Monday, October 31, 2011

Taylor Swift Threatens to Take Legal Action Over Alleged Topless ...

October 31, 2011 02:16:50 GMT
Lawyers for the 'Sparks Fly' singer have fired off a cease and desist letter to the gossip site that posted the supposed leaked photo, claiming that it spread false 'news' about the star.

is preparing for a legal battle against a gossip website for tampering her squeaky-clean image. The "Back to December" singer has through her lawyers fired off a cease and desist letter to Celeb Jihad around two months after it posted a topless picture of a girl resembling her.

Insisting that the blonde girl in the image was not the country music star, her camp demanded that the photo be taken down immediately, accusing Celeb Jihad of spreading "false pornographic images and false 'news' about the singer." Despite the trademark infringement threat, the site has yet to remove its post titled "Taylor Swift Topless Private Pic Leaked?"

Celeb Jihad put out back in August. The picture captures a girl who "bears a striking resemblance" to the ex-girlfriend of reclining on a bed with her breasts exposed. A representative for the site told TMZ that it was considering its options, while to Gossip Cop, it claimed that the shot of "Taylor Swift shall stay up".

? AceShowbiz.com




?

Source: http://www.aceshowbiz.com/news/view/00044880.html

mike stoops mike stoops end of the world end of the world jerome harrison ryan leaf ryan leaf

Aunt: Nephew doesn't deserve death for killings (AP)

NEW HAVEN, Conn. ? The aunt of a Connecticut man convicted of killing a woman and her two daughters in a home invasion told a jury he doesn't deserve the death penalty because he's been rejected since birth and has a daughter he loves.

Karlie Lebatique testified Monday her nephew Joshua Komisarjevsky (koh-mih-sar-JEV'-skee) "has been rejected, attacked, abused, doubted" since he was in the womb.

A prosecutor reminded her of details of the crime, in which the family was tied up and gas poured on the girls before the house was set on fire.

The defense says Komisarjevsky was sexually abused as a child.

Komisarjevsky was convicted of killing Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her daughters in their Cheshire home in July 2007.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111031/ap_on_re_us/us_home_invasion

cantaloupe credit union greys anatomy greys anatomy x factor auditions 2011 x factor auditions 2011 redacted

Ethnic Uzbeks vote for "another Putin" in Kyrgyzstan (Reuters)

TASHLYQ, Kyrgyzstan (Reuters) ? Ethnic Uzbeks voting in Kyrgyzstan's presidential election on Sunday backed a candidate with ties to Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as the leader most likely to protect them from renewed violence in the former Soviet republic.

Kyrgyz Prime Minister Almazbek Atambayev, 55, is favorite to become the next president of the strategic Central Asian state of 5.5 million people.

"Here in Kyrgyzstan, he is called 'Another Putin'," said Bakhriniso Rakhmanova, a 58-year-old resident of Tashlyq, a village on the edge of the southern Kyrgyz city of Osh.

Mainly Muslim Kyrgyzstan lies along a major drug route out of Afghanistan and hosts a U.S. military air base that supports the war there. Russia also operates an air base in the country.

Osh was the epicenter of clashes between ethnic Kyrgyz and Uzbeks that killed nearly 500 people in June 2010, three months after the president had been deposed by a popular uprising.

"Atambayev heads the government and we hope that he will not allow this tragedy to be repeated," ethnic Uzbek Akhmatzhon Kasymov, 62, said after voting. His house, big enough to accommodate three families, was burned down in the riots.

Both sides suffered casualties during several days of violence, but ethnic Uzbeks comprise the majority of those prosecuted since. Many complain of daily harassment.

"A young Kyrgyz started on me on the bus only yesterday," said Rakhmanova, a Tajik by ethnicity who has lived among the Uzbek community since childhood.

"They said: 'Go back to your Tashkent'."

RUSSIAN TIES

Atambayev has visited Putin several times, building close ties with his country's Soviet-era master before an election that will test reforms set in motion after the 2010 revolt to make parliament the main decision-making body in Kyrgyzstan.

He has hinted that the U.S. lease on its air base might not be renewed beyond 2014, a move that would please Moscow, and supports the idea of Kyrgyzstan joining a Customs Union between Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan.

Kyrgyzstan's government even named a peak in the Tien Shan mountains after Putin, who last month declared his intention to reclaim the Russian presidency in an election next March.

Bakhodyr, an ethnic Uzbek food technology specialist who works on construction sites, said he had voted for Atambayev because the prime minister had visited Russia and Uzbekistan.

But he said life would never be the same again. "The Kyrgyz insult us daily," he said. "You can't go out after six o'clock in the evening. You could be accosted or taken to the police."

Atambayev's main rivals for the presidency, Adakhan Madumarov and Kamchibek Tashiyev, are expected to perform well in the south. Though both can draw on the Kyrgyz nationalist vote in the south, both candidates strongly reject the 'nationalist' label.

"How can you call me a nationalist?" Tashiyev told a news conference before the election. "My children study in Russia. My wife is Kazakh, and I live among Uzbeks and saved thousands of Uzbek lives," he said, referring to the June 2010 violence.

Nevertheless, they have the support of many Kyrgyz voters in Osh and the surrounding area. Kairat, a police lieutenant posted to keep order in the ethnic Kyrgyz village of Gulbakhor, said he believed Atambayev was "highly unpopular" locally.

Anarbai Saidiyev, a 50-year-old farmer, said he had voted for Madumarov, a former deputy prime minister. "He was once a good parliamentarian and he will be an honest president, who will finally put the country in order," Saidiyev said.

(Writing by Robin Paxton; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111030/wl_nm/us_kyrgyzstan_elections

the killing fields texas killing fields burzynski pete seeger itunes match itunes match gazelle

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Spotted: Kelly Rutherford?s Grinning Girl

Helena Grace, 2, shares a smile with mom Kelly Rutherford at the 2011 Free Arts NYC Kidsfest, held Sunday at Saatchi & Saatchi, in New York City.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/AgU99Q3kZ0c/

barometer barometer intc cyclops cyclops zanesville google ice cream sandwich

Consumer spending rises, weak incomes a worry (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? Sluggish income growth led U.S. households to cut back on saving in September to raise their spending, showing the economy's recovery remains fragile.

Consumer spending increased 0.6 percent, the Commerce Department said on Friday, after a 0.2 percent gain in August. However, incomes edged up only 0.1 percent after a 0.1 percent August drop.

The solid increase in consumer spending -- which accounts for about 70 percent of U.S. economic activity -- lends momentum to fourth-quarter output, but the economy could flag if income growth does not pick up.

"Consumers are really walking a tight rope here. They don't have much room and it's easy for them to lose balance with very modest shifts in hiring, the cost of food and everything," said Steve Blitz, senior economist, ITG Investment Research in New York.

JPMorgan raised its forecast for fourth-quarter growth to a 2.5 percent annual rate from 1 percent to take into account a stronger run of recent data, including the figures on spending, and rebound in stock markets.

Still, with household budgets stretched, analysts warned the current pace of expansion could prove fleeting if job growth does not accelerate.

SAVING SOFTENS

The report showed saving slowed to an annual rate of $419.8 billion, the lowest level since August 2009, from $479.1 billion in August.

After accounting for taxes and inflation, income slipped 0.1 percent, a third straight monthly drop. For the third quarter as a whole, it fell at an annual rate of 1.7 percent -- the first quarterly decline since the fourth quarter of 2009.

The weak income growth reflects the anemic labor market, characterized by a jobless rate that has been stuck above 9 percent for five consecutive months.

Economists are cautiously optimistic a recent rally in stock markets as Europe tackles its debt crisis will help to shore up consumer confidence, which has dropped to recession levels, and encourage businesses to step-up hiring.

Consumer moods brightened slightly in October, with the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan's sentiment index rising to 60.9 from 59.4 in September.

"We expect income growth will rebound in the fourth quarter as employment strengthens, which would support continued gains in spending and a gradual recovery in the savings rate," said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics in New York.

The saving rate, the percentage of disposable income socked away, fell to 3.6 percent, the slowest since December 2007, from 4.1 percent in August.

Stocks on Wall Street were marginally lower after a big rally on Thursday, while prices for U.S. Treasury debt and the U.S. dollar rose.

INFLATION SLOWS

A separate report underscored the troubling signals on income. The Labor Department said wages and salaries rose 0.3 percent in the third quarter -- the smallest gain in a year -- after increase 0.4 percent in the prior quarter.

The report showed benefit costs borne by employers, which make up about 30 percent of overall compensation, grew just 0.1 percent in the quarter, the weakest since the first quarter of 1999.

Some companies, like Wells Fargo, which are looking to cut costs, are rolling out insurance plans with employees paying higher premiums if they get sick.

Weak incomes are likely to draw the attention of policymakers at the Federal Reserve when they meet next week to debate additional ways to aid growth and cut the jobless rate.

Officials who want to take further action to aid the economy may be emboldened by a slowing in inflation shown by the report on spending, although slower inflation also eases the burden on consumers.

A price index for personal spending rose at a 0.2 percent rate last month, slowing from August's 0.3 percent pace. In the 12 months through September, the PCE index was up 2.9 percent, the same margin as in August.

A core inflation measure, which strips out food and energy costs, was flat last month after increasing 0.2 percent in August. In the 12 months through September, this gauge rose 1.6 percent after increasing 1.7 percent in August.

The Fed would like this measure to be closer to 2 percent.

(Additional reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Neil Stempleman)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/bs_nm/us_usa_economy

white witch occupy san francisco occupy san francisco jack the cat frank lucas house of wax bernard madoff

Steroid medications tied to vitamin D deficiency (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) ? People who use oral steroid medications may be at greater-than-average risk of a serious vitamin D deficiency, a new study suggests.

The findings, reported in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, do not prove that the drugs themselves are the cause.

But they do suggest that people on the medications should have their doctors check their blood levels of vitamin D, researchers say. And that may be especially important for children.

Steroid medications help control inflammation and are used for a number of medical conditions -- including asthma, certain types of arthritis such as rheumatoid arthritis and autoimmune diseases like Crohn's disease, lupus and multiple sclerosis.

In the new study, researchers found that among nearly 23,000 Americans in a government health survey, those using oral steroid medications were twice as likely as non-users to have a severe vitamin D deficiency.

Overall, 11 percent of those on steroids had a vitamin D level below 10 ng/mL -- which is considered too low to keep your bones, or the rest of you, healthy. That compared with five percent of study participants not on steroids.

Vitamin D levels that low can lead to a serious softening of the bones or muscle pain. Blood levels of about 20 ng/mL or above are considered sufficient for health.

"When doctors write that prescription for steroids and they're sending the patients for lab tests, they should also get the vitamin D level measured," lead researcher Dr. Amy L. Skversky, of Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, said in a news release from the university.

Skversky's team based their findings on a national health survey done between 2001 and 2006. It included 22,650 U.S. adults and children who had blood samples taken and reported on their medication use.

Just under one percent of the group said they'd used oral steroids in the past month -- which would translate to 2.1 million Americans likely taking the drugs nationwide.

The steroid users in the study were twice as likely to have a vitamin D deficiency, even after researchers accounted for several other factors that affect D levels -- including obesity, milk intake and vitamin D supplement use.

The link was especially strong among children. Steroid users younger than 18 were 14 times more likely to have a vitamin D deficiency than kids not taking the medications.

It's not clear that the medications themselves were to blame, or fully to blame. It's likely, according to Skversky's team, that the conditions the drugs treat contribute to low vitamin D levels.

Some of those disorders can lead to poor nutrient absorption, for example, or limit people's physical activity -- which may mean more time indoors, away from the sunlight that triggers the body's natural ability to make vitamin D.

On the other hand, there is evidence that steroid medications may lead to vitamin D deficiency, possibly by boosting an enzyme that curbs the vitamin's activity in the body.

The bottom line, according to Skversky, is that patients and doctors should be aware of the higher risk of vitamin D deficiency linked to oral steroids.

The latest recommendations from the Institute of Medicine, an advisory body to the U.S. government, are for most children and adults to get 600 IU of vitamin D per day. Adults older than 70 are advised to get 800 IU.

There are no special recommendations for people on steroid medication.

The sun is the major natural source of vitamin D. Food sources are relatively few and include fatty fish like salmon and mackerel, as well as dairy products and cereals that have added vitamin D. Multivitamins also contain vitamin D.

Not all steroids are taken orally. The study did not look at inhaled steroids, like those often used by people with asthma, so it's not clear if the findings would apply to those medications.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/rLA1t2 Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, online September 28, 2011.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/meds/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111028/hl_nm/us_steroid_medications

dart progeria watch free movies online watch free movies online montreal canadiens montreal canadiens jason aldean

Olympus denies wrongdoing as groups urge reforms (AP)

TOKYO ? The new president of embattled Olympus Corp. on Thursday denied the company's $687 million payment for financial advice was excessive, while foreign business groups urged Japan to bolster its lagging corporate governance rules to avoid more high-level scandals.

Shuichi Takayama, who was named president Wednesday following the abrupt resignation of Chairman and President Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, sought to placate frustrated shareholders with his second press conference in less than a day.

Takayama stuck to the camera and medical equipment maker's denials of wrongdoing over its $687 million payment to an obscure Wall Street financial adviser as part of a $2 billion purchase of U.K.-based Gyrus Group Plc. The payment represented more than a third of the acquisition price. Fees for advisers are normally 1 to 2 percent of the deal value.

Takayama also maintained the company had done nothing wrong in other past acquisitions that were massively written down in value.

Kyodo news agency, meanwhile, reported that Japan's Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission has launched an inquiry into the company's acquisitions. The regulator wouldn't confirm the report.

Former Olympus CEO Michael Woodford, whose revelations triggered the scandal and his sacking by the Olympus board two weeks ago, has turned over documents to the U.K. Serious Fraud Office, and media reports say the FBI is also investigating.

A board member at the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan said that if Tokyo had stronger corporate governance laws, the "fiasco" at Olympus would not be as serious as it has become.

Woodford, a British national, has said he was dismissed because he questioned the $687 million fee as well as the lofty prices Olympus paid for three small money-losing Japanese companies with seemingly little strategic value.

Between 2006 and 2008, it paid a total of 73.4 billion yen ($967 million) for recycling company Altis Co., food container maker News Chef Co. and cosmetics firm Humalabo Co. All three are based in the same building in Tokyo.

Olympus wrote down more than three-quarters of their value in fiscal year ended March 2009. It said Thursday that the deals were unrelated to the Gyrus acquisition.

"There were things I could not talk about yesterday," Takayama said. "I thought about it and decided that we should release information."

"Those decisions were made in line with our mid- to long-term strategy," he said of the acquisitions.

Olympus confirmed for the first time the identities of the Gyrus deal financial advisers as Axes America LLC of New York and Axam Investments Ltd., both founded by U.S. resident Hajime Sagawa. It decided to work with Sagawa because of his financial experience and connections.

Takayama denied the fee was excessive. Executive Vice President Hisashi Mori said there was no prior personal relationship between Sagawa and Olympus executives, but he declined to disclose who made the initial introduction.

He blamed Woodford for disclosing secret internal information, which led to the recent plunge in Olympus shares.

The company says Woodford was dismissed because of his unilateral decision-making and intimidating managerial style. The Briton also spent much of his time outside of Japan, Takayama said.

He acknowledged that the board of directors did not discuss Woodford's allegations when they voted to fire him.

Investors appeared encouraged by Takayama's statements, at least for now. The issue surged more than 23 percent in trading Thursday on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, recovering some ground after losing more than half its value in the days after Woodford's firing.

Olympus is setting up its own independent task force to look into the deals "as soon as possible." Takayama did not specify a timeframe. The company pledged to be more forthcoming with information in the future.

Four chambers of commerce representing businesses from the U.S., Europe, Canada, Australia and New Zealand on Thursday urged the Japanese government to bolster corporate governance as it seeks to revise its Company Law.

Japanese listed companies significantly lag those in other leading economies in the use of independent outside directors and tend to appoint only board members with close ties to the company's management or majority shareholder, they said in a press release.

That has undermined the confidence of foreign investors and perpetuated the perception that Japanese corporations are "insider-dominated" and out-of-step with global governance standards, the statement said.

Japan should amend its laws to include a specific definition of "independent outside director," require listed companies to appoint a meaningful number of such directors, and require an independent committee to handle board decisions where the risks of self-interest and conflicts are inherently high.

The initiative was not prompted by problems at Olympus, but rather by the "frustration and concern" with the perceived slow progress in amending the law, said James Lawden of the European Business Council in Japan, at a press conference at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan.

Nicholas Benes, a governor at the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan, said that if Tokyo adopted the proposed changes in the law, "the fiasco over at Olympus that's now occurring would not be occurring the same way, and as badly."

More broadly, failing to improve Japanese corporate governance will hurt Japan's economy as a whole, he argued.

___

Associated Press writer Malcolm Foster contributed.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_bi_ge/as_japan_olympus

earthquake california torrey smith torrey smith packers bears boeing 787 mike wallace mike wallace

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Will robots take our jobs?

There's a saying which I think I first heard on the Robots podcast which goes something like the following:


Americans are worried that robots are going to kill them
Europeans are worried that robots will take their jobs
Japanese want robots to be their friends
What automation already has done and will do in future to the employment market is a question which has been debated for many decades.? A fairly intelligent discussion about this can be found here between Martin Ford and Robin Hanson.

The standard narrative about automation has typically been that robots will do the dull, dirty and dangerous work which people mostly don't want to do, but that they won't encroach much beyond that, leaving an intellectual refuge within which human "knowledge workers" can remain as the non plus ultra.? This is true now, and also for the immediate future, but I tend to agree with people like Hans Moravec and Martin Ford that in the long run - assuming no major setbacks such as asteroid strikes or insurmountable energy/material shortages - that practically nobody's job is going to escape from the rising tide of automation.

You can always point out the limitations of particular contemporary technologies.? Hanson mentions how Google Translate does not entirely do away with the need for human translators, and I've had some first hand experience of those situations.? Most industries have their own specialized vocabulary and set of acronyms which automatic translation doesn't handle well.? However, given more time and training data there is no fundamental obstacle to having automatic translators also handle niche vocabularies.

Martin Ford describes in more detail in his book how anyone doing what he calls a "software job" will be at risk from technological unemployment in the foreseeable future and that the economic value of possessing a college degree will fall accordingly.? In his opinion what has been happening to blue collar workers (outsourcing, offshoring and replacement by automation) will also increasingly happen to white collar knowledge workers in this century.

Is technological unemployment a component of the current economic troubles?? Perhaps.? But if it is then it's only a small component.? One thing which is however conspicuous is that it's possible to have something like 10-25% of the population classified as being "economically inactive" without any really major downturn in overall productivity.? GDP can be rising at the same time as unemployment rates.? There are a few possible interpretations as to why this might be, but one is that this could indicate that over time a smaller fraction of the population is required to be in the loop of economic production in order for it to still continue to function effectively.

Ultimately this challenges the notion that in order to have income you need to be personally and directly involved in economic production activities, and whatever happens I think it's going to be true that advances in automation will fundamentally change the way that the economy functions - sacrificing a few ideological sacred cows along the way.?

Hanson talks about democratic ownership of the means of production, and that seems quite likely to me.? RepRap is an obvious pointer in that direction, but it's also not too hard to imagine that mobile robots equipped with appropriate tools and sophisticated enough software could perform jobs of significant economic value which effectively free the owner of needing to be personally involved at all.? If the automation is cheap enough, or can be produced in a viral manner similar to RepRap components, then potentially anyone can manufacture things which they might need, or want to sell or barter.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/IHeartRobotics/~3/ch6AJqYvhBM/will-robots-take-our-jobs.html

war in iraq gunner kiel gunner kiel baby lisa baby lisa paranormal activity west virginia football

Why Gaddafi's Death Doesn't Fill Me With Joy

I was going to let the demise of Muammar Gaddafi pass without comment?after all, what does the murder of this tyrant have to do with science, right? But a bizarre essay in The New York Times on October 26, ?Dictators Get the Death They Deserve,? by the historian Simon Windbag?I mean Sebag?Montefiore, has pushed my big red rant button.

Montefiore argued that, although ?Western leaders and intellectuals find Colonel Gaddafi?s lynching distasteful,? there are ?sound political reasons for the public culling of the self-proclaimed king of kings.? He contends that ?as long as the tyrant lives, he reigns and terrorizes?Only death can end both the spell to bewitch and the prerogative to dominate.? Montefiore recounted in gleeful, gory detail the violent ends of all manner of tyrants, from the Byzantine emperor Andronicus, who was ?beaten and dismembered, his hair and teeth pulled out by a mob,? to the pro-Soviet Afghan president Najibullah, who was ?castrated, dragged through the streets and hanged.?

So, hooray for tit-for-tat vengeance, eh? I wonder if Montefiore is titillated by reports that Libyan rebels have been massacring captured pro-Gaddafi soldiers and even civilians suspected of supporting him. In September, Amnesty International accused both pro-Gaddafi and anti-Gaddafi forces of war crimes. Amnesty International urged Libya?s new leaders to ?make a complete break with the abuses of the past four decades and set new standards of accountability by putting human rights at the centre of their agenda.?

Yes, of course, Gaddafi and his minions committed atrocities. They?re the bad guys. That?s why NATO, including the U.S., provided armed assistance to the Libyan rebels. The rebels are supposed to be the good guys, meaning that they should respect, at the very least, laws prohibiting killing of prisoners and civilians. How else can Libya hope to transcend its brutal, traumatic past and create a peaceful, prosperous future?

On the other hand, the U.S., whose leaders love to lecture other nations on their immoral behavior, has not exactly renounced violence. The U.S. maintains a worldwide military presence, paid for?in spite of our economic woes?with a budget almost as great as the military spending of all other nations combined. We are fighting wars in two nations and carrying out assassinations in others, in defiance of international law. We are the world?s biggest arms dealers, and we supply armed assistance to non-American warriors, including, since last spring, the Libyan rebels. The rebels captured Gaddafi after a U.S. Predator drone and NATO plane bombed his convoy, which was fleeing the city of Surt. Is there really a difference, morally, between blowing Gaddafi to bits with a Predator and shooting him in the head?

To my mind, the major challenge facing humanity?even greater than finding cheap, clean sources of energy?is ending militarism as a means of resolving disputes. Recently, we?ve been headed in the right direction. Since World War II, the frequency and lethality of wars has declined, as the political scientist Joshua Goldstein documents in his upbeat new book Winning the War on War: The Decline of Armed Conflict Worldwide (Dutton Adult, 2011), which has the same basic theme as Steven Pinker?s The Angels of Our Better Nature: Why Violence Has Declined (Viking Adult, 2011). ?But if this decline is to continue, the U.S. must work harder to find nonmilitary solutions to threats?and even attacks?against Americans and others.

Goldstein has a much more positive view than I do of the armed intervention of the U.S. and NATO in Libya. Goldstein wrote his blog: ?The humanitarian intervention in Libya finally got it right after a number of flawed interventions over the past twenty years. Unlike Kosovo, the Western powers intervened with backing from the UN Security Council?the world?s unique source of real legitimacy in such actions. Unlike Somalia, they stayed the course when things took a while to succeed. Unlike Bosnia, they did not try to stay neutral between bad guys and good guys. Unlike Iraq, they supported local rebels with air power rather than invade and occupy. Unlike Rwanda, the international community did not stand by and allow a mass atrocity event to occur (it was hours away in Benghazi when NATO took action). Lessons learned, and applied.?

I appreciate the moral logic of Goldstein?s analysis. It would have been awfully hard for the U.S. and other nations to stand by and watch Gaddafi slaughter those who called for his ouster last spring. In some cases, humanitarian interventions seem morally inescapable. I just wish we had tried harder to find other, less violent measures to protect Libyans, because I fear that our intervention may incite further violence in Libya and elsewhere. Already, Syrians opposing the regime of Bashar al-Assad are clamoring for NATO?s bombers to help them.

On October 25, The New York Times reported that rebel forces in Surt had apparently executed dozens of people?including government officials, loyalist fighters and civilians, some of whose hands were bound by plastic ties?in ?one of the worst massacres of the eight-month conflict.? The Times quoted a doctor warning that the killings, if they are not investigated and punished, might lead to counter-reprisals.

The desire for vengeance is deep-rooted, as the evolutionary biologist David Barash and psychiatrist Judith Lipton, who are married, note in their fascinating new book Payback: Why We Retaliate, Redirect Aggression, and Take Revenge (Oxford University Press, 2011). Not just humans but many animals retaliate against those who threaten or harm them, Barash and Lipton point out. We also engage in ?redirected aggression,? lashing out against innocent bystanders. The classic example is the man who, after being yelled at by his boss, goes home and whacks his wife or kid. Another example is the U.S., which, after being attacked by al Qaeda 10 years ago, invaded Iraq, which had nothing to do with 9/11. If we don?t try harder to break these cycles of violence, we will never escape war?s grip once and for all.

Photo of Gaddafi courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and Aljazeera.net.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=9f338bfd2df4f1f350a667fa252a6436

weldon weldon danica patrick today show peyton hillis david garrard matt nathanson

Avlon: Birthers, smokers, jokers -- it's silly season in GOP presidential race (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/153701102?client_source=feed&format=rss

jacqueline kennedy jacqueline kennedy jackie o john kennedy jr john kennedy jr machine gun preacher machine gun preacher

Friday, October 28, 2011

Smurf drawings could sell for $167,000 each

Rare original drawings of the Smurfs, blue-skinned cartoon characters created by Belgian artist Peyo, are set to fetch up to 120,000 euros ($167,000) each on Saturday in the first auction of the late artist's work.

The highlight of a sale of 33 full-page Peyo comic strips at the Artcurial auction house on the Champs-Elysees in Paris will be a black-and-white sketch -- "The Smurfs and the Magic Flute."

It is the first time Peyo's family has sold original Smurf artwork, although some drawings given as gifts has been sold, and the sale is drawing interest from enthusiasts worldwide.

"It was a stroke of genius on Peyo's part to have made the Smurfs blue because everyone -- whether they're Chinese or European -- can identify with them," said Eric Leroy, Artcurial's comic expert said.

  1. More Entertainment stories
    1. 'Sister Wives' welcome baby No. 17

      And baby makes 22! According to People, Kody Brown and wife No. 4, Robyn, welcomed a baby boy on Wednesday morning. The child is the first for the couple, but is the 17th in the plural family.

    2. Report: Bruce Willis to be a dad again
    3. Exclusive: Taylor Armstrong shares healing
    4. 'Beavis and Butt-head' and ... Snooki?
    5. Trick-or-treat with a 'Toddlers' twist

The Magic Flute drawing was the basis for the cover of Peyo's 1960 "Johan and Peewit" comic, a precursor of the Smurf series in which the diminutive figures, who sport white pants and pointy hats, first appeared before becoming stars in their own right.

Smurfs -- or "Schtroumpfs," as they are called in French -- went on to achieve worldwide fame, appearing in widely syndicated television cartoons, advertising spots and movies.

Story: Noisy, 3-D 'Smurfs' offers unfunny chaos

"The whole world knows the Smurfs from TV, and children think it's an animated show, but the original was a comic strip," said Leroy.

The auction, and a recent exhibition of more than 200 original comic sheets and personal items belonging to Peyo, follows this year's successful release of the 3D movie "The Smurfs," which has grossed more than half a million dollars.

Prices for the signed cartoon panels run from 5,000 euros up to 120,000 euros, not an unusually high price for comic art given that in 2008 Artcurial sold a Tintin comic for around $1 million. Some proceeds will go to UNICEF.

Peyo -- whose real name was Pierre Culliford -- came up with the word "Schtroumpf" over a meal when he forgot the word for salt and asked a friend to pass him the "schtroumpf."

Story: Hasbro meets Hollywood: When childhood toys turn into movies

The two started to use "schtroumpf" to replace other words in a playful form of conversation that was to become the basis for the cartoon Smurfs' language.

Conceived for children, the Smurfs were originally all males, lived in mushroom-like houses in a cooperative community, rode storks for transport and derived names from their trades or personalities, such as Lazy Smurf, Jokey Smurf and Doctor Smurf.

The cartoon prompted its share of controversy this year when French sociologist Antoine Bueno wrote a book alleging that the Smurfs' world represented a totalitarian Communist utopia and their gold-loving villain Gargamel was a caricature of a Jew.

Peyo's son Thierry Culliford defended his father, saying that the late cartoonist was completely apolitical.

Since Peyo's death at age 64 in 1992, Thierry Culliford has led Studio Peyo, which still produces comics under Peyo's name.

Are you a Smurf fan? Tell us on Facebook.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45050645/ns/today-entertainment/

anderson cooper dadt repeal comedy central roast neal schon neal schon eli manning eli manning

Lawyers give differing views of Mass. terror case (AP)

BOSTON ? A Massachusetts man charged with conspiring to help al-Qaida was an aspiring terrorist who hoped to answer Osama bin Laden's call to fight Americans, mostly from the comfort of his "cushy" home in a Boston suburb, a federal prosecutor told a jury Thursday.

Tarek Mehanna went to Yemen looking for terrorist training, but when that failed he returned to his home in Sudbury and began translating and posting on the Internet videos and texts promoting violent jihad, Assistant U.S. Attorney Aloke Chakravarty said.

"He viewed himself as part of the media department of al-Qaida," Chakravarty said.

But Mehanna's lawyer described Mehanna as a young man from a good family "with a normal American upbringing" who was simply venting his anger over the U.S. invasion of Iraq. Mehanna's online activities amount to free speech protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, attorney J.W. Carney Jr. told the jury.

"As Americans, we have that freedom. We can hold onto these beliefs and we can speak them, even if it upsets the federal government," Carney said.

Mehanna, 29, faces seven charges, including conspiring to provide material support to a designated terrorist organization, conspiracy to kill in a foreign country and lying to federal authorities.

Prosecutors are expected to call their first witnesses Friday. The trial is expected to last six to eight weeks. If convicted, Mehanna faces a possible sentence of lilfe in prison.

In opening statements, Chakravarty told the jury that Mehanna was among a group of young men, most of whom grew up in the suburbs of Boston, who for a period of about 10 years "were secretly plotting to attack American interests."

He said Mehanna and two other men decided they wanted to do something to participate in jihad.

"There were Muslims dying around the world and they felt it was their job to exact revenge," he said.

Chakravarty said the men considered domestic terrorism, including attacks on U.S. shopping malls and Hanscom Air Force Base in Bedford.

After the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003, the men decided "we need to go over there, we need to fight, we need to get the training," Chakravarty said.

Mehanna and two other men, Ahmad Abousamra and Kareem Abuzahra, agreed to go to Yemen in 2004 to get terrorism training, the prosecutor said.

Abousamra fled to Syria shortly after he was questioned by the FBI, while Abuzahra is expected to be a star witness against Mehanna.

Chakravarty said that after the men failed to get into a training camp in Yemen, Mehanna returned to the United States and began translating Arabic videos and texts promoting violent jihad, including a publication entitled "39 Ways to Serve and Participate in Jihad," which the prosecutor described as a "training manual."

"You'll find that this case is not about the defendant being un-American, having unpopular thoughts, but it's about what he tried to do to support the people who were actually killing Americans," Chakravarty said.

Mehanna's lawyer told the jury that his client never acted on behalf of al-Qaida.

Carney said Mehanna was a scholar of Arabic and Islamic law, and told people he wanted to go to Yemen, a country known for having pure Arabic unpolluted by outside influences as well as religious schools.

He said Mehanna did not go to Yemen to seek terrorist training.

"Tarek wanted to visit the schools he hoped to attend sometime in the future," Carney said. He told jurors they will hear testimony that while Mehanna was in Yemen, he toured three different schools, sat in on classes and talked to students.

Carney said Mehanna felt free to express his anger over the U.S. involvement in Iraq over the Internet and in instant messages to his friends because "he felt he was doing so under the freedom granted him by the First Amendment."

Carney also said Mehanna rejected the idea of shooting up a U.S. shopping mall. He said when someone else brought up the idea, Mehanna's response was, "Oh, come on, that's ridiculous."

"What you will see in this case is that Tarek Mehanna didn't do anything," he said.

About 100 of Mehanna's supporters, including his parents and brother, packed the courthouse for the start of his trial. Two overflow courtrooms were provided to accommodate the crowd. The group chanted "Free Free Tarek" and "Justice for Tarek" outside the courthouse.

About a dozen members of Occupy Boston, a local offshoot of the Occupy Wall Street movement, also attended the trial to show support for Mehanna.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_re_us/us_massachusetts_terror_charge

walter isaacson walter isaacson urban meyer zodiac killer battlefield 3 review battlefield 3 review real housewives of new jersey

Hurricane Rina becomes Category 2 storm

Hurricane Rina strengthened to a Category 2 storm on Tuesday as it swirled off Central America's Caribbean coast.

A hurricane watch has been issued for the east coast of the Yucatan Peninsula from north of Punta Gruesa to Cancun. A tropical storm watch was in effect from Chetumal to Punta Gruesa.

Rina's maximum sustained winds are near 100 mph. The U.S. National Hurricane Center said additional strengthening was forecast and Rina could become a major hurricane by Tuesday night or early Wednesday.

  1. Only on msnbc.com

    1. Battling for gay rights, in Allah's name
    2. Perry seeks to cash in on flat tax's enduring appeal
    3. PhotoBlog: World population set to exceed seven billion
    4. Your Career: Employers that pay for lunch
    5. Fecal transplants: Sounds gross, works great
    6. Yeast adds vitamins to bread

The hurricane was centered about 320 miles east-southeast of Chetumal and is moving west-northwest near 3 mph.

In Nicaragua, the air force launched an aerial search Monday for a Navy boat that disappeared Sunday while trying to evacuate residents from a low-lying coastal village.

Honduras, Central America's largest coffee producer, saw its coast brushed by the storm but coffee-growing areas were largely spared from more rains after heavy downpours last week collapsed roads to farms before the harvesting season.

On Monday afternoon, skies were clear in Guatemala ? the region's No. 2 coffee grower ? and in El Salvador, also a producer of high-quality arabica beans.

Farmers are still assessing damages from the earlier rains but national coffee associations say that infrastructure damage will be the biggest challenge.

Arabica coffee trading on ICE Futures U.S. got a boost from concerns about the hurricane after two weeks of rainstorms, that killed around 100 people across Central America.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45027451/ns/weather/

gazelle pumpkin carving patterns pumpkin carving patterns lsu lizzie borden lizzie borden james arthur ray

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Lung cancer screening with X-rays isn't beneficial

(AP) ? Routine chest X-rays do not prevent lung cancer deaths, not even in smokers or former smokers, according to a big government study challenging a once common type of screening.

In the study of more than 150,000 older Americans, those who had four annual chest X-ray screenings were just as likely to die of lung cancer as participants who didn't have those tests.

The results from the National Cancer Institute-funded research confirm previous, smaller X-ray studies. They follow another big study from that institute favoring a newer, more sophisticated imaging test. That found fewer lung cancer deaths among current or former heavy smokers who had special CT imaging scans versus those who had chest X-rays.

CT scans provide much more detailed images than X-rays, and while no major medical group recommends any type of routine lung cancer screening, several are preparing new guidelines.

Screening refers to routine tests in people without symptoms; doctors say chest X-rays are still useful to help diagnose people with lung cancer symptoms, including a persistent cough or coughing up blood.

Chest X-ray screening for lung cancer was common decades ago, and some doctors continue to recommend it in smokers and former smokers. The new study results should put an end to that practice, said Robert Smith, director of cancer screening at the American Cancer Society.

"No one recommends it but they do occur quite a lot," said Smith, who was not involved in the study.

The study was released online in the Journal of the American Medical Association on Wednesday, when it was presented at an American College of Chest Physicians meeting in Hawaii. The doctors' group is among those preparing new lung cancer screening recommendations.

The study's participants were aged 55 to 74 and were tracked for about 13 years. During that time, there were about 1,200 lung cancer deaths in participants who got X-rays and in those who got usual medical care. That's equal to about 14 deaths per 10,000 people each year.

Lung cancer is the leading cancer killer; it will be diagnosed this year in about 220,000 people nationwide, and more than half that number will die from lung cancer, the cancer society estimates.

Less than 1 percent of never smokers will develop lung cancer in their lifetime. By contrast, about 18 percent of current smokers will get the disease by age 75; the risk is somewhat lower but not zero for former smokers, depending on how long ago they quit, said Dr. Christine Berg, the study's senior author and chief of the National Cancer Institute's early detection research group.

"We were really hoping chest X-rays might be beneficial," partly because they are relatively inexpensive ? about $60 versus hundreds and sometimes thousands of dollars for CT scans, Berg said.

But Smith said the study shows routine chest X-ray screenings in healthy people without symptoms are "a waste of time," plus they can lead to false-positive results that may lead to invasive and potentially harmful tests.

Similar concerns have been raised recently about too-frequent pap tests for cervical cancer, routine PSA tests for prostate cancer screening, and excessive mammograms for breast cancer, leading to revised guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.

That independent group, which advises the U.S. government, concluded in 2004 that there was no evidence to support any method of routine lung cancer screening in people without symptoms, including X-rays and CT scans.

It is updating those guidelines based on recent new evidence, including last year's CT scan vs. chest X-ray study, and will take into account the new X-ray study, too, said Dr. Michael LeFevre, co-vice chairman of the task force and a family physician at the University of Missouri. That process may take up to two years, he said.

Because CT scans also can yield false positive results, it is unlikely any group will recommend them for screening nonsmokers.

___

Online:

JAMA: http://www.jama.ama-assn.org

National Cancer Institute: http://1.usa.gov/cndLsL

___

AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LindseyTanner

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-26-US-MED-Lung-Cancer-X-rays/id-f8722efa34664a3686be315a29df5822

constitution constitution james carville james carville andy cohen andy cohen rimm

Obama welcomes Europe's plan for dealing with debt (AP)

WASHINGTON ? President Barack Obama says Europe's new debt plan lays a "critical foundation" for a comprehensive solution to the continent's financial crisis.

In a statement, Obama says the U.S. looks forward to the rapid implementation of the plan. European leaders agreed to a deal Thursday to have banks take bigger losses on Greece's debts and to boost the region's weapons against market turmoil.

Obama says he will continue to support European allies in their efforts to address the financial crisis. The president will meet with some European leaders next week in France during the G-20 world financial meeting.

The president has said economic instability in Europe has been a drag on the U.S. economy.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama_europe

debit card fees debit card fees how to be a gentleman how to be a gentleman iphone 5 case pawpaw pawpaw

Govt: Few UK rioters were gang members

(AP) ? After riots swept through Britain in August, some officials blamed the looting and violence on gangs. But official data released Monday said those who have been charged in the unrest in London and other cities were young and poor ? but few were gang members.

The four days of rioting, triggered by a fatal police shooting Aug. 4 in north London's Tottenham neighborhood, were the worst civil disturbances to hit Britain since the 1980s. Five people were killed and scores of stores were looted and buildings burned in several cities, including London and Birmingham. More than 2,500 shops and businesses were targeted by the looters and vandals, with more than 230 homes being hit by burglars or vandals.

Afterward, Prime Minister David Cameron identified the growth of gangs as a key factor, and his Conservative-led government vowed to tackle gang culture as a result.

Cameron also blamed the disorder on Britain's "moral collapse," and Britain's Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg last month pledged new help for disadvantaged youths, saying young rioters had been let down by society.

But the figures released by the Home Office on Monday showed that less than one in 10 of those arrested for riot-linked activity were gang members. Police forces found that gang members "did not play a pivotal role" in the unrest, the Home Office said.

The statistics showed that most of the rioters were under the age of 20 ? with 26 percent aged 10-17 and 27 percent 18-20. The data also indicated that three-quarters of all those who appeared in court because of the unrest had a previous conviction or caution.

Separate figures based on government statistics regarding school systems showed that 36 percent of young people who appeared in court regarding the riots had been suspended during the 2009-2010 school year. Absence rates also were higher for those charged than the general school population, along with lower grades.

Those figures bolster claims made by Education Secretary Michael Gove last month that the riots had highlighted an "educational underclass" existing in Britain.

Separately, the Metropolitan Police force acknowledged that it did not have enough officers available on the first night of the August riots and that reinforcements took too long to arrive.

Police were criticized for responding too slowly, particularly in London, but eventually deployed huge numbers of officers at riot zones to quell the mayhem.

The Metropolitan Police force also has said it was re-examining how it draws intelligence from social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-24-EU-Britain-Riots/id-47d536e5886f4962a54259a266d9a77b

champions online mezzanine mezzanine jules verne jules verne als puppies

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Justin Bieber, Usher Drop Christmas Track

'The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)' debuted on Ryan Seacrest's radio show Monday morning.
By Jocelyn Vena


Justin Bieber in the "Mistletoe" video
Photo: Island Def Jam

On November 1, Justin Bieber will take his fans Under the Mistletoe on his holiday album. But he's giving them an early treat by releasing his Usher duet, "The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)," on Monday (October 24).

The song dropped on Ryan Seacrest's radio show. Its vibe is reminiscent of '90s R&B tracks, and it sounds a lot like it could have been recorded by Boyz II Men, who also appear on the album.

The Christmas classic is all about the little joys of the holiday season, including the family get-togethers, the food and Santa bringing presents to children. The song, one of the classics that appears on the album, hits iTunes on Monday. Bieber and Usher previously appeared together on "Somebody to Love" off My World 2.0.

"Justin and I did the classic record 'Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire.' This record is going to be remembered for years to come," Usher told Seacrest on Monday morning. "It's a record that has always been one of my favorites, and I'm happy that I was able to share it with Justin, and for us to put it out. The album is full of surprises. Justin's Under the Mistletoe is going to be incredible!"

In the lead-up to the release, Bieber released some behind-the-scenes footage of his mentor and him in the studio working on the song. He also shared that he had another surprise in store for his fans. Just one week after dropping the video for "Mistletoe," he tweeted, "Up early to shoot another video for #UNDERTHEMISTLETOE #Nov1st but something else is out this morning...."

In addition to Usher, Under the Mistletoe will also feature appearances from the Band Perry, Busta Rhymes, Boyz II Men and Mariah Carey, who re-recorded her classic "All I Want for Christmas" for the album.

Related Videos Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1673032/justin-bieber-usher-christmas-song.jhtml

tupac shakur dish network houston news nfl power rankings us news and world report college rankings us news and world report college rankings dishnetwork

Protesters defy calls to quit St. Paul's cathedral (AP)

LONDON ? St. Paul's Cathedral has welcomed visitors for 300 years, but for almost a week its heavy oak doors have been shut, locked because of an anti-capitalist protest camp outside the landmark building.

Church officials say the campsite is a health hazard, and on Wednesday London's Anglican bishop asked the demonstrators to leave. But the protesters are settling in for a long stay, and accuse the church of choosing the wrong side in the standoff between capitalism and idealism that has spawned sit-ins from New York to Sydney.

"We want this church to open," said a 50-year-old protest spokesman who gave his name as Akira. "We were shocked that they closed it."

The Dean of St. Paul's, Rev. Graeme Knowles, said Wednesday evening he was optimistic that the cathedral would reopen Friday following changes to the layout of tents used by the protesters.

The cathedral is considering all its options in response to the protest ? including legal action ? Knowles said, adding that a final decision would be made Thursday on whether St. Paul's could open in time for a midday service Friday.

In recent days authorities in several cities around the world have swooped in to evict encampments of anti-corporate demonstrators inspired by New York's Occupy Wall Street movement. But London's campsite has grown since protesters erected tents near the base of the cathedral steps on Oct. 15. They had hoped to camp outside the nearby London Stock Exchange, but were stopped by police. Cathedral officials initially permitted the protesters to stay.

The camp, perhaps 100 tents and 500 people strong, has the air of a scruffy village carnival, with banners, speeches, activities ? and even, one recent afternoon, a singalong. "Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right," sang a small but enthusiastic group attempting a Stealers Wheel classic. "Here I am, stuck in the middle with you."

That is a fair summary of how cathedral officials feel. They say they support the right to demonstrate and did not want to shut the building ? for the first time since German bombers blitzed London during World War II ? but made the decision last Friday because the protesters' tents, stoves and generators pose a threat to public safety.

The closure is costing the cathedral thousands of pounds (dollars) a day ? St. Paul's charges adults 14.50 pounds ($23) for admission, unless they are attending a service ? and means disappointment for tourists hoping to visit Christopher Wren's domed church, one of London's most famous buildings and the site of the 1981 wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.

On Wednesday, Bishop of London Richard Chartres, the third highest-ranking cleric in the Church of England, asked the protesters to go home, saying: "The camp's presence threatens to eclipse entirely the issues that it was set up to address."

The protesters say they have worked with health-and-safety officials to make sure the site is safe, and want to negotiate a compromise with the church.

The protest is less than two weeks old but has a semi-permanent feel. There is a kitchen dispensing donated food and water, a tent offering free "tea and coffee and empathy," a technology tent linking the camp to the world via the Internet, a music tent, a meditation tent, a library, a movie theater and a newspaper.

There are twice-daily meetings to plan strategy, and near-constant debates. The activists include many students and veteran protesters, but also, organizers say, doctors, shopkeepers and teachers.

Their demands are diverse, ranging from tighter control of banks to the complete dismantling of the capitalist system. But that diversity, the protesters say, is the point.

"This is a free space ? a free space for ideas, for discussions, for coming together and trying to brainstorm something, as a collective," said Emma Medoes, a student who works part time in a bar.

Similar camps have sprung up across the United States and around the world since activists took over a plaza near New York's Wall Street seven weeks ago to protest corporate greed and social inequality.

Most have withered or been dismantled, sometimes by force. On Tuesday police in Oakland, California, fired tear gas and bean bags to disperse about 170 protesters who had been camping in front of City Hall for the past two weeks. Police in Atlanta also moved in to break up a 2-week-old camp.

Several high-profile protests remain. In the hub of Asian capitalism, Hong Kong, 30 to 40 protesters are camped outside the headquarters of banking giant HSBC.

In Germany, crowds of several thousand demonstrated on Oct. 15 and again on Saturday, and a small camp has been pitched outside the headquarters of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt. But the protests have failed to catch fire in a country that has one of Europe's strongest economies.

As winter approaches in London, it's unclear whether the protest will prosper or shrink.

At the moment police can't remove the protesters, who technically are not trespassing ? they camped with the Cathedral's approval. A handful of people have been arrested for public disorder offenses since the protest began, but police say it has been mainly peaceful.

The local governing authority, the City of London Corporation, says it is taking legal advice on the best way to evict the protesters ? but that could be a long process.

An anti-war vigil outside Britain's Parliament has continued for 10 years, despite repeated legal attempts by local authorities to move it. A handful of die-hards remain, even though legal challenges have limited the protesters to the sidewalk, rather than the grass area of Parliament Square.

The issue is complicated because this patch of London dates back to medieval times, with complex ownership split between the local authority and the cathedral.

Bookmaker William Hill is taking bets on a reopening date, offering 50 to 1 odds on the building still being shut at Christmas.

The camp is drawing support from some of the tourists, office workers ? and even bankers ? who stop by the site to take photographs and chat. Many say they understand the anger at bankers at a time when economic crisis and government austerity are bringing rising unemployment, higher prices, scarcer services and dwindling pensions.

"I agree with some of the things they are saying," said David Pressman, a 19-year-old trainee investment banker. "I think there is a lot of greed from a small number of people."

The protest has already spawned a second, smaller camp, a mile (1.6 kilometers) away in Finsbury Square. But a local councilor claimed this week that infrared photographs revealed that 90 percent of the tents at St. Paul's were unoccupied at night as protesters returned home to hot showers and warm beds.

Camp organizers insist that most of the tents are occupied at night, saying there are plenty of newcomers willing to take over from those whose who have to leave.

Protester Malcolm Blackman, 44, said the photographs were probably taken before midnight ? when many demonstrators were in the pub.

"If you're going to have a tent city in the middle of London, you're going to enjoy London," he said. "We're not all so poor we can't afford a pint."

____

Associated Press Writers Juergen Baetz in Berlin and Peter Enav in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_wall_street_protests

aspergers tcu apple computer pancreatic cancer steve jobs aapl stock aapl stock

Video: Wow guests with impressive tablescapes

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45031427#45031427

marco rubio groupon ipo groupon ipo wvu football meteor shower tonight district 9 district 9

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Hezbollah: Syria largely out of 'danger zone' (AP)

BEIRUT ? The leader of the militant group Hezbollah says the regime in Syria is largely "out of the danger zone" despite a 7-month-old uprising against President Bashar Assad.

Hezbollah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah's comments Monday appeared to be an attempt to portray confidence that the Assad regime will survive.

Hezbollah is one of Syria's strongest allies, but the group has struggled to respond to the regime's bloody crackdown on protests.

Nasrallah has largely supported the Arab uprisings, saying Egypt, Tunisia and even Libya were too close to the U.S.

Syria's crackdown also appears to be eroding Hezbollah's reputation. At recent protests, Syrian protesters also unleashed their anger at Hezbollah over its blunt support for the regime.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_lebanon_hezbollah

jenna lyons jenna lyons amzn flat tax flat tax bettie page harry caray

Bret Taylor: ?A Few Years From Now, Most Every Single Person At Facebook Is Going To Be Working On Mobile?

Bret TaylorHow important is mobile to Facebook? Already, 350 million of its 800 million monthly active users are on mobile devices, and that number is just going to get bigger. "Fundamentally we view it as a really big shift for our company, as fundamental as the shift from desktop apps to the Internet," Facebook CTO Bret Taylor tells me in the TCTV interview above (which was shot at the Web 2.0 Summit earlier this week). "Companies really need to redefine themselves in this world of devices rather than browsers on people's laptops." Taylor goes even further with this stunning prediction: "A few years from now, most every single person at Facebook who works there is going to be working on mobile almost exclusively." Mobile and social go hand in hand. Facebook wants to create a seamless experience across the desktop and mobile, as well as between mobile devices.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/43Cpn4Ox0P0/

vince young byu skylab skylab all my children moneyball moneyball

Turkey quake death toll reaches over 200, set to rise (Reuters)

ERCIS, Turkey (Reuters) ? More than 200 people were confirmed killed and hundreds more feared dead on Monday after an earthquake hit parts of southeast Turkey, with rescue teams working until morning to free survivors crying out for help from under rubble.

Interior Minister Idris Naim Sahin said the 7.2 magnitude quake on Sunday killed 100 in the city of Van and 117 in the badly hit town of Ercis, 100 km (60 miles) further north. The death toll was expected to rise.

Overseeing emergency operations in Ercis, Sahin said a total of 1,090 people were known to have been injured. Hundreds remain unaccounted for.

Rescue efforts struggled to get into full swing following the quake, with electricity cut off as darkness fell on the towns and villages on the barren Anatolian steppe near the border with Iran.

Survivors and emergency service workers searched frantically through broken concrete, using hands, shovels and torches or working under floodlights powered by mobile generators.

As dawn broke the scale of devastation became clearer.

At one crumpled four-storey building in Ercis, a team of firemen from the largest southeastern city of Diyarbakir were trying to reach four children believed trapped deep in an apartment block as concerned bystanders looked on.

Nearby, aid teams handed out parcels of bread and food, while people wrapped in blankets huddled around open fires after spending a cold night on the streets.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said there were an unknown number of people unaccounted for under the collapsed buildings of the stricken towns, and he feared the worst for villagers living in outlying rural areas, who had still to be reached.

"Because the buildings are made of adobe, they are more vulnerable to quakes. I must say that almost all buildings in such villages are destroyed," Erdogan told a televised news conference in Van shortly after midnight on Sunday.

More than 100 aftershocks have jolted the region in the hours since the quake struck for around 25 seconds at 1041 GMT on Sunday.

"BE PATIENT"

In Van, a bustling and ancient city on a lake ringed by snow-capped mountains and with a population of 1 million, cranes shifted rubble off a collapsed six-storey apartment block where bystanders said 70 people were trapped.

Erdogan visited Ercis earlier by helicopter to assess first hand the scale of the disaster. With 55 buildings flattened, including a student dormitory, the level of destruction in Ercis, a town of 100,000, was greater than in Van, where fewer came down.

"We don't know how many people are in the ruins of collapsed buildings, it would be wrong to give a number," he said.

Reuters television images from Ercis showed rescuers trying to free one young boy, aged about 10, pinned beneath a concrete slab.

"Be patient, be patient," they pleaded as the boy whimpered. The lifeless hand of an adult, with a wedding ring, was visible just a few centimeters (inches) in front of his face.

The Red Crescent said a team of about 100 expert personnel had arrived at the earthquake zone to coordinate operations. Some 4,000 tents and 11,000 blankets, stoves and food were being distributed to help fight off the cold.

A tent city was being set up at the Ercis sports stadium. Access to the region was made more difficult as the earthquake caused the partial collapse of the main road between Van and Ercis, broadcaster CNN Turk reported.

The military issued a statement saying two battalions had been sent to assist the relief operations.

Soldiers were deployed in the town to help rescuers and digging machines had also arrived to help. There was a constant wail of ambulance sirens ferrying the injured to hospitals.

Dogan news agency reported that 24 people were pulled from the rubble alive in the two hours after midnight.

Reuters photographer Osman Orsal earlier described seeing dead body after body being pulled from the debris.

"Ambulances, soldiers, emergency teams everywhere now, working on getting people out of collapsed buildings. I have seen many dead bodies being taken out, the teams are trying to find people alive," Orsal said.

One nurse told CNN Turk news channel the town's hospital was so badly damaged that staff were treating injured in the garden, and bodies were being left outside the building,

After visiting the quake zone, Erdogan returned to Ankara, where he is expected to chair a cabinet meeting to discuss the response to the disaster.

He said Turkey was able to meet the challenge itself, but thanked countries that had offered help, including Armenia and Israel, two governments that have strained relations with Ankara.

In Van province officials scrambled to provide shelter for people rendered homeless or too afraid to go home while the aftershocks continued with alarming regularity.

"We are working on supplying people with places to spend the night, find shelter. One hundred tents are being erected in the city stadium now, and 700 more will be put up in the municipality stadium," Sahin told Reuters in Ercis.

(Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/wl_nm/us_turkey_quake

apple keynote apple keynote seattle news seattle news cheryl burke jenna fischer ben bernanke

Monday, October 24, 2011

Rina becomes hurricane off Honduras, boat missing (AP)

MANAGUA, Nicaragua ? Hurricane Rina formed Monday off Central America's Caribbean coast and officials in Nicaragua launched a search for a missing Navy boat with 27 people aboard that had been trying to evacuate coastal residents.

Rina quickly built into a Category 1 hurricane off Honduras' coast with top winds of 75 mph (120 kph) and was expected to strengthen further, perhaps reaching windspeeds of 120 mph (195 kph) or more later in the week as it takes aim on Mexico's Caribbean coast, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Monday.

Rina was centered about 190 miles (310 kilometers) northeast of the coastal city of Trujillo, Honduras and was moving west-northwest at about 5 mph (8 kph).

In neighboring Nicaragua, the air force launched an aerial search Monday for a navy boat that disappeared late Sunday while trying to evacuate residents from the low-lying coastal village of Sandy Bay, near the Honduran border.

Rosario Murillo, Nicaragua's first lady and secretary of communications, told a local radio station that the boat was carrying four crew members, 12 male passengers, 10 female passengers and a child when officials lost radio contact with the open boat late Sunday.

The boats disappeared when Rina was still not yet a hurricane but had already begun causing rain in the area.

Rina was expected to make a turn to the north midweek and take aim on the Mexican resort of Cancun, possibly hitting in or near the Caribbean resort by Friday.

Officials in Cancun started preparations for storm shelters and potential evacuations, if needed.

"Hotel operators, the civil defense department, tourism and public safety authorities are taking the necessary measures for shelters, transportation and providing information for tourists, obviously with generating alarm that could create a panic," said Cancun Tourism Director Maximo Garcia.

Cancun civil defense director Felix Diaz Villalobos said officials would begin meeting tonight to begin drawing up emergency plans.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/tropical_weather

jack o lantern jack o lantern dave thomas kris humphries selena mean girls houston weather