Saturday, December 31, 2011

Matters obtaining Canada Goose Coats.

December 29th, 2011 5:32

Matters obtaining Canada Goose Coats.

Matters obtaining Canada Goose Coats
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Source: http://my.telegraph.co.uk/logary/logary/4/matters-obtaining-canada-goose-coats/

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How to Survive Your First Year As An Entrepreneur

HBO1I loved talking to the skankiest prostitutes at three in the morning with a camera crew around me, fires burning in the street, sad, abused people clinging to scraps of life for their pleasures, bailed out prisoners and the drug dealers waiting for them to be released, homeless addicts with nowhere to go and they only weren't freaks if you saw them at three in the morning . In short,? I loved my job. Entrepreneurship ruined it.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/7y8wIDNp3oQ/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Daily Desired: A Watch That Makes It Really Hard to Tell Time [Video]

I hate everything about time. Being on time, looking at time, adhering to time. EVERYTHING. My hate for time is a big reason why I never wear watches because then, I would be handcuffed by time. AND WHO WANTS THAT. I'm a free spirit! Don't change me world! Or I can just wear this Kisai On Air Watch that looks more like a faceless watch than a timecuff. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/SwaXGK8oO-8/daily-desired-a-watch-that-makes-it-really-hard-to-tell-time

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Mizzou and A&M begin SEC play at home in 2012

(AP) ? Missouri and Texas A&M will play their first Southeastern Conference games at home on Sept. 8, and Alabama will visit LSU in a rematch of the Bowl Championship Series national championship on Nov. 3.

The SEC released its first 14-team schedule on Wednesday with new members Missouri and Texas A&M as part of the conference.

Missouri will play the 2012 season in the SEC East and hosts Georgia on Sept. 8. Texas A&M will be in the West and hosts Florida. The first conference game will be Aug. 30 when South Carolina visits Vanderbilt.

SEC commissioner Mike Slive praised the league's transition team and athletic directors for handling what he called "significant logistical challenges" in putting together the schedule released Wednesday.

Teams will still play eight conference games, with six against divisional foes and two against the other division. The SEC championship game will be Dec. 1 in Atlanta.

Athletic directors will meet in the spring to decide the formula for future schedules.

David Williams, Vanderbilt's vice chancellor in charge of athletics, said adding Texas A&M and Missouri made it challenging to put together an eight-game conference schedule.

"Fans should keep in mind that this league schedule is only for the 2012 season ...," Williams said in a statement.

There remain plenty of kinks to work out for 2012, though.

Texas A&M is under a 10-year contract to play Arkansas in Dallas, and Razorbacks coach Bobby Petrino said recently the Aggies want a home-and-home series now that both teams are in the SEC.

Texas A&M will be the home team for the Sept. 29 game for which the site has yet to be decided. It will be the first league game between these teams since 1991 when both were in the Southwest Conference.

Arkansas released an 11-game schedule with the Razorbacks busy trying to line up a final non-conference opponent. Texas A&M's current schedule has 10 opponents listed. Missouri has three non-conference games to be decided, while Auburn has its non-conference opponents lined up, including Clemson in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Classic with dates yet to be set.

"Unfortunately, there are still several issues to be resolved in our 2012 football schedule, but we wanted to get as much information to our fans as possible so they may begin planning for next season," Arkansas athletics director Jeff Long said in a statement. "We are pleased to have at least seven home games and possibly eight as part of a very competitive 2012 football schedule."

Texas A&M's entry into the SEC will be challenging. The Aggies not only kick off the SEC season against Florida, they still play Arkansas while hosting LSU and Missouri and visit Auburn, Mississippi State and Alabama on Nov. 10.

Missouri visits South Carolina, Florida, Tennessee and Texas A&M, and hosts Vanderbilt, Alabama on Oct. 13 and Kentucky.

LSU will visit Auburn on Sept. 22 to kick off its SEC schedule before visiting Florida.

Alabama not only hits the SEC road to visit LSU but opens conference play at Arkansas on Sept. 15. Alabama visits Missouri and Tennessee in addition to LSU.

Georgia, the SEC East champ, didn't play either LSU or Alabama in 2011, and the new SEC schedule has the Bulldogs missing both of the BCS teams in 2012. The Bulldogs play Mississippi and Auburn out of the West.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-28-SEC%20Schedule/id-106f5eb5d1024daaa1e1b108d3e4492d

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Avastin Passes Test in Delaying Ovarian Cancer (LiveScience.com)

For women with advanced cases of ovarian cancer, the drug Avastin adds about four months to the time it takes for the cancer to worsen, according to a new report.

Patients treated with Avastin in addition to chemotherapy had about 14 months before their advanced ovarian cancer progressed, compared to about 10 months for those in the study who were ?treated with chemotherapy and a placebo.

An early analysis of the trial's results was presented in June 2010 at the meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology; the complete report from the trial appears today (Dec. 28) in the New England Journal of Medicine.

This was the third clinical trial to show that adding Avastin to standard chemotherapy treatments extends the time before ovarian cancers progress, said Dr. Carol Aghajanian, chief of gynecologic medical oncology service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City.

"This is good news for women with ovarian cancer," said Aghajanian, who was not involved in the new study.

The European Commission approved Avastin as a treatment for ovarian cancer this month, but it is unclear whether the drug will be approved to treat this cancer in the United States, Aghajanian said. The Food and Drug Administration will be looking at the data.

The drug, made by pharmaceutical company Genentech, is designed to inhibit the growth of blood vessels that feed a tumor. It is currently approved to treat certain types of colon, lung, kidney and brain cancers, while the FDA recently disallowed its use for breast cancer.

Preventing cancer from worsening

The new report is based on 1,873 ovarian cancer patients who had been assigned at random to three groups. One received chemotherapy treatments along with a placebo; one received Avastin (generically known as bevacizumab) along with chemotherapy at the start of their treatment, then received only chemotherapy for the rest of their treatment; the third group received Avastin along with chemotherapy for the entirety of their treatment. The patients did not know which treatment they were receiving; neither did the doctors treating them.

The researchers measured the blood levels of a marker called CA-125 to determine whether the patients' cancers were progressing. CA-125 levels are a very early marker of worsening cancer, Aghajanian said. Levels of CA-125 begin to rise before a growing cancer is visible on a CT scan.

"They used a very conservative method of measuring progression, so we can be certain that it's meaningful," Aghajanian said.

Whether Avastin could extend patients' lives is a tricky question to try to answer with studies, Aghajanian said. At the end of this trial, for example, the patients and their doctors were told whether they had received Avastin or the placebo treatment, and it was entirely possible that those who had been on the placebo then received Avastin, she explained. Such a crossover in treatments after a study's conclusion would make it difficult to later determine whether patients who received a drug during a trial lived longer.?

Avastin and breast cancer

There are important differences between the studies of Avastin as a treatment for breast cancer and the studies of its use for ovarian cancer, Aghajanian said.

In November the FDA revoked its approval of Avastin to treat breast cancer because studies showed that breast cancer patients treated with it did not live any longer, and faced significant risks of severe side effects such as small holes developing in the intestines. The drug had been cleared by the FDA in February 2008 under an "accelerated approval" process based on promising early studies, allowing Avastin to be used for breast cancer patients while Genentech did further research.

"There was not a consistent benefit seen in the breast cancer studies," Aghajanian said. By contrast, three studies of the drug's use in ovarian cancer showed a consistent benefit.

The safety of the drug as seen in the new study "was reassuring," Aghajanian said, as was the finding that patients taking the drug reported no difference in their quality of life from patients receiving the placebo.

The rate of patients who developed gastrointestinal perforations was twice as high among those who received Avastin as among those who received a placebo, but the rate was still under 3 percent.

Elevated blood pressure was seen in more patients who received Avastin throughout the study than in those who received the drug only at the beginning or not at all.

Pass it on: A third study has found the drug Avastin can delay the worsening of advanced ovarian cancer.

This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @MyHealth_MHND. Find us on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111228/sc_livescience/avastinpassestestindelayingovariancancer

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Video: No snow? Big problem for US ski resorts

The lack of snow this year is creating big problems for ski resorts nationwide. NBC?s Mike Taibbi reports.

Related Links:

TODAY.com home page

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45814185/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Activists: Syrian troops kill more protesters

In this photo taken on Monday Dec. 19, 2011, defected Syrian soldiers position their rifles as they take cover behind a the wall of a damaged house in the Baba Amr area, in Homs province, Syria. Arab League monitors kicked off their one month mission in Syria with a visit on Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011 to Homs, the first time Syria has allowed outside monitors to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising. Several from the team of 12 stayed in the city overnight, and the team continued to work in Homs on Wednesday. The monitors are expected to visit Hama, Idlib and Daraa on Thursday, Dec. 29, all centers of the uprising. (AP Photo)

In this photo taken on Monday Dec. 19, 2011, defected Syrian soldiers position their rifles as they take cover behind a the wall of a damaged house in the Baba Amr area, in Homs province, Syria. Arab League monitors kicked off their one month mission in Syria with a visit on Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011 to Homs, the first time Syria has allowed outside monitors to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising. Several from the team of 12 stayed in the city overnight, and the team continued to work in Homs on Wednesday. The monitors are expected to visit Hama, Idlib and Daraa on Thursday, Dec. 29, all centers of the uprising. (AP Photo)

In this photo taken on Wednesday Dec. 21, 2011, anti-Syrian regime protesters, some wearing Syrian revolution flags, gather during a night demonstration in the Baba Amr area, in Homs province, Syria. Arab League monitors kicked off their one month mission in Syria with a visit on Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011 to Homs, the first time Syria has allowed outside monitors to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising. Several from the team of 12 stayed in the city overnight, and the team continued to work in Homs on Wednesday. The monitors are expected to visit Hama, Idlib and Daraa on Thursday, Dec. 29, all centers of the uprising. The large Arabic banner hanging to the right reads, "all the doors closed, except your door God." (AP Photo)

In this photo taken on Monday Dec. 26, 2011, a Syrian doctor, left, treats civilians wounded by Syrian army shelling in the Baba Amr area, in Homs province, Syria. Arab League monitors kicked off their one month mission in Syria with a visit on Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011 to Homs, the first time Syria has allowed outside monitors to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising. Several from the team of 12 stayed in the city overnight, and the team continued to work in Homs on Wednesday. The monitors are expected to visit Hama, Idlib and Daraa on Thursday, Dec. 29, all centers of the uprising. (AP Photo)

In this photo taken on Monday Dec. 26, 2011, a Syrian man walks in an alley shelled by the Syrian army forces in the Baba Amr area, in Homs province, Syria. Arab League monitors kicked off their one month mission in Syria with a visit on Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011 to Homs, the first time Syria has allowed outside monitors to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising. Several from the team of 12 stayed in the city overnight, and the team continued to work in Homs on Wednesday. The monitors are expected to visit Hama, Idlib and Daraa on Thursday, Dec. 29, all centers of the uprising. (AP Photo)

In this photo taken on Monday Dec. 19, 2011, defected Syrian soldiers position their rifles as they take cover behind a the wall of a damaged house in the Baba Amr area, in Homs province, Syria. Arab League monitors kicked off their one month mission in Syria with a visit on Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011 to Homs, the first time Syria has allowed outside monitors to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising. Several from the team of 12 stayed in the city overnight, and the team continued to work in Homs on Wednesday. The monitors are expected to visit Hama, Idlib and Daraa on Thursday, Dec. 29, all centers of the uprising. (AP Photo)

(AP) ? Arab League monitors gathered accounts about the Syrian government's crackdown on dissent in the central city of Homs Wednesday as fresh violence flared just dozens of miles away. Activists said troops opened fire on thousands of unarmed protesters, killing at least six.

Though President Bashar Assad's regime has made concessions to the observers, including the release of nearly 800 prisoners, the military was pressing ahead with a campaign to put down mostly peaceful protests.

In the two days since the Arab monitors arrived, activists said troops have killed at least 39 people, including the six shot in the central city of Hama on Wednesday. The continued bloodshed ? and comments by an Arab League official praising Syria's cooperation ? have fueled concerns by the Syrian opposition that the Arab mission is a farce and a distraction from the ongoing killings.

The opposition suspects Assad is only trying to buy time and forestall more international sanctions and condemnation.

"This mission has absolutely no mandate, no authority, no teeth," said Ausama Monajed, a member of the Syrian National Council, the main opposition group. "The regime does not feel obliged to even bring down the number of casualties a day."

The 60 monitors ? the first Syria has allowed in during the nine-month uprising ? are supposed to be ensuring the regime is complying with terms of a plan to end a crackdown the U.N. says has killed more than 5,000 people since March.

The plan, which Syria agreed to on Dec. 19, demands that the regime remove its security forces and heavy weapons from cities, start talks with the opposition and allow human rights workers and journalists into the country. It also calls for the release of all political prisoners.

On Wednesday, the government released 755 prisoners following a report by Human Rights Watch accusing authorities of hiding hundreds of detainees from the monitors. It was the second concession in two days.

The army on Monday pulled some of its troops back from the central city of Homs after bombarding it for days and killing scores of people. Monitors who were allowed into the city were met by tens of thousands of protesters who called for Assad's execution.

Images obtained by The Associated Press from the city in the days leading up to the monitors' visit show army defectors inside a bombed-out building, firing machine guns through gaping holes in a wall.

In another, a huge crowd fills the street for a nighttime rally behind a giant banner of the uprising's revolutionary flag. A row of women wear the flags and a large sign overhead reads: "All the doors are closed except your door, God."

There are also photos of wounded civilians lying on a floor in pools of blood, and being treated with crude medical equipment. Another shows an alleyway with blood smeared on a wall and pooled on the ground.

At a Dec. 21 protest, a banner reads: "To the Arab League: Your initiative cannot protect us from death." Young girls with headbands that read "Leave!" and sashes calling for the "execution of Bashar" protest under banners with "Freedom and Dignity."

The images show the intensity of the opposition against Assad's regime, which brought on the offensive against Homs that began on Friday and lasted until monitors arrived Tuesday to start their one-month mission with a visit to the city.

Several from the team of 12 stayed in Homs overnight and they continued to work there Wednesday. There was no word on whether other teams went to different cities.

According to officials and activists, the monitors went to several districts of Homs, including trouble spots in Baba Amr, Bab Sbaa and Inshaat.

Amateur video posted on the Internet showed the head of the team, Sudanese Lt. Gen. Mohamed Ahmed Mustafa al-Dabi, walking in Baba Amr and stopping to talk to people. In one video, he is seen talking to a man who accuses the regime of killing his 64-year-old brother, a former official of Assad's ruling Baath party, and his wife, and then blaming it on armed gangs.

"Your excellency, they are killing influential people to draw a violent reaction from people," he tells al-Dabi.

Some amateur video showed the orange-jacketed observers in a white car, surrounded by people shouting for Assad's downfall and apparently objecting to the presence of a Syrian military escort in the car with them.

Other video showed the monitors visiting women and children who purportedly lost family members in recent violence. There were no reports of firing on protesters in Homs during the observers visit on Wednesday. Troops did open fire on the crowds on Tuesday.

On Thursday, the monitors are expected to visit Hama, Idlib and Daraa ? all centers of the uprising.

In Hama, several thousand protesters were trying to reach the city's main Assi square to stage a sit-in amid a heavy security presence when troops opened fire with bullets and tear gas to disperse them, activists said.

Hama-based activist Saleh Abu Kamel said he had the names of six people who were killed and many others wounded. The number could not be immediately confirmed. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Local Coordination Committees confirmed the protests and the shooting, giving conflicting casualty figures.

Violence erupted in several other parts of Syria, including the ambush killings of four soldiers by a group of military defectors, activists said.

Despite the ongoing crackdown, an Arab League official said cooperation by Syrian authorities with the monitors was "reassuring."

"The Syrian side is facilitating everything," Adnan Issa al-Khudeir told reporters in Cairo. He said the 60 observers who arrived in Syria Monday were divided into five groups to visit five locations: Homs, Aleppo, Idlib, Daraa and Hama.

Monajed, the SNC official, said the remarks were "unfortunate."

"They reflect the irresponsible behavior and attitude toward the massacres and atrocities committed by Assad's forces in the country," he said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-28-ML-Syria/id-576da326ea7249a880169459c1e370e5

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Last-minute holiday shopping gives lift in finale

The holiday shopping season turned out to be two seasons split by a big lull.

A surge in buying in the two weeks before Christmas coupled with a record-breaking Black Friday gave retailers a solid season. The doldrums between the buying binges show how shoppers have learned to wait for the discounts they know will come.

For Dec. 1-24, spending rose 4.7 percent compared with the same period last year, according to research firm ShopperTrak. In November, it rose 4.1 percent. A 4 percent increase is considered a successful season. A combined figure for the whole season won't be available until after Dec. 31.

The increase is good news for the economy, because it shows shoppers were willing and able to fund a holiday splurge. Consumer spending, including major items such as health care, accounts for 70 percent of the economy.

Still, plenty of shoppers are pinched for cash in the slow economic recovery, and were seeking the best deals. Stores have trained even shoppers who are primed to spend to look for a discount.

In the week before Christmas, last-minute shoppers gave retailers a 4.5 percent increase in revenue at stores open at least a year with the same week last year, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers-Goldman Sachs Weekly Chain Store Sales Index.

The index estimates sales at 24 major stores including Macy's Inc. and Costco Wholesale Corp. Revenue at stores open at least a year is an important measurement of a retailer's performance because it excludes the effects of stores that open or close during the year.

Total retail revenue for the week ended Saturday rose 14.8 percent compared with the year ago, ShopperTrak estimates.

Gift buyers gained steam as the season went on. The store revenue figure rose 0.9 percent last week from the week before, building on a 3.4 percent increase the week before that.

"The downs and ups were much more accentuated," said Michael P. Niemira, chief economist at the trade group. "It just shows how cautious the consumer is. Consumers are bargain hunters more today than ever before."

The post-Black Friday lull was deeper than usual this year. The two weeks after Thanksgiving weekend showed the biggest percentage sales decline since 2000. Then, during the final two weeks before Christmas, sales surged again, by the highest rate since 2005, Niemira said.

"The holiday season was good but uneven," Niemira said.

Stores are expected to benefit when shoppers come back to spend their gift cards, because people often spend more than the cards' value. In addition, gift card sales are recorded only when shoppers redeem them.

People have more money on their cards to spend. According to an ICSC-Goldman Sachs survey of shoppers conducted Sunday, 18 percent of holiday spending went toward gift cards, up from 14.6 percent last year.

ICSC said it expects holiday sales for November and December to rise in line with its forecast of 3.5 percent.

The week after Christmas, which includes six shopping days, should be strong. But it's being compared with seven days last year because the week as retailers measure it ends on Saturday.

As proof that consumers are timing their spending to when they know they'll get the best bargains, Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, was the biggest sales day, as expected, generating sales of $11.4 billion, up 6.6 percent from a year ago, according to ShopperTrak.

But based on preliminary data, Christmas Eve and Dec. 26 were the second- and third-heaviest spending days of the season, according to ShopperTrak founder Bill Martin. He had originally expected Saturday, Dec. 17, to be the second-largest. Christmas Eve wasn't even forecast to be among the top 10 days.

"Shoppers are willing to spend when they know the biggest discounts are available," said Martin.

ShopperTrak measures foot traffic in 25,000 stores in the U.S. and blends those figures with economic data along with proprietary sales figures from merchants. The data excludes sales from auto dealers, gas stations, restaurants and grocery stores.

A fuller holiday spending picture will come Jan. 5, when stores including Target Corp. and Macy's will release December sales figures.

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/45804100/ns/business-stocks_and_economy/

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Chinese Bloggers Have Discovered Another Abandoned Luxury Housing Development

?On the north end of Bahe East Road, there is a cluster of villas standing in the middle of weeds and trees, looking just like those little castles from fairy tales. Surprisingly they are all empty.? Netizen ?????" wrote on Huashang Forum and posted some photos.

?I heard that they have been abandoned for years. What a pity, not only that they are occupying this large area of land for no purpose, also that they are fine houses left unused. Isn?t it a waste of resource? Who build them? Is anybody responsible for this? Why they are left unmanaged??

(From sohu) A reporter then tracked down this villa cluster according to the description of the post, and spotted it near the intersection of Ba River(??), Wei River(??) and Jing River(??). Amongst overgrowing weeds scatters over 10 western style villa buildings with 2 floors. The half-finished buildings are basically just frameworks, whose walls are damaged here and there along the years. Walking inside the area, you would find that the weeds in some part are already over the knees.

In the middle of the cluster, there is a domical architecture relatively higher than the rest of the villas. The reporter encountered a couple who live there. The man Mr Li said he was hired by another man who lives nearby to oversee these buildings and do some gardening. ?I have been living here for 7 years, my boss is only a project manager, I have never seen the real boss.?

Mr Li said that originally the area was meant to be a resort village, and the domical building he lives in was designed to be a conference center, with cafe and swimming pool on the east side.

Residents from nearby communities told reporter that nobody would walk in even though there was no fence. ?The other day I passed by that place and walked into it out of curiosity. It was a cloudy day and getting dark, I was walking in the yard, suddenly a hare jumped out and disappeared, then a while later a flock of birds flew from of the weeds, it gave me the creeps. And I looked around, those houses were all undecorated, and their doors and windows are like huge open mouths and empty eyes. I was really scared and hurriedly left.?

Later reporter found out that the land belongs to a nearby village Lan Jia Village. It was farming land before. Villagers said: ?we barely go in there, it is scary just like the scenes from horror movies. Only kids go there to play sometime.? They called the villa cluster ?ghost town?.

According to the head of the Lan Jia Village, developers started the construction in 1997, but ceased somewhere along the construction due to some approval issues. Later, the remodeling program of Wei River kicked off, and the land is part of the planned area. Now that the resort project is in conflict with the river project, the approval process becomes a dead knot.

Yan Gaochao, an official from Ba Qiao District, Shanxi Province explained: ?The land belonged to Lan Jia Village at that time, developers had to apply from homeland department approval to nationalize it before using it for other purpose, which led to a series of process. At that time, developer took a short cut, signed the draft with the government first and started the construction right away, never to expect the process to be stuck and even contradicted with another government project. That?s why the villa cluster is left unfinished.?

Yan assured the reporter that demolition is inevitable, but he didn?t know how it will start. ?There is no guidelines, no laws or regulations to follow through, or to decide whether or not to compensate the developers.?

?We have apply to the upper level, and are thinking about establishing a special team consist of officials from homeland department, water resource ministry etc to solve this problem.?

The reporter tried to trace down the developers with contact information provided by the village committee and government department. But both the address and contact number of the developers belong to irrelevant companies now.

More pictures at China Hush >

Also check out satellite pictures of Chinese ghost cities >

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/clusterstock/~3/sgnTf3ChJjA/chinese-bloggers-ghost-town-2011-12

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Nine shot at Tennessee teenagers' party (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Nine people were shot, though no deaths were reported, after gunfire broke out at a teenagers' party at a nightclub in Chattanooga and another location nearby, Tennessee, a police official said on Sunday.

Police were called to the "teen party" in downtown Chattanooga at around midnight on Saturday following reports of multiple gun shots, the Chattanooga Police Department said in a statement.

Several revelers were struck and wounded by gunfire, including a 17-year-old boy who was hit in the pelvis and underwent surgery at a local hospital, department spokesman Sgt. Jerri Weary said.

An off-duty Chattanooga police officer working at the nightclub where the party was being held, fired at a suspect who pointed a gun at him during the shootings, Weary said. The officer was not hit during the incident.

At the same time, police also responded to a second shooting nearby, although it was not immediately clear if the incidents were related.

"Due to the number of victims and potential number of suspects, details from both incidents are still inconclusive," Weary said.

"We have not had anybody come forward (saying) that they were shot, but people fled the scene ... We are still trying to piece this together," she added.

Weary said no arrests had been made, and that it was unclear if there were one or more suspects involved.

No deaths were reported. All of the victims were taken to local hospitals. Only some were admitted, Weary said.

(Reporting by Eric Johnson; Editing by Tim Gaynor)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/us_nm/us_tennessee_shooting

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Years before, Darfur rebel served Sudan leaders (AP)

KHARTOUM, Sudan ? Years before Darfur's most powerful and charismatic rebel leader became enemy No. 1 of Sudan's Arab-dominated government, Khalil Ibrahim was a member of the movement that brought it to power in a coup.

Ibrahim was part of the National Islamic Front, which seized power in a bloodless military putsch in 1989. Like many of the movement's members, Ibrahim, a physician, returned to Sudan from Saudi Arabia after the coup and was soon after appointed state minister for Darfur, the vast western desert region of the country.

Years later, having grown frustrated with the continued marginalization of ethnic African Darfurians, Ibrahim joined a group of dissidents ? most of them from the Darfur region ? who published the "Black Book," a scathing exposure of the Arab domination of politics and resources in Sudan.

Full-blown war broke out in 2003.

On Sunday, Sudan's army said, it killed Ibrahim, its fiercest enemy, in a military offensive in the North Kordofan region, which borders Darfur. He was in his 50s.

Ibrahim first made his split with the government of army general Omar al-Bashir public when he sided with another key figure who had turned against Sudan's president.

Hassan al-Turabi, the president's one-time mentor and movement ideologue, fell out with al-Bashir and was pushed from government. For years afterward, the government accused al-Turabi of supporting Ibrahim's group, and it has kept the elderly politician in and out of prison for years.

Ibrahim announced the formation of Darfur's Justice and Equality Movement, or JEM, from exile in early 2000. Along with an array of other rebel groups, he launched the struggle against Khartoum's marginalization of Darfur from the remote western region.

After years of conflict, Ibrahim's group emerged as the most formidable military challenge to Khartoum's government.

In its most stunning display of might, the rebels of JEM in 2008 blazed across the desert in trucks loaded with men and guns right up to the capital's outskirts and launched an attack that shook the government. At least 200 people, including rebels, civilians and security, died in that attack.

The short-lived assault was the first of its kind by the Darfur rebels. The government soon afterward went into peace talks that produced deals with many rebel factions.

Ibrahim's group was among them at first, but it soon dropped out over disagreement on the release of prisoners and representation in a future government. He later extended his group's operation in provinces neighboring Darfur and threatened to take the fight to Khartoum.

Ibrahim's rebel movement is made up of fighters largely from his own Zaghawa tribe, which is based in Darfur and to the west, across the border in Chad and known for its formidable fighting ability.

Ibrahim tried to dominate other rebel groups in an attempt to form a unified position. But divisions along tribal lines and Ibrahim's own Islamist politics kept him from drawing a slew of rebel groups together under his leadership.

He lashed out at some of these groups, accusing them of having been infiltrated by the government and describing them dismissively as "individuals with mobile phones who appear on satellite stations."

Ibrahim was, however, one of the most successful rebel leaders in securing support from Sudan's neighbors Libya and Chad in his fight against al-Bashir's regime ? at least for a time.

His fortunes began to turn when the president of Chad reached a pact with al-Bashir to end his support for JEM and other rebel groups. Ibrahim was expelled from Chad and sought refuge in Moammar Gadhafi's Libya until Gadhafi's ouster and killing this year in that country's civil war.

Since then, Ibrahim's exact location had not been known.

Sudan's government said it attacked his convoy as he made his way to Sudan's newly born neighbor, South Sudan, which seceded from Khartoum in June as a result of a separate, decades-long war against the Arab-dominated government of Sudan.

The Darfur conflict and the related humanitarian crisis killed an estimated 300,000 people and displaced 2.7 million, according to U.N. figures. The fighting has tapered off since 2009, but the conflict continues to simmer and local grievances over government neglect remain.

Just days ago, JEM had renewed its threats against Khartoum, saying it would take the fight from the remote western region to the capital to topple al-Bashir's regime.

Partially encouraged by the wave of Arab Spring uprisings, some in Sudan have looked to Darfur's rebels as the most organized opposition to the regime and a force that could potentially challenge its decades-long hold on power.

Ibrahim's killing, however, throws the future of his rebel movement in doubt.

___

El Deeb reported from Cairo.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_sudan_obit_ibrahim

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Report: AFP photographer released in Turkey (AP)

ANKARA, Turkey ? Turkey's state-run news agency says authorities have released an AFP photographer, along with 12 other people who were detained as part of an investigation into a group prosecutors accuse of having links to Kurdish rebels.

Anadolu Agency said however, that a court early on Saturday ordered 35 other suspects formally arrested pending trial over their alleged involvement in the Union of Kurdistan Communities ? which authorities say is an offshoot of the PKK rebel group.

AFP photographer Mustafa Ozer was among 48 suspects, including a number of other journalists, detained in police raids in seven cities on Dec. 20, sparking increased concerns over media freedoms in Turkey.

Hundreds of Kurdish activists have been charged as part of the investigation since 2009.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_journalists

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NHL notes: Briere joins injury parade

NHL notes: Briere joins injury parade
Flyers forward Daniel Briere in action against the Canadiens at the Bell Centre in Montreal, Que., Dec. 15, 2011. (MARTIN CHEVALIER/QMI Agency)

Report an error

The bad news is Danny Briere is injured.

The good news for the Philadelphia Flyers is it's not another concussion.

Briere, who has 10 goals and 15 assists this season, was out of the lineup Friday night because of a bruised hand, Flyers general manager Paul Holmgren said.
The 34-year-old forward was listed as day to day.

The Flyers have been hit hard by concussions this season, including captain Chris Pronger who is out for the season, and Sean Couturier and Brayden Schenn who are currently sidelined. Leading scorer Claude Giroux has just returned to the lineup after missing four games with a concussion.

PANTHERS FEEL THE PAIN

The Florida Panthers could use a few days off -- they have had five forwards injured during the past four games.

The latest was Stephen Weiss, who sustained an upper-body injury Thursday against the Ottawa Senators when he collided with Chris Neil, knocking him out of a Friday night game against Boston.

Weiss joined Jack Skille (shoulder), Sean Bergenheim (groin), Mikael Samuelsson (tailbone) and Marco Sturm (possible concussion) among those who were injured in recent games. As well, Scottie Upshall and Marcel Goc have been on injured reserve with long-term injuries.

NAGGING INJURY FOR PEVERLEY

Boston Bruins forward Rich Peverley was taken out of the lineup for a game Friday against the Florida Panthers because of an undisclosed injury.

The Bruins want to give Peverley a break from an injury that he will have to cope with for the rest of the season, Bruins coach Claude Julien said Friday.

Peverley has six goals and 19 assists in 30 games.

"It's a little nagging injury that doesn't stop him from playing, but sometimes rest does a lot of good," Julien said.

BRIEFLY

The San Jose Sharks recalled Antero Niittymaki on Friday from the AHL, giving the Sharks three goalies on their roster. Niittymaki, who has been recovering from off-season hip surgery, joins fellow goalies Antti Niemi and Thomas Greiss ... Winger Martin Havlat visited the Sharks dressing room Friday, two days after surgery to repair a torn tendon in his left hamstring. He will be sidelined up to eight weeks.

Source: http://www.edmontonsun.com/2011/12/23/nhl-notes-briere-joins-injury-parade

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Menachem Wecker: Only "Fuzzy" Factors Can Predict Iconic Images, New Book 'From Christ to Coke' Suggests

Particularly in this era of YouTube and Flickr, it's worth pondering what makes an image or a video clip iconic -- or "go viral," to use the social media lingo?

2011-12-15-christtocoke228x300.jpg If the question had an easy answer, of course, Hollywood film companies and marketing and public relations firms wouldn't be throwing hundreds of millions of dollars at it.

But, Martin Kemp should be commended for trying to work his way through what's at stake in an image becoming an icon in his new book, Christ to Coke: How Image Becomes Icon.

A professor emeritus of the history of art at Oxford University, Kemp tackles 11 important images and figures in his book: Christ, the cross, the heart, the lion, the Mona Lisa, Che, a Vietnam War photo of napalmed children, the American flag, Coca-Cola, DNA, and the equation E=MC?.

Kemp devotes one chapter to each of the themes, symbols, or figures, and some of the chapters reflect particularly interesting research and little-known facts. Anyone who has seen Kemp's Wikipedia page won't be surprised at his wide repertoire, but it bears reiterating. In Christ to Coke, Kemp easily navigates high art and kitsch, and complicated scientific discoveries and sociology and cultural history.

But as dazzling as Kemp's individual chapters are in their information about the first heart transplant (in South Africa, and the Jewish patient's wife worried about her husband's new gentile heart) and who really invented Coca-Cola's semi-erotic-shaped bottle, there is no overarching lesson about icons.

"There is no absolute predictability -- just a series of extraordinary stories about images that exhibit varied kinds of shared and individual characteristics," Kemp writes.

Kemp allows that though only two of his chapters address literally religious subject matter -- Christ and the cross -- the heart has a "conspicuous religious dimension." And if the definition of 'religion' is extended to "embrace devotion that accords a value to something that transcends all its apparent physical existence," he adds, "then the other eight all exhibit either religious or quasi-religious dimensions."

One wonders why Kemp abandons this approach when he seeks larger governing patterns. He calls the American flag "probably the most religious of the apparently secular images" -- as it is a "kind of sacramental object through both law and custom" -- and notes that lions can convey divine majesty, and "No one who has witnessed the elbowing crowds in front of the Mona Lisa can doubt that 'she' is the subject of cultural worship and journeys of pilgrimage."

But after arguing that it'd be tough to characterize the Coca-Cola bottle as religious "without debasing the term 'religious' to embrace such things as the worship of material consumption," Kemp dismisses religious, or quasi-religious, identity as a defining feature of icons. "We all tend to accord value to things that transcend any kind of financial and utilitarian worth," he says.

So apparently transcendence won't do as a contributing factor to icon status, though of course all successful icons are necessarily transcendent, in that they distinguish themselves from the pack of would-be icons. Perhaps identifying transcendence as a prerequisite to achieving iconic status would be a tautology, but it's actually a bit of a deep point.

A Che Guevara portrait isn't necessarily going to be successful because of it's subject matter. The photograph actually needs to be greater than the competition, just like Christ's majesty doesn't mean every crucifixion is going to be great art. Iconic themes certainly don't imply that every treatment of the themes deserve a reward. So Kemp is no doubt onto something in noticing at least some religious aspect to the icons he examines -- even the non-religious ones.

It's no wonder, then, that Kemp's first chapter on the "true icon" is arguably his most interesting one. In his treatment of Jesus' appearance, Kemp carefully traces the history of the acheiropoietos, or image not made by human hands. The sudarium (or Veronica's Veil) literally claimed iconic status by virtue of their divine creators.

Kemp doesn't suggest it, but perhaps all the 11 icons he addresses can be viewed in this light. Viewers are of course interested in Mona Lisa because they are fascinated by the image's creator, Leonardo da Vinci, and the model, Mona Lisa. But I'd argue that the painting has become iconic at least in part because it's so easy to "get lost" in the work and to forget the literal content and the creator. I'd submit that this type of transcendence might be common to all icons. The ones that have so much depth that they can hold our attention in their own right are the ones that we will cling to for many generations.

Of course this won't help us diagnose and predict which images are likely to go "viral," as it's always easier to predict the past than the future when it comes to qualitative judgments like this, but it might still be a useful template to use when we pose the very provocative question of what makes certain images become icons.

This article originally appeared in Houston Chronicle.

?

Follow Menachem Wecker on Twitter: www.twitter.com/mwecker

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/menachem-wecker/only-fuzzy-factors-can-pr_b_1150011.html

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Photos: 10 great gifts for college students

Photos: 10 great gifts for college students

Having a hard time coming up with Christmas presents for college students? No worries, here are 10 great Christmas gifts that your favorite college student would be thrilled to get.

Dressed in a Christmas tree outfit, Stephen Oparka, of Arlington, Va., walks past the White House as party of "Santarchy" in Washington, on Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. During "Santarchy," an annual holiday event, groups of people wear Santa suits and holiday themed attire and rove the city. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

by Lynn O'Shaughnessy / CBS MoneyWatch

khou.com

Posted on December 18, 2011 at 5:11 PM

(MoneyWatch)? Having a hard time coming up with Christmas presents for college students? No worries, here are 10 great Christmas gifts that your favorite college student would be thrilled to get.


1. Jambox speakers ($200)

These are incredibly small wireless speakers and speakerphone that you can carry in any room to enjoy streaming audio from a phone, computer or Bluetooth devices. With one of these speakers, which looks like a colorful block of cheese, you can have an instant dance party with music on your iPhone.


2. Roku ($49)


College students love watching South Park, Scrubs and their other favorite TV shows via Hulu, Netflix and Amazon, but it can be a pain to watch shows and movies on a small laptop screen. That's no longer necessary, however, with an amazing streaming media device called Roku. Plug the device into your television and watch your streaming video on a larger TV screen. It's that simple.


3. Livescribe smart pen ($99)


Smart phones are ubiquitous on college campuses, but smart pens can also be incredibly valuable. The Livescribe smartpen will make sitting through lectures much easier. With the pen, a student can record lectures while taking notes on special paper. Tap on the notes later and the pen will play back the appropriate audio.


4. Terrarium (Nearly free)

Terrariums are hot. You can buy them online, but it can be more fun to put one together and it will cost you next to nothing. Find a jar with a lid -- a quart size is great - and put pebbles on the bottom. Take a walk in a forest and find some small fern or other tiny plants, along with some hunks of moss and place them in the terrarium.


5. Zeo Sleep Manager ($99)


It's tough maintaining good sleep habits when you're a college student. Zeo Sleep Manager can help by tracking your sleep and alerting you in the morning to the quality of your slumber. You can sync the gadget to your smart phone.


6. DVDs of favorite TV shows ($20 - $30)


Give your college student DVD's of Dexter, True Blood, Entourage or whatever their favorite cable shows happen to be.


7. Electric tea kettle ($14 and up)

An electric tea kettle is perfect to fix a cup of tea on cold winter days or to heat water for ramen or a cup of soup. If you want to splurge, buy some Tevana tea to go along with it. My son loves Teavana's Jasmine pearls.


8. Fitbit Ultra ($99)


Perfect gift for any college students battling the freshmen 15. You may lose weight, despite dorm food, if you use the Fitbit Ultra, which looks like a thumb drive. The gadget, which clips onto your waistband, records your steps, flghts of stairs, calories burned and more data, which is automatically synced to your computer when the device is nearby. It also tracks how well you are sleeping.


9. Noise cancelling headphones ($30 - $300)


Help your favorite college student drown out noise in the dorm with noise canceling headphones. The best are going to be pricey.


10. Stocking stuffers


Skip the candy canes: What college students would like to see in their stockings are extra ear buds, thumb drives, packs of their favorite gum, beef jerky (big hit with my son), camera memory cards and gifts cards.

Source: http://www.khou.com/news/slideshows/Photos-10-great-gifts-for-college-students-135831108.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Yule Log TV

Even if you're not a yule log devotee, at this point you're probably at least familiar with the phenomenon. You know, that crackling log that burns in the fireplace ? on your TV. Ever wonder where this quirky idea originated? Watch the video to find out how the yule log came to television and how it's found renewed life online.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=cfee820caece1e4bbd796285777ffa15

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Game of the Week: No. 4 Molloy at No. 3 Bishop Ford

December, 21, 2011

Dec 21

1:28

PM ET

WHO: No. 3 Molloy vs. No. 4 Bishop Ford

WHEN: Thursday, 6:45 p.m.

WHERE: Bishop Ford

WHY THIS GAME IS IMPORTANT: Everyone wants to know who is going to be the team that can give Nazareth the best run for its money this season and this game can go a long way toward finding out. Bishop Ford and Molloy have both gotten off to great starts this season and this game will give one of these teams a foot up on the competition in trying to establish itself as a top competitor in the league.

Bishop Ford is off to a 6-1 start on the season that includes a win over New Jersey power St. John Vianney. The Lady Falcons have beaten Mary Louis Academy and Christ the King and will be going for their third big win in the division when they take on Molloy.

Molloy is 5-1 in the season, losing its last game to a non-conference foe in Ossining. Just one day prior to that loss, Molloy had a nice win in conference play against Bishop Loughlin. The Class A champions last season, the Lady Stanners are looking to make some noise in the AA this year.

KEY PLAYERS

Bishop Ford senior forward Shanice Vaughan
Bishop Ford junior guard Aaliyah Lewis
Bishop Ford junior guard Jill Conroy
Molloy junior forward Carolyn Gallagher
Molloy sophomore guard Kamille Ejerta
Molloy junior guard Amani Tatum

COACHES

Bishop Ford: Mike Toro
Molloy: Scott Lagas

HOW THEY GOT HERE:

Bishop Ford (6-1, 3-0 Brooklyn/Queens Division I)
Nov. 26: 44-33 win vs. JFK
Nov. 27: 60-40 loss to St. Anthony's
Dec. 3: 48-35 win vs. Sachem East
Dec. 5: 52-52 win vs. Christ the King
Dec. 14: 52-39 win at Mary Louis Academy
Dec. 16: Win vs. St. Francis Prep
Dec. 17: 62-56 (OT) win vs. St. John Vianney

Molloy (5-1, 1-0)
Nov. 26: Win vs. Sacred Heart
Dec. 3: 50-40 Win vs. Spotswood (Virginia)
Dec. 5: Win vs. St. Mary's
Dec. 7: 57-49 win vs. Holy Trinity
Dec. 17: 61-56 win vs. Bishop Loughlin
Dec. 18: 92-75 Loss to Ossoning

Tags:

Girls Basketball, Game of the Week, Bishop Ford, Molloy, Kamille Ejerta, Carolyn Gallagher, Amani Tatum, Mike Toro, Scott Lagas, Shanice Vaughan, Aaliyah Lewis, Jill Conroy

Source: http://espn.go.com/blog/new-york/high-school/post/_/id/4455/game-of-the-week-no-4-molloy-at-no-3-bishop-ford

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Applications for home mortgages slip

Applications for home mortgages slipped last week, led by a drop in purchase demand as low interest rates were not enough to entice home buyers, an industry group said on Wednesday.

The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and home purchase demand, fell 2.6 percent in the week ended Dec 16.

The MBA's seasonally adjusted index of refinancing applications dipped 1.6 percent, while the gauge of loan requests for home purchases lost 4.9 percent.

"Remarkably low rates are not enough, as many homeowners continue to hold back due to lack of equity in their properties, poor credit and a weak job market," Michael Fratantoni, MBA's vice president of research and economics, said in a statement.

Fixed 30-year mortgage rates averaged 4.08 percent, down 4 basis points from 4.12 percent the week before. It was the lowest rate this year, the MBA said.

The refinance share of total mortgage activity rose to 80.7 percent of applications from 79.7 percent the previous week.

The survey covers over 75 percent of U.S. retail residential mortgage applications, according to MBA.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45749351/ns/business-real_estate/

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Future War: Military satellite could stream live, ultra-zoomed in video of the Earth?s surface (Yahoo! News)

DARPA is developing a massive space camera to stream live video from the battlefield

If you're paranoid about eyes in the sky, a new project from the?Pentagon's zaniest department sure isn't going to help you sleep at night. The?Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (better known as DARPA) is at work developing a video-capable spacecraft that would peer down on Earth in high resolution ? and in real time.

Plenty of?satellites are already equipped with extremely powerful cameras pointed at the surface of the Earth, but capturing video presents an interesting dilemma. Unlike normal photo-snapping spacecraft which lurk in low altitudes, a satellite like DARPA is after would need to hang out about 22,000 miles away from Earth, lest it move too fast to capture video. DARPA is researching a satellite that would enter into geosynchronous orbit with the Earth, meaning that it would appear to stay in exactly the same place to an observer on the ground.

To field the idea, DARPA is looking to Ball Aerospace in a futuristic "membrane optics" proof of concept design worth $37 million. In theory, such a satellite would enter its ideal orbit and then open up a massive 66' space lens in the form of a flexible membrane. If executed, the massive aperture would be able to capture live streaming video of the battlefield, with a resolution high enough to spot ground objects like missile launchers. While the membrane optics telescope remains a concept design, many of DARPA's wildest dreams do have a habit of coming true (the agency's?deep pockets certainly don't hurt). And if?this particular dream is realized, the telescope of the Pentagon's dreams might just revolutionize modern warfare as we know it.

Innovation via?PopSci

This article originally appeared on Tecca

More from Tecca:

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111222/tc_yblog_technews/future-war-military-satellite-could-stream-live-ultra-zoomed-in-video-of-the-earths-surface

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Argentina and Britain reignite tensions over Falkland Islands

South American trade group Mercosur sided with Argentina this week in its ongoing dispute with Britain over the Falkland Islands.

The South American trade group Mercosur, wrapping up a two-day summit in Uruguay, has sided with Argentina in its ongoing dispute about the Falkland Islands, which it calls the Malvinas, announcing it will ban boats with Falkland Islands flags from their ports.

Skip to next paragraph

The countries that make up the Mercosur group include Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, and Uruguay, and they have increasingly voiced disapproval of British control over the islands, which lie 400 nautical miles off the coast of Argentina, and which have been in British hands since the 1830s.

The Telegraph has a good timeline of tensions between Britain and Argentina since a 1982 war between the two nations broke out.
?
?Note the flurry of activity since 2010. The dispute has become heightened over resources, as British firms explore for oil in the waters surrounding the islands.

?At the summit, in Montevideo, Argentinean President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner said:

"I want to thank everyone for their immense solidarity with the Malvinas. But you should know that when you are signing something on the Malvinas in favor of Argentina you are also doing it in your own defense. Malvinas is not an Argentine cause, it is a global cause, because in the Malvinas they are taking our oil and fishing resources. And when there is need for more resources, those who are strong are going to look for them wherever and however they can."

The ban announced by Mercosur does not include civilian ships, but it has caused a flurry of words across the Atlantic. The British foreign office responded to the announcement on Wednesday, saying, "We are very concerned by this latest Argentine attempt to isolate the Falkland Islands people and damage their livelihoods, for which there is no justification.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/TiRM4cvvl-o/Argentina-and-Britain-reignite-tensions-over-Falkland-Islands

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Monday, December 19, 2011

U.S. lifts sanctions on post-Gaddafi Libya (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The United States on Friday lifted most of the economic sanctions it had in place against Libya before the fall of former ruler Muammar Gaddafi.

"After careful consultation with the new Libyan government, the United States rolled back most U.S. sanctions on the government of Libya to keep our commitment to the Libyan people," the White House said in a statement.

Gaddafi's 42-year rule collapsed when his forces fled Tripoli in August and the last of the fighting in Libya ended in October when he was captured and killed by rebels.

The U.S. action followed by the lifting of sanctions by the U.N. Security Council on Libya's central banks and a subsidiary.

"Today's action unfreezes all government and central bank funds within U.S. jurisdiction, with limited exceptions," the White House said, adding that assets in the United States of Gaddafi family and his former aides remain frozen.

(Reporting By Caren Bohan; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/wl_nm/us_libya_usa_sanctions

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Suspect's lawyer describes Minn. courthouse attack (AP)

GRAND MARAIS, Minn. ? In the moments after authorities say a man just convicted in a criminal trial opened fire at a small northern Minnesota courthouse, it was his defense attorney who rushed to the aid of two shooting victims.

John Lillie III described a chaotic scene Thursday just minutes after his client, Daniel Schlienz, was convicted of third-degree criminal sexual conduct. Authorities have identified Schlienz, 42, as the man who shot the prosecutor who handled his case and another man.

In an interview with the Star Tribune of Minneapolis ( http://bit.ly/satj4y), Lillie said he was speaking to Schlienz's mother when he heard a shot ring out inside the Cook County courthouse.

Lillie said he followed a man's pleas for help and found Gregory Thompson, of Grand Marais, wounded. He dragged Thompson outside, then re-entered the courthouse to warn workers. Lillie said he heard two more shots on the second floor and ran up to find Tim Scannell, the county prosecutor, bleeding from three gunshot wounds.

"I hear screaming, `I've been shot! I need an ambulance!' Just screaming and screaming," Lillie told the newspaper. "The county attorney has crawled 10 feet to the top of the stairwell and can't move. He's been shot in the leg and the stomach."

Lillie said he wrapped Scannell's belt around his leg to stanch the bleeding, while others wrestled with Schlienz.

Scannell was in fair condition Friday and Thompson was in good condition. At least one other person was injured in the attack, but authorities did not disclose the nature of their injuries.

Schlienz was taken into custody, and authorities planned a midday Friday news conference to give more details about their investigation.

Online state court records listed several cases involving Daniel Schlienz in the past two decades, but most were minor traffic cases. More serious charges included fleeing a peace officer and the sexual conduct case, which was first filed in 2006.

Schlienz had made a plea agreement to serve no more than four months in the case, but was sentenced to a year in jail while he underwent sex offender treatment. Schlienz appealed and the state Court of Appeals sided with him, saying he should have been allowed to withdraw his plea once the district court disregarded the plea agreement.

Schlienz's father, Gary Schlienz, told the Duluth News Tribune that his son was down and out and "hated the prosecuting attorney that did this."

"I don't want to make excuses for him, but they prosecuted him pretty bad," the elder Schlienz said. "He had no job, no money, nothing."

The county's two-story courthouse, which has one courtroom, has no metal detectors and visitors aren't searched when they enter the building, Cook County Commissioner Fritz Sobanja said.

Grand Marais, home to about 1,300 residents, is about 110 miles northeast of Duluth and sits along the shore of Lake Superior in Minnesota's far northeastern tip.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_re_us/us_courthouse_shooting_minnesota

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Comet defies death, brushes up to sun and lives (AP)

WASHINGTON ? A small comet survived what astronomers figured would be a sure death when it danced uncomfortably close to the broiling sun.

Comet Lovejoy, which was only discovered a couple of weeks ago, was supposed to melt Thursday night when it came close to where temperatures hit several million degrees. Astronomers had tracked 2,000 other sun-grazing comets make the same suicidal trip. None had ever survived.

But astronomers watching live with NASA telescopes first saw the sun's corona wiggle as Lovejoy went close to the sun. They were then shocked when a bright spot emerged on the sun's other side. Lovejoy lived.

"I was delighted when I saw it go into the sun and I was astounded when I saw something re-emerge," said U.S. Navy solar researcher Karl Battams.

Lovejoy didn't exactly come out of its hellish adventure unscathed. Only 10 percent of the comet ? which was probably millions of tons ? survived the encounter, said W. Dean Pesnell, project scientist for NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, which tracked Lovejoy's death-defying plunge.

And the comet lost something pretty important: its tail.

"It looks like the tail broke off and is stuck" in the sun's magnetic field, Pesnell said.

Comets circle the sun and sometimes get too close. Lovejoy came within 75,000 miles of the sun's surface, Battams said. For a small object often described as a dirty snowball comprised of ice and dust, that brush with the sun should have been fatal.

Astronomers say it probably didn't melt completely because the comet was larger than they thought.

The frozen comet was evaporating as it made the trip toward the sun, "just like you're sweating on a hot day," Pesnell said.

"It's like an ice cube going by a barbecue grill," he said.

Pesnell said the comet, although only discovered at the end of November by an Australian observer, probably is related to a comet that came by Earth on the way to the sun in 1106.

As Comet Lovejoy makes its big circle through the solar system, it will be another 800 or 900 years before it nears the sun again, astronomers say.

___

Online:

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Winter diets? The secret is to chill the extremities

ScienceDaily (Dec. 16, 2011) ? Large mammals living in temperate climates frequently have difficulty finding food during winter. It is well known that they lower their metabolism at this time but does this represent a mechanism for coping with less food or is it merely a consequence of having less to eat? The puzzle has been solved -- at least for the red deer -- by the group of Walter Arnold at the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology, University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna.

The results are published in the Journal of Experimental Biology.

Although the temperate climates of central Europe provide plentiful food in summer, finding enough to eat is much more problematic in winter. Many small mammals avoid the problem by hibernating but this survival strategy is generally not practised by larger animals. With the exception of some bears, large mammals remain fully awake throughout the year, yet they too must reduce their metabolism to cope with the comparative scarcity of food. Red deer, for example, are known to lower their heart rate and to allow their extremities to cool substantially during winter. These changes have been interpreted as a mechanism for conserving energy but could simply reflect the fact that the animals cannot find enough food to eat, as the act of digestion is known to have a direct influence on a ruminant's metabolism.

It is clear that red deer must minimise their energy requirements to be able to survive on little but their own body fat over the long winter season. To understand how they do so, Christopher Turbill and colleagues at the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna inserted special transmitters into the reticulum (the foremost part of the stomach) of 15 female red deer and monitored the animals' heart rate and stomach temperature for a period of 18 months, including two winters. The deer lived under near-natural conditions but their food intake was tightly controlled, with the amount and the protein richness determined by the scientists. The air temperature was also recorded and statistical modeling was used to untangle the effects of the various different factors -- including swallowing snow, which naturally led to a rapid and dramatic decrease in stomach temperature -- on the animals' metabolism.

The slow season

The most striking result was that the deer lowered their heart rates in winter regardless of how much food they ate. A heart rate of 65-70 beats per minute in May declined gradually to about 40 beats per minute throughout the winter, even when the deer were supplied with plenty of protein-rich food. Heart rate is a good indicator of metabolic rate, so as Turbill says, "The decrease in metabolism occurred exactly when food is normally scarce -- although our animals always had enough to eat -- and this shows that the deer are somehow 'programmed' to conserve reserves during winter." The enormous rise in heart rate in spring, at the start of the breeding season, was not associated with any change in food availability so also forms part of the animals' internal programming. As expected, when the deer were offered less food, their heart rates dropped even further. Surprisingly, however, this effect could also be observed in summer and was not solely caused by the reduced amount of digestion, showing that red deer react both to the winter season and to food shortages by actively lowering their metabolism.

Turbill, Arnold and coworkers found that the lowered heart rate was associated with a reduction in stomach (core body) temperature, suggesting that the deer adjust energy expenditure by regulating their internal heat production. However, relatively small changes in stomach temperature had larger than expected effects on metabolic rate, implying that the animals have an additional mechanism for saving energy. The key to explaining the results came from previous studies in Arnold's group, which had shown that red deer can greatly lower the temperature of their legs and other extremities, especially during cold winter nights. It thus seems likely that a small reduction in stomach temperature indicates a much greater reduction in the temperature of the deer's entire body, which could explain the substantial reduction in heart rate and metabolism. "Perhaps larger animals are able to make use of their size to enable temperature gradients," Arnold proposes. "This would enable them to reduce their metabolism dramatically without requiring a big decrease in core body temperature. It seems as though peripheral cooling might be an important mechanism for red deer -- and maybe other large mammals -- to conserve energy during winter and when food is scarce."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Veterin?rmedizinische Universit?t Wien.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Christopher Turbill, Thomas Ruf, Thomas Mang and Walter Arnold. Regulation of heart rate and rumen temperature in red deer: effects of season and food intake. J Exp Biol 214, 963-970, 2011 DOI: 10.1242/?jeb.052282

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

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Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111216084212.htm

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