preview-college-golf/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

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Putin resists rerun; Kremlin ideologist out (AP)

MOSCOW ? Facing a swelling wave of public anger over fraud-tainted elections, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Tuesday rejected demands for a rerun of the vote, while the Kremlin reassigned the architect of his tightly controlled political system to a job with no apparent domestic political duties.

The order by President Dmitry Medvedev to make Vladislav Surkov a deputy prime minister in charge of economic modernization was variously interpreted as a sign that leaders recognize the need for significant reform and as a cosmetic move with little meaning.

Allegations of fraud in the Dec. 4 national parliamentary election sparked a wave of protests unprecedented in post-Soviet Russia, including two vast rallies in Moscow that attracted tens of thousands. Putin, who was president in 2000-2008, seeks to return to the Kremlin in elections in March, and the protests have undermined his image as the inevitable winner.

Putin and Medvedev have sought to dilute the protests by rolling out a set of proposed political reforms, but have firmly resisted the protest leaders' main demand that the parliament elections be annulled and rerun. Opposition forces also say the proposed reforms are too little and too late.

In a meeting with supporters Tuesday, Putin again took a tough line on the election, saying "there can't be any talk about reviewing it" ? a position likely to lead to more protests.

The protesters have not only denounced the elections, but the entire so-called "managed democracy" political system implemented under Putin, under which parties that do not take their cues from the Kremlin or United Russia have been forced to the far sidelines.

Surkov, whose formal title had been deputy chief of the presidential administration, was seen as the developer of that system. He also is believed to be the creator of the intensely pro-Putin Nashi youth movement despised by the opposition.

Former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin, a close Putin associate, was quoted by the state news agency RIA Novosti as saying The decision about the departure of Surkov, which I understand was made by Putin and Medvedev, is a very serious order for the renovation of the political system."

But in the view of Mikhail Prokhorov, the tycoon and New Jersey Nets owner who plans to run against Putin in March, "what happened today is no more than the moving of people from one office to another."

Putin on Tuesday urged his supporters to ensure fairness of the presidential vote to prevent any possible criticism, and discussed details of his proposal to put web cameras at all polling stations. He also suggested that all ballot boxes be made transparent.

"As a candidate, I don't need any vote-rigging," Putin said. "I want the election to be maximally transparent. I want to rely on people's will."

Alexei Navalny, an anti-corruption lawyer and popular blogger who has been a key driving force behind the latest protests, vowed that up to a million demonstrators would take to the streets before the presidential election.

Although Putin is seen as still the strongest candidate in the presidential elections, recent polls suggest his support his not enough to win an outright victory in the first round.

His United Russia party retained a slim majority in parliament in the December elections, but lost about 25 percent of its seats. The party's electoral performance, which protesters say would have been even weaker in an honest count, has galvanized opposition forces that were long marginalized under Putin.

___

Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_putin

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Insight: Violence creeping into Mexican capital (Reuters)

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) ? In a nation wracked by drug violence, this sprawling capital city of more than 20 million has been an oasis of relative peace. But the key to that calm - an informal truce among rival gangs - may be cracking.

On a sunny afternoon this month, a group of gunmen drove into a slum in the north of Mexico City, the streets packed with shoppers and children leaving school. In plain sight, the killers lined three crack cocaine dealers against a wall and shot them in the head with AK-47 assault rifles. They then forced another two men into a black van and drove away past terrified onlookers.

The killings, allegedly carried out by the bloodthirsty La Familia cartel of the central state of Michoacan, were the latest sign that the drug violence raging across large swathes of Mexico is creeping into the capital.

The drug lords have long kept a lid on turf wars in Mexico City. But a generation of upstart gangsters has this year carried out a series of massacres and decapitations on the city edges. Cells of these newer cartels have also become more active in kidnapping and shaking down local businessmen.

In the greater Mexico City area, police have reported more than 300 gangland killings this year. The carnage includes the massacre of a family of five in the Tlalpan area, a decapitation close to the wealthy business district of Santa Fe, and two headless bodies hanged from bridge in Huixquilucan in the west of the city. The death toll is up from last year, when 260 murders in the area were blamed on rival gangs.

Mexico City includes the inner Federal District, home to almost 9 million people, and another 12 million in outer suburbs and slums governed by the State of Mexico.

"A cartel crime wave here would be catastrophic," says Luis de la Barreda, head of ICESI, a Mexican think-tank on crime. "Mexico City is not only the home of all the country's major institutions, it is an image that is constantly in everyone's minds."

The capital, to be sure, remains one of the safest parts of the nation. Ciudad Juarez on the U.S. border was last year the most murderous city on the planet. The tourist resort of Acapulco has been hollowed out by violence. Even the affluent business city of Monterrey has been ravaged. But the Federal District boasts a lower homicide rate than many U.S. cities.

Many wealthy Mexicans have retreated here from violent enclaves, setting up new businesses and helping to boost property prices. Poorer families have fled from the bloodshed around the country to shanty towns on the city edges.

But there are signs the capital could go the way of other regions. The Guadalupe Victoria neighborhood - where gangsters shot dead the three alleged crack dealers in broad daylight - is typical of the slums the new cartels are moving into.

It is in the far north of the metropolitan sprawl, beneath shanty towns that spiral up dusty hills, a two-hour commute from the heart of the capital. The victims represented a problem relatively new to Mexico - a growing population of addicts and dealers who sell rocks of crack cocaine for as little as 30 pesos ($2.15).

Although the gunmen shot the alleged dealers right in front of a row of shops, store owners are too scared to talk about it. Most denied seeing anything, saying they were busy or their view was blocked.

TRUCE

Until a few years ago, when kidnappings and armed robbery were the biggest threats, Mexico City was seen as one of the most dangerous spots in the country. But it has enjoyed a relative calm while other regions were engulfed by turf wars triggered when President Felipe Calderon went after the cartels in late 2006.

The capital even seemed to be a safe place for the families of gangsters. Vicente Carrillo Leyva, son of the Juarez cartel founder, was arrested in 2009 as he exercised in the park of a plush suburb wearing an Abercrombie & Fitch jogging suit. Vicente Zambada, an heir to the rival Sinaloa cartel, was nabbed the same year driving through the upscale district of Lomas de Pedregal.

While cartel leaders kept money, houses and families in the capital, they were extremely cautious about unleashing violence on its streets. Security analysts say gangsters had a tacit understanding not to set off alarm bells in the heartland of Mexico's political power.

The murder rate tells the story. In the last three years, there were between 8 and 10 homicides for every 100,000 residents of the Federal District, police figures show. That is about half the national rate and much lower than U.S. cities like New Orleans, Baltimore and Detroit.

Meanwhile, Sinaloa state, the cradle of the drugs trade, had 81 murders per 100,000 last year. Ciudad Juarez, across from El Paso, Texas, had a horrifying rate of 272 homicides per 100,000.

The truce in the capital is now threatened by the intensity of turf wars elsewhere and the emergence of three cartels of a new ilk: La Familia, the widely-feared Zetas and a criminal cell called Mano con Ojos - or Hand With Eyes. These groups have all become major players, radicalized amid the fury of the drug war.

Many kingpins of these new cartels were once assassins and use violence as a basic form of communication instead of a last resort. The three groups have been fighting over turf in states surrounding the capital for years. Recent violence shows they may be spreading this war into the periphery of the city.

Police have hit back by raiding dozens of safe houses, busting gangsters holed up with guns, drugs and money. In some of these houses, usually rented properties in residential streets, agents have rescued terrified kidnap victims.

In one case, detectives arrested 14 men and women who allegedly formed a cell carrying out kidnappings for the Zetas cartel in the northern parts of the city. Detectives say the gangsters always demanded ransom payments in dollars and collected them at passenger bridges. One victim was a pregnant woman. The criminals cut off two of her fingers and sent them to her husband, in a box to pressure for the ransom.

Another gangster arrested in Mexico City was a leader of the Mano con Ojos gang called Oscar Osvaldo Garcia, nabbed by police in August. Garcia, a 36-year old former Mexican marine, allegedly spent many years working as a hit man for older kingpins of the Sinaloa Cartel.

But his bosses were taken down as part of Calderon's war on drugs and he began to head his own operations, recruiting young men from the Mexico City area to sell drugs, kidnap and kill.

TRAINED KILLERS

His career path underlines a central problem with Calderon's offensive. As the older kingpins are captured or killed, bloodthirsty lieutenants have risen up to fight over their empires.

"I was trained to kill," Garcia told police in videotaped testimony. He acknowledged murdering not only rival gangsters but dozens of witnesses. "They were innocent but they had seen too much. They had seen too many faces, and they had to go."

The attorney general of Mexico State, Alfredo Castillo, concedes the gangsters extort businesses in the area, a tactic of increasing concern across Mexico.

Rather than going after big companies or foreign ventures, they hit local vendors - taco stands, hardware stores and clothes stalls on the edge of the capital. Police arrested four such extortionists on December 12, alleging they were members of La Familia and shaking down businesses for 500 pesos ($36) a week each in the Cuautitlan area in the north of Mexico City.

Most of the affluent neighborhoods have not been affected. In trendy areas such as La Condesa, residents enjoy cappuccinos, sushi restaurants and Irish pubs with no sign of gunmen or soldiers.

Hugh Carroll, an offshore investment banker from Scotland, has lived here almost 10 years and hasn't felt any personal effect from the drug war. "I tend to operate in business areas, which are all very safe," Carroll says. "The worst thing that ever happened to me is that I was mugged a few years ago, but that can happen anywhere in the world."

Mexico's biggest security company, Multisistemas de Seguridad, still considers Mexico City a relatively low risk area. "In places close to the border such as Tamaulipas, there are real warlike conditions, but we have seen nothing like that here," says company spokesman Gabriel Avalos. "The incursion of these cartels is worrying, but it hasn't yet had a major effect on violence in the city."

Avalos says the Federal District's government, led by Mayor Marcelo Ebrard, has helped keep wealthier neighborhoods safe. After visiting London, Ebrard set out to install 8,000 cameras by 2012, when he leaves office. These eyes in the sky are on many street corners in plush districts and have been used to catch muggers and other criminals.

The Federal District's police officers are more effective than those in much of Mexico. While the rest of the country has different state and municipal police forces that often fight each other, the Federal District has a unified force.

"If other Mexican police forces were to follow this model it would be a positive development," says Jon French, a former U.S. State Department official who runs a Mexico City-based security consultancy.

With the city still relatively secure, Mexicans continue to take refuge here.

Diego Viloro moved from his native town of Uruapan, Michoacan to settle here in February. Uruapan was the scene of one of the first high-profile atrocities of the war when thugs rolled five severed heads onto a nightclub dance floor in 2006.

Viloro owned a grocery store but fled when gangsters threatened to kill him in a row over extortion payments. He left a big house and decent living, he said, to rent an apartment and get by driving a taxi.

"It worries me a lot when I see news about La Familia and Zetas on the edge of this city. That was how it started in Michoacan and it just got worse and worse," Viloro says.

"I don't want my children growing up around that fear and bloodshed. That was why I moved here."

(Editing by Kieran Murray and Chris Kaufman)

(Editing By Chris Kaufman)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/wl_nm/us_mexico_mexicocity_violence

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Troops hit protesters marching into Yemen capital (AP)

SANAA, Yemen ? Troops commanded by relatives of Yemen's outgoing president attacked a crowd of more than 100,000 protesters peacefully marching into the capital Saturday, killing at least nine and driving the president to promise to leave the country.

Yielding to pressure to defuse the country's turmoil, president Ali Abdullah Saleh said Saturday he would leave for the United States after forces overseen by his son and nephew opened fire on the protesters.

They had marched for four days and 200 miles on foot to pressure the government not to give Saleh immunity from prosecution, in the first march of its kind in the impoverished nation that is home to a dangerous al-Qaida offshoot. After protesters arrived at the southern entrances to the capital, forces of the elite Republican Guard fired on them with automatic weapons, tear gas and water cannons, sparking hours of clashes.

The violence illustrated the confusion in Yemen caused by the slow-motion exit of Saleh from power after 33 years of rule.

After entrenching for months against massive protests across the country demanding his ouster, the president signed a deal in late November handing over his powers to the vice president and committing to leave office in return for immunity.

But Saleh retains his title and remains in the presidential palace, lauded as "his excellency the president" by state media controlled by his supporters.

Opponents say he has continued to wield influence through his relatives and loyalists who still hold powerful positions, undermining Vice President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi. That has raised fears that Saleh was looking for a way to continue to rule, even as a national unity government prepares for presidential elections set for February.

The Republican Guard forces, led by Saleh's son Ahmed, and Central Security troops, led by his nephew, have defied orders from Hadi that they pull back from positions in the streets of the capital, even up to a Saturday deadline.

Saleh had been expected to leave Yemen soon after he signed the U.S.- and Saudi-backed accord, ostensibly to undergo treatment for wounds suffered in an assassination attempt in June. But officials say he has stalled on leaving.

Hours after the fighting erupted in Sanaa, Saleh told reporters at his palace that he would leave "in the coming days" for the U.S.

"Not for treatment, but to get out of sight and the media to calm the atmosphere for the unity government to hold the presidential election," he said.

He said he would eventually return and pursue "political work as an opposition figure."

Government officials said ambassadors from the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council had been in contact with Saleh in the past week to pressure him to leave. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press.

There was no immediate confirmation from American officials that Saleh would come to the U.S., though Yemeni officials said he had received a visa.

The protesters, who have been massing by the millions around the country since February, oppose an accord for Saleh's exit because it would grant him immunity and because it keeps many of his regime figures in place.

Saturday's "March of Life" demanded Saleh be put on trial for the killings of protesters during his crackdown on the uprising. The crowds marched from Taiz, a city that has been a major opposition center 170 miles (270 kilometers) to the south of Sanaa.

The marchers Saturday were trying to pass down a main avenue where the presidential palace is located when they were met by Republican Guard and Central Security forces, backed by tanks. Troops fired on the crowd, who responded by throwing stones.

The fighting stopped after several hours when the loyalist forces allowed the protesters to continue their march into Sanaa. Amid the clashes, Hadi issued orders for the troops to step aside, but government officials said they only obeyed after international ambassadors contacted Saleh's son Ahmed.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the behind-the-scenes efforts.

At least eight protesters, including a woman, were killed and more than 200 injured, including 61 wounded by gunfire, according to two doctors at a protesters' field hospital, Mohammed el-Qoutbi and Sadeq el-Shogaa.

In all, at least 500,000 protesters had joined the march by the time it reached Change Square, according to activists. A smaller group broke away and marched on the presidential palace, where troops opened fire on them, killing a ninth protester and wounding four more, activist Abdel-Karim el-Khaywani said.

The violence sparked Prime Minister Mohammed Basindwa to ask a committee to investigate.

"The prime minister called on the Defense and Interior ministers to create an investigative committee into what happened and how protesters were killed," said Information Minister Ali el-Emrani. "The results of the investigation will be shown to the prime minister for the correct course of action."

A human rights organization appeared to lay responsibility on Saleh and the new unity government.

"The shooting of peaceful demonstrators by forces under the control of President Saleh and his top commanders is further proof that promises of immunity encourage rather than deter illegal attacks," Letta Tayler, Human Rights Watch Yemen researcher, said in a statement Saturday.

"Systematic or widespread unlawful killings, carried out as a state policy, are likely to be crimes against humanity," she added.

Even if Saleh carries out his promise to leave, his loyalists remain in place. The unity government is split between opposition parties and Saleh's Congress Party, which holds the powerful defense, oil and foreign affairs ministries. A military committee that Hadi heads to manage military affairs also includes the Congress Party.

There is also confusion over when Saleh is supposed to formally leave as president.

According to the deal signed Nov. 23, the parliament was supposed to convene 29 days later to approve immunity for Saleh; on the next day, he would step down. But parliament has not formally taken up the issue. Some lawmakers say that the "mechanisms" for the deal give them until the February presidential election to grant immunity.

Parliament convened for the first time Saturday since March but did not discuss immunity. Instead it discussed the program of the national unity government, headed by Basindwa, a veteran independent politician. The body can not take action by majority vote; it must reach consensus between Congress Party lawmakers and the opposition.

In past weeks, Saleh loyalists have repeatedly worked counter to Hadi.

Foreign Minister Abu Bakr al-Qirbi, a veteran of Saleh's regime, rejected a U.N. request to send a human rights fact-finding team to Yemen, without consulting with Hadi. When he learned about the incident, Hadi gave his approval.

Last week, the Military Committee ordered the removal of the top military commander in Taiz for the killings of protesters there. But the governor of Taiz, a Saleh loyalist, did not carry out the order.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_yemen

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Monday, December 26, 2011

What to Watch on Sunday: Another Scotty parade and the Grinch for Christmas

Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade (10am, ABC) - Scotty McCreery, Justin Bieber, Cee Lo Green, Jennifer Hudson, and Christina Aguilera headline this holiday extravaganza at Disney's Florida and California theme parks.

The Polar Express (8pm, ABC Family) - The animated story of an 8-year-old boy who's whisked to the North Pole by a mysterious train conductor. Features the voices of Tom Hanks and Peter Scolari.

How the Grinch Stole Christmas (8pm, ABC) - The animated Dr. Seuss tale abut the Whos and the evil Grinch with a plan to steal their beloved Christmas holiday. Boris Karloff narrates.

Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas (8:30pm, ABC) - The live-action version of the original classic, starring Jim Carrey as the coldhearted Grinch trying to thwart Whoville's Christmas celebration.

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (9pm, Disney) - Don't get excited, it's the 2005 remake with Johnny Depp, not the 1971 Gene Wilder classic. But it's still not bad.

Downton Abbey (9pm, UNC-TV) - In part 3 of 4 parts, the rivalry between Mary and Edith reaches a fever pitch, and Thomas and O'Brien plot against Mr. Bates while Anna's fondness for him grows.

National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (10pm, ABC Family) - Family man Clark Griswold (Chevy Chase) tries for a fun-filled family Christmas at home, but things don't work out quite the way he hopes.

Source: http://blogs.newsobserver.com/tv/what-to-watch-on-sunday-the-grinch-headlines-last-gasp-of-christmas-tv

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Green Jobs Debacle

The Green Energy debacle has washed down the proverbial drain another half billion dollars with no visible success or green jobs created or saved


Sifting through Congressional records is not my idea of fun. I wanted to find out for myself where half a billion-taxpayer dollars were spent with the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, which was earmarked to fund employment and training programs for Americans.

The unemployment rate was abysmal yet the Employment Training Administration (ETA) received half a billion dollars in grants for research, labor exchange, and job training projects for careers in renewable energy industries and energy efficiency, the administration?s so-called ?Green Jobs? program. Where were the jobs?

The Department of Labor?s Office of Inspector General (OIG), an independent entity, was asked by Congress to audit this Green Jobs program. The Inspector General?s office was told to find out how ETA defined ?green jobs,? how ETA used the half billion dollars, how much training and placement workers received, and what was their job retention rate. The findings were a typical example of government waste of taxpayer dollars.

?Green jobs? were defined as ?jobs associated with products and services that use renewable energy resources, reduce pollution, and conserve natural resources. This is nothing new, since such jobs were defined in the Occupational Information Network and more recently in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and the Green Jobs Act of 2007, long before the current presidency.

The half billion dollars were awarded as grants to 189 entities, mostly for training programs and $54.7 million for non-training programs. Program administration and technical assistance swallowed the remaining $9.9 million.

Twenty-five projects, mostly first time recipients of grants, prepared and placed workers for ?green jobs? such as hybrid/electric auto technicians, weatherization specialists (caulkers), and solar panel installers.

Thirty-eight grants were distributed to Pathways Out of Poverty projects ($147.7 million) for worker recruitment, job referral services, basic skills, work-readiness, occupational skills training, and supportive services to overcome barriers to employment. Non-profit agencies, community colleges, and State Workforce Agencies received the funds. I am translating this as another redistribution of wealth scheme to support the current administration?s goals.

Non-training programs squandered $54.7 million to disseminate ?green jobs? information through State Labor Markets, to help workers find jobs after training, equipment purchases, curriculum development, and hiring of additional staff.

The audit found that all the money had been allocated as of June 30, 2011. Only 33 percent of the grants were spent, the entire sum was already obligated to be spent in the future, but 73 percent of the training and non-training periods had already elapsed. The money was spent but only some training took place. So much for government efficiency and use of taxpayer dollars.

Forty-two percent of the recipients were trained. Twenty-seven percent had completed training. Only ten percent of participants entered employment and only TWO percent had retained employment for more than six months. This is a monumental waste of half a billion dollars. Even ETA acknowledged that grant recipients complained that the overall economic conditions were poor and green jobs had not materialized.

?ETA could not demonstrate that grantees were on target to meet grant outcomes nor was there a plan to ensure that they could.?

Elliot P. Lewis, Assistant Inspector General for Audit, testified to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on November 2, 2011 that OIG is ?concerned as to whether grantees will effectively use the funds and deliver targeted employment outcomes by the end of the grant periods.?

It is a false statement to say that there is high demand for ?green job-related skills.? The OIG audit recommended that ?ETA evaluate the Green Jobs program and obtain a current estimate of the funds each grantee will realistically spend given the current job market and the demand for green job-related skills.?

Unfortunately the taxpayers lost half a billion dollars because ETA had obligated all of its Recovery Act funds, ?and it expects that all funds will have been expended by September 30, 2013, as required by the Office of Management and Budget.?

The Green Energy debacle has washed down the proverbial drain another half billion dollars with no visible success or green jobs ?created or saved,? to use a favorite expression of this administration.

Dr. Ileana Johnson Paugh
Most recent columns

? ?Dr. Ileana Johnson Paugh is a freelance writer (Canada Free Press, Romanian Conservative), author, radio commentator, and speaker. Her book, ?Echoes of Communism, is available at Amazon in paperback and Kindle. Short essays describe health care, education, poverty, religion, social engineering, and confiscation of property. Visit her website, ileanajohnson.com.

Dr. Johnson can be reached at: .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)

Source: http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/43470

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Warrant issued for sports agent Leigh Steinberg over debt

SANTA ANA, Calif. - A California court has issued a bench warrant for veteran sports agent Leigh Steinberg in a case involving a $1.4 million judgment owed to a landlord.

Orange County Superior Court spokeswoman Carole Levitzky said Thursday the warrant was issued after Steinberg failed to attend court last week.

Court papers show Steinberg was ordered to pay $1.4 million last year to The Irvine Company for office space he leased in Newport Beach.

In court papers, the company says Steinberg stopped paying under his lease terms in 2009.

Steinberg says he is not hiding and is responsible for his debts.

Irvine Company officials declined comment.

Steinberg has represented NFL stars including Troy Aikman and Ben Roethlisberger and was the inspiration for Tom Cruise's character in the movie "Jerry Maguire."

Source: http://www.dailynews.com/ci_19601460?source=rss_viewed

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Holyoke City Council fail to override mayor's veto on tax rate

HOLYOKE ? The City Council Saturday failed to override Mayor Elaine A. Pluta?s veto of a proposal to raise the residential tax rate by 11 percent.

The City Council had to set the tax rate quickly so bills can be mailed by the state Jan. 1 deadline. If they were not, the city would face cash-flow problems.

With many councilors having scheduled vacations after Christmas, they decided to meet at 12:45 p.m. Christmas Eve. Despite the timing, all 15 members attended.

The dispute was about the division of how much of a tax burden homeowners and business owners should each shoulder. After the override failed, the council voted to keep the burden the same as it is this year.

The City Council voted to increase the tax levy of the city by legally-allowed maximum of 2.5 percent when it set the budget months ago.

Last week the council shifted the rate more towards residential taxpayers. That 9-6 vote would have raised homeowners rates from the existing $15.78 per $1,000 valuation to $17.50 per valuation and increase the bill for the average homeowner from $2,919 to $3,237.

Saturday?s decision kept the split the same, but will increase rates for both. In the next year homeowners will pay $16.85 per $1,000 valuation while the commercial rate will be $38.52 per $1,000.

Pluta said she supports shifting a small amount of the burden to residential property, but vetoed the change the council adopted because it was too much.

?To those people who say we lost businesses because of the tax rate, I would say we had 85 new businesses come into the city of Holyoke? in two years, she said.

Mayor-elect Alex B. Morse was also invited to speak. He encouraged one of the six City Councilors who voted against the shift to switch their support to override the veto.

?We need to make Holyoke more competitive for business. We are the second-highest rate in the state,? he said.

Instead four reversed their votes and rejected the bigger shift toward homeowners, so the attempt at an override failed 10-5.

Members then voted 8-7 to keep the same shift for next year between commercial and residential. James Leahy, Rebecca Lisi, Diosdado Lopez, Todd A. McGee, Brenna E. Murphy, Peter R. Tallman, Donald R. Welch and Kevin A. Jourdain supported the proposal. Anthony M. Keane, John J. O?Neill, Timothy W. Purington, Aaron M. Vega, Patricia C. Devine, Linda L. Vacon and McGiverin voted against.

?We are supposed to be progressive and help poor people,? Jourdain said, adding the city is still competitive in attracting businesses because its assessments are lower.

But O?Neill said the rates don?t make sense. He said he has a two-family home and a business building which are each assessed at about $200,000. He pays about $3,000 a year for the residential property and $7,000 in taxes for the business.

Source: http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2011/12/holyoke_city_council_fail_to_o.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

'Elf on the Shelf' is a holiday hit

There is one hot item this holiday season that won't be resting under the Christmas tree. It will be on a shelf ? watching you.

In a few short years, the "Elf on the Shelf" picture book and accompanying elf doll has been transformed from a phenomenon known mostly around the Atlanta area to a national sensation sold in 12,000 stores.

For parents, the elf is an adorable yuletide enforcer. They ensure he pops up in a different place each morning to watch over children and ensure they are not naughty, but nice.

Carol Aebersold and her daughters Chanda Bell and Christa Pitts, creators of "Elf on the Shelf," say it has its roots in their family tradition dating to the 1970s. An elf would appear every year after Thanksgiving only to vanish each evening, the children were told, on a journey to the North Pole with reports for Santa on who had dared to pout, misbehave or cry.

In 2005, Aebersold and Bell wrote the book to encourage others to adopt the tradition in their families. All major publishers rejected it.

Undeterred, the family founded CCA and B Publishing in Marietta, Ga., to put out the $30 book and the 10-inch elf doll by themselves.

Some think it's sweet, and some think it's just creepy. Undisputed: It's been a massive success since the company's founding in 2005.

About 2.5 million have been sold to date. And this year, it reached No. 2 on USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestseller lists. It sold out at Target stores in the first year the chain carried it.

Last month, on a nationally televised special on the day after Thanksgiving, 4.2 million viewers tuned in to watch "Elf on the Shelf: An Elf's Story," on CBS, according to Nielsen.

Social media darling
It's become a social media darling, too.

Elf on the Shelf has 7,564 (and counting) Twitter followers and 92,545 friends on Facebook. There are blogs about where to place it in the house, a different spot every morning, and how to dress it up.

"We have seen the sales of The Elf grow every year since 2008," Barnes & Noble spokeswoman Mary Ellen Keating said. "It is wildly popular with our customers."

CCA and B Publishing has had at least double-digit sales increases every year since 2008. The company has grown from three employees to 25 and recorded $10 million in revenue last year.

"We used to have to stop people in the aisles at retail shows and explain what this was," said Christa Pitts. This year, at book signings, "people are coming in and they already know. It's taken on a much more mainstream relevance and awareness that has been really thrilling to see."

No one can quite put their finger on why sales of an elf, with the accompanying book, have been so strong.

Timetoplaymag.com toy expert Jim Silver posits that Elf on the Shelf has filled a previously untapped niche.

"For all the years we've talked about Santa Claus, elves have never gotten their due with kids," Silver said.

Books and toys associated with the 2003 Will Ferrell movie "Elf," sold well, he said, but there haven't been many elf-themed toys since then.

"Seeing how the movie 'Elf' did, we knew there was a market there, so it was just a matter of time before a company came along to capitalize on Santa's helpers."

Will it join the compendium of American holiday traditions? It is hard to say. Not everyone is a fan. There's a parody book called "Elf OFF the Shelf" from Adams Media. Some critics say it promotes spy tactics that might not be healthy for children, a claim Bell dismisses as coming from people who have never actually "experienced the Elf."

But Elf on the Shelf has clearly surpassed its status as local curiosity and become a must-have for millions of people.

"It's a fun, innocent tradition," said Warren Haynes, from LaGrange, Ga. He says his 3-year-old sleeps better knowing his elf, which they named Posie, "is going to tell Santa what a good boy he has been."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45775674/ns/business-small_business/

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Buffalo TeraStation Pro Quad TS-QVH8.0TL/R6 Review

The Gadgeteer was asked by the team at Buffalo Technology, makers of wireless networking, NAS, and all around good gadgets for the hi-tech home and business, to review one of their latest NAS products, the Buffalo TeraStation Pro Quad – TS-QVH8.0TL/R6.?? The Buffalo TeraStation Pro Quad is positioned for storing and protecting the small and [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2011/12/21/buffalo-terastation-pro-quad-ts-qvh8-0tlr6-review/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Facebook for Android App Tops iPhone

Despite earlier reports that there are more people who use iPhone apps, there is one Android app that people have been seen favoring over. In fact, this is the very first time that an Android app has exceeded its iPhone alternative. Given its number of active users, the app boasts of having 58.8 million daily active users compared to iPhone?s 57.6 million. If you?re curious to know what this app is, it is actually the ever famous Facebook app.

This bit of news has surprised so many people, considering that the iPhone app was already available even before the Android version was first launched. In fact, the iPhone app was made available to users in July 2008, whereas its biggest rival hit the marketplace a shocking year later?September 2009. Even with its one year difference, the Android app has maintained a very close lead to the iPhone version. It is only recently that the Android version finally succeeded in overtaking the spot of iPhone.

The data was gathered by AppData, a tracking service which revealed the numbers of daily Facebook app users from both platforms. It also mentioned that the iPhone app had a total of 99.5 million monthly active users while Android only had 86.1 million. However, analysts think that the daily amount is much relevant as it is a more accurate method to base the popularity of the app from.

As a result of this impressive leap, developers feel eager to come up with more apps for Android users. Given the fact that there are 700,000 Android devices which get activated daily, it is a clear indication that Android has become the choice of many, when it comes to smartphone usage.

This is most likely the reason why Facebook decided to develop an Android launch for their Timeline profile format instead of the iPhone. The new Timeline UI feature was launched on Facebook for Android last week whereas Facebook for iPhone 4.1 was only released this Monday.

?

[Source: NVO News]

Source: http://www.androidauthority.com/facebook-for-android-app-tops-iphone-39543/

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Tax cut fight ends ugly year for Boehner (AP)

WASHINGTON ? John Boehner vowed early on that as speaker, he would let the House "work its will." At the end of his first year in charge of the fractious Republican-controlled chamber, it's clear he has little choice.

An uncompromising band of conservatives, led by GOP freshmen to whom Boehner owes his speakership, has repeatedly forced him to back away from deals with President Barack Obama, Democrats and, this week, even one struck by Senate Republicans. Gridlock, again and again, has defined Congress in the Boehner era even as Americans fume and the economy continues to wobble.

In a closed meeting Monday night, a few Republicans gave voice to widely whispered questions about Boehner's ability and willingness to represent them in negotiations with the White and Senate. They were incensed that the Senate had overwhelmingly passed a two-month extension of a payroll tax cut for 160 million Americans and then left town for the holidays. House Republicans were demanding a year-long tax cut, but there was no longer a Senate in session to negotiate with.

How could this have happened, Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., asked Boehner, according to multiple officials who were present.

Rep. Cliff Stearns was more direct: Was the Senate deal really a total surprise? Or did Boehner give some sort of tacit agreement?

Boehner tersely, adamantly denied doing so, according to those present. He said he had not expected the Senate's overwhelming approval of the two-month extension.

"I take the speaker at his word that he was surprised by the strong support for the payroll tax legislation in the Senate, which approved it with 89 votes, including from 39 Republicans," Stearns said Tuesday in a statement to The Associated Press.

Did Rep. Jeff Flake believe Boehner? "Oh, I don't know," said the Arizona Republican, grinning and edging away. "You'll have to ask the leaders that."

Boehner "has told us he did not agree to this," said Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C. "I am not a mind reader, and I can only go on what the speaker has said."

At midday Tuesday, the House rejected the Senate's two-month extension, leaving hanging the fate of the tax cut for 160 million Americans, unemployment benefits for 2 million more, and Medicare reimbursements for physicians to treat 48 million Medicare beneficiaries. As it now stands, Social Security taxes on workers will by up to $40 a week on Jan. 1, people out of work for more than six months will start losing jobless benefits and doctors will see their fees for treating Medicare patients cut 27 percent.

It was an ugly end to a year of gridlock on Capitol Hill that earned Congress historically low approval ratings and the nation a downgrade in its credit rating. The policy debate changed, but the question was the same each time: Compromise, or no deal?

First was the fight last spring over how many billions of dollars to cut from the 2011 federal budget after talks strayed far below the Republicans' campaign promise to slash $100 billion. Rather than standing firm and allowing parts of the government to shut down until enough lawmakers came around, Boehner did exactly what the tea partiers campaigned had campaigned against ? he negotiated with Obama and Senate Democrats on smaller spending cuts.

"Cut it or shut it!" chanted a crowd of tea partiers outside the Capitol.

OK as a campaign slogan, but not a viable technique for lawmaking in a divided government. Some of the 87-member freshman class, swept to power by tea party enthusiasm, insisted that Boehner rewrite the GOP proposal. He did, and submitted instead a proposal to cut about $61 billion_ the pro-rated remainder of conservatives' campaign pledge to cut $100 billion in the 2011 budget year.

Moments before the government was set to shut down, most of the freshman class voted for the final, six-month deal to cut $38.5 billion.

Soon followed the showdown over whether to raise the nation's debt limit. Deficit cuts totaling $2 trillion or more over a decade would be the price for Congress to raise the nation's $14.3 trillion debt ceiling and continue borrowing 35 to 40 cents of every dollar it spends. Failure to lift that cap could cause the U.S. government to default on its bills and previous borrowing for the first time in its history. Experts warned the cascading reaction in world financial markets could trigger another recession.

Massive spending cuts were mandatory, and raising taxes was out of the question, Republicans said. Boehner assigned his lieutenant, Majority Leader Eric Cantor, to negotiate a blend of spending cuts into the deal with Vice President Joe Biden. But Boehner was meeting secretly with Obama on a grander deal to cut as much as $4 trillion. House Republicans were furious when they learned about it, and the speaker broke off his talks with the president.

In the end, Congress agreed to a deal cutting spending by more than $2 trillion and raising the debt limit by nearly the same amount. But the bill was still highly unpopular among House conservatives who felt it didn't go far enough in slashing government spending.

And finally, the end-of-year debate over the payroll tax cut. The House voted Tuesday, 229-193, to kick the measure back to the Senate, where the bipartisan two-month measure passed on Saturday. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., says he won't allow bargaining until the House approves the Senate's short-term measure.

Back to gridlock.

The speaker's allies say his patience and his willingness to pull back is preventing conservatives from trying to replace him.

"It's a maturation process" for the House's feisty newcomers, said Rep. Steve LaTourette, a fellow Ohioan and close Boehner ally. "They came to town not knowing how this place works. Now that they have a year under their belts, we're in a much better place going into next year."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_go_co/us_boehner_gridlock

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Romney says he would deport Obama's uncle (AP)

ASHLAND, N.H. ? Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney says he would deport President Barack Obama's uncle, who police say was arrested in August for drunk driving near Boston and is an illegal immigrant.

In an interview with Boston radio host Howie Carr on Wednesday, Romney said "yes" when asked if Onyango Obama should be deported. Romney at first did not recognize the name, but said the nation's immigration laws should be enforced.

Onyango Obama is the 67-year-old half-brother of the president's late father. His case is pending in Framingham, Mass., District Court. He was initially held without bail on a detainer from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials on allegations he violated an order to return Kenya issued 20 years ago but has since been released.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney_obama_uncle

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

BP settles with spill blow-out preventer maker Cameron (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Cameron International Corp (CAM.N) agreed a $250 million settlement with BP (BP.L) to help pay for costs associated with the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, raising hopes that deals between the British oil major and two other contractors could follow.

The settlement with Cameron, which made the blow-out preventer that failed at BP's doomed Macondo well, is the fourth BP has reached with parties involved in the accident which caused the biggest offshore oil spill in the U.S.

Settlement agreements with two remaining parties, Transocean (RIGN.VX) and Halliburton (HAL.N), have to date, however, proved elusive.

Transocean, the owner and operator of the Deepwater Horizon rig, and Halliburton, which supplied cement to cap the well, are both being sued by BP to share the cost of the spill and cleanup, while the two have launched lawsuits of their own.

The settlement with Cameron will put pressure on the two remaining contractors to follow suit, analysts said.

"It shows that BP is prepared to be reasonable when settling with contractors - this ought to raise hopes that settlements with Halliburton and Transocean are more, rather than less likely to follow," JP Morgan analyst Fred Lucas said.

Cameron International said BP had agreed to indemnify the company for current and future compensatory claims associated with the spill.

Investors, relieved that the deal removes uncertainty over Cameron's financial obligations, pushed the oilfield service company's shares up 7 percent.

"Cameron is the fourth company to settle with BP and contribute to economic and environmental restoration efforts in the Gulf. Unfortunately, other companies persist in refusing to accept responsibility for their roles in the accident and for contributing to restoration efforts," BP chief executive Bob Dudley said in a statement.

Analysts at UBS said the settlement was positive for BP.

"It indicates Cameron has probably judged BP is unlikely to be found grossly negligent. We also note Cameron is the second oil service contractor to settle despite theoretically being protected by indemnity clauses," UBS said.

Transocean said in November that it sees maintaining its contractual indemnity as the base for any potential settlement with BP.

The U.S. government in September assigned most of the blame for the disaster to BP, the operator of the well.

The settlement agreement between BP and Cameron is not an admission of liability by either party, the two companies said, acknowledging that the Gulf of Mexico oil spill resulted from "complex and interlinked causes involving multiple parties".

The cases between the companies are among hundreds of claims set to go to trial before a federal judge in New Orleans in February to assign blame and damages for the Macondo blowout.

Cameron expects to take a charge in the fourth quarter for any amounts not covered by insurance, the Houston company said, adding that its insurers are expected to fund no less than $170 million of this agreement.

"We view the grand total is a very reasonable amount, and a significant overhang has now been removed from the company," analysts at Raymond James said in a note to clients.

BP, which has said the total bill for the oil spill, including fines will be $42 billion, said it will place the $250 million from Cameron into the $20 billion victims' compensation fund it established last year.

BP has to date concluded settlements with its partners in the well, Anadarko Petroleum Corp (APC.N) and Japanese trading house Mitsui's (8031.T) exploration unit MOEX, as well as Weatherford International Ltd (WFT.S) (WFT.N), which made equipment used in the well.

The company has so far paid out $7.5 billion to individuals, businesses and government entities, it said.

Shares in BP closed down 0.5 percent to 445.75 pence on Friday, slightly underperforming the European index of oil and gas companies (.SXEP) which was 0.1 percent lower.

(Reporting by Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore, Anna Driver in Houston, and Sarah Young in London; Editing by Steve Orlofsky and Elaine Hardcastle)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/bs_nm/us_bp_cameron

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Report: Anthony shopping interview for $750K

A Los Angeles-based TV producer is shopping the first interview with Casey Anthony, who was acquitted in July of murdering her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee Anthony.

The Hollywood Reporter has learned that Scott Sternberg and his Scott Sternberg Productions have been quietly pitching a no-holds-barred interview with Anthony, who has been lying low since being released July 17 after nearly three years in a Florida jail.

PHOTOS from THR: 10 TV Trials That Shook the World

Multiple sources say Sternberg is asking between $500,000 and $750,000 to deliver Anthony, a hefty license fee to be sure. According to sources with knowledge of the proposal, networks can choose the interviewer and Scott Sternberg Productions would co-produce the program. But so far, multiple cable networks have declined. Spokespeople for Discovery Communications' TLC and ID confirmed that the networks have passed on the project. A&E Networks, which includes Lifetime and A&E, also has passed, says a spokesperson.

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Did 'Springer Show' offer Casey Anthony $1M?

HLN has not been approached, says a network spokesperson, who adds that the cable news network would not pay for an interview with Anthony anyway. MSNBC has also not been pitched the project. But sources at the NBCUniversal-owned cable channel also say they would not pony up for Anthony, who has become the target of national outrage since her acquittal.

(TODAY.com is powered by msnbc.com, which is a joint venture between Microsoft and NBC Universal.)

In fact, Anthony?s pariah status has already spurred news divisions to publicly disavow the common and age-old practice of licensing personal photos and home video from interview subjects as a fig leaf to paying outright for interviews. And ABC News, CBS News and NBC News all have stated adamantly that they would not pay for an Anthony interview specifically.

STORY from THR: Lifetime Developing Casey Anthony TV Movie Based on Prosecutor's Book

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Further complicating matters is that while the interview would likely be a ratings hit, it is not likely to be a moneymaker since it would be difficult to get advertisers to support a program that featured Anthony.

?It will get very good ratings,? muses one cable source. ?But who would want to put their ads in that kind of show??

Read the full story on HollywoodReporter.com.

Would you watch Casey Anthony's first interview? Share your thoughts on the Facebook page for our TV blog, The Clicker.

Copyright 2011 The Hollywood Reporter

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45676830/ns/today-entertainment/

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Film details Jerry Lewis' 'Method to the Madness' (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Gregg Barson is a documentarian, not a comedian. But when Jerry Lewis let him know that more than a dozen people were waiting in line to tell his story, Barson offered a persuasive punch line.

"Yeah, but they're not me," was Barson's comeback, followed by a momentary quiver of fear that he'd gone too far with the veteran star.

"He said, `I like that. You know why? Because you remind me of me,'" Barson recalled. That chutzpah-fueled exchange led to "Method to the Madness of Jerry Lewis," debuting 8 p.m. EST Saturday on Encore.

The film focuses on what makes the 85-year-old ? and still working ? Lewis tick as a performer and filmmaker. Those looking for dish on his family life or breakup with stage and screen partner Dean Martin or abrupt departure from the Muscular Dystrophy Association telethon he'd nurtured for six decades won't find it here.

Barson, who describes himself as "in heaven" when he caught a Lewis film on TV as a youngster, said his intent was to focus on Lewis' career from vaudeville on and his contributions to comedy and movies.

Younger people without exposure to Lewis' work likely consider him as "that telethon guy. Hopefully, the film will open their eyes as opposed to thinking he did one thing one day a year," Barson said.

During more than three years of filming, Barson had near-complete access as he followed Lewis from his yacht in San Diego to his home in Las Vegas to concert dates and to the Cannes Film Festival in France, the country that idolizes Lewis as a cinematic genius.

He was good company, Barson said. "He's always up, funny and playful. ... The sparkle, he didn't put in on for the camera. He's being real."

"Method to the Madness," which opens with Jerry Seinfeld, Eddie Murphy and other comedians anointing Lewis as comedy royalty, is an unabashed valentine. It is also a reminder that Lewis inspired rock-star levels of fan devotion, and of how impressively "The Bellboy" (1960) and many other films starring and written and directed by Lewis ruled the box office.

Barson, who made the well-received Phyllis Diller documentary "Goodnight, We Love You," sees parallels between Diller and Lewis, including their work ethic.

"She was 84 when she retired, and he's 85 and still working. They never rest on their laurels," Barson said. "They still care. They're not phoning it in."

And that, he said, is part of Lewis' method: Every aspect of his performance is planned.

"As Eddie Murphy says (in the film), slapstick looks simple but the reason it's been around so long is how well thought out it is," Barson said.

Lewis is pleased with the film. And his health is good, according to the filmmaker, who spills one appropriately quirky personal secret on his subject: "He drinks a lot of orange soda. Maybe that's the fountain of youth."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111217/ap_en_ce/us_tv_jerry_lewis

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Friday, December 16, 2011

A simple clip could increase quality of life for thousands of patients with a common heart problem

ScienceDaily (Dec. 15, 2011) ? The interventional cardiology team at the Montreal Heart Institute (MHI) recently conducted the first clinical procedure in Canada using the MitraClip system, which is designed to treat patients suffering from mitral valve failure, a very common heart defect that affects an estimated 1 out 5 people to various extents starting at the age of 55. The MHI has implemented a treatment program for this condition and so far is the centre that has performed the most procedures in Canada with the MitraClip system.

An effective treatment with few complications

This innovative and minimally invasive procedure is an alternative to heart surgery. Until now, mitral valve failure has been treated with medication or open-heart surgery depending on the degree of severity. The MitraClip system was designed by Abbott Vascular for inoperable or very high-risk surgical patients and can provide lasting treatment for acute mitral regurgitation. The risk of complications is low compared to traditional surgery, and patients are discharged from the hospital within 48 hours of the procedure. The procedure consists of using a catheter to guide the MitraClip, a simple clip device, through the femoral vein to the left atrium of the heart and then pushing it into the ventricle. The clip is then positioned so that it holds the anterior and posterior flaps of the mitral valve together.

This creates a double orifice opening that allows blood to flow on both sides of the clip, which mechanically restricts regurgitation. The first procedure was performed by a multidisciplinary team made up of cardiologists Anita Asgar, Anique Ducharme, Raoul Bonan and Arse?ne Basmadjian along with anesthesiologists Jennifer Cogan and Baqir Qizilbash. "

All initial cases went well, and we believe that the long- term outcomes for this procedure will be favourable," stated Dr. Anita Asgar, interventional cardiologist and Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Medicine at Universite? de Montre?al. "Since it allows patients to regain autonomy and quality of life, we believe that this treatment will reduce the number of hospital admissions and visits to emergency due to symptom recurrence."

About mitral valve failure

Mitral valve failure (or mitral valve regurgitation) is the most common type of heart valve disease. This condition occurs when the anterior and posterior flaps of the valve do not close completely, which causes abnormal blood backflow from the left ventricle to the left atrium. The bigger the leak, the more blood the left ventricle has to pump to maintain adequate cardiac output. In the long term, mitral valve failure can lead to many complications, such as left ventricle dilation, atrial fibrillation and heart failure. In most cases, someone with mitral valve failure has no symptoms. Rarely, and at a generally advanced stage, the person can experience breathlessness, mild chest pain or general fatigue. In most cases, mitral valve failure is discovered by a doctor during a clinical exam.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Montreal Heart Institute.

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Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111215113514.htm

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