Thursday, January 31, 2013

Analysts greet BlackBerry launch with downgrades

(Reuters) - Research In Motion Ltd's glitzy unveiling of the long-delayed line of BlackBerry smartphones on Wednesday and a new corporate name failed to impress Wall Street analysts, with at least three downgrading the company's stock.

RIM, which renamed itself BlackBerry, showcased two devices, Z10 and Q10, running on its new BB10 operating system as the smartphone pioneer looks for a fresh start.

"Despite recent enthusiasm for RIM's new BB10 devices, we see limited scope for traction in the hypercompetitive smartphone market," Credit Suisse analysts wrote in a note.

RIM faces an uphill struggle in terms of gaining smartphone market share, the Credit Suisse analysts said, downgrading the stock to "underperform" from "neutral".

RIM's Nasdaq-listed shares were set to open 3 percent lower on Thursday. They closed 12 percent down on Wednesday at $13.78. Its Toronto-listed shares also fell by the same margin to close at C$13.86.

RIM launched its first BlackBerry in 1999 and quickly cornered the market for secure emails, but its market share plummeted after customers jumped ship to Apple Inc's iPhone and devices using Google Inc's Android technology.

Analysts at Evercore Partners said they did not expect the new BB10 devices to cause a stir among customers, and cut their rating to "equal weight" from "underweight".

"The new hardware and operating system is a dramatic improvement versus RIMM's older products but expect a muted consumer response due to RIMM's damaged brand image," they said.

Barclays Capital analysts wrote in a note that RIM had the best possible device launch it could have hoped for, but there were many challenges ahead.

The analysts said average sales prices might be too high for many emerging market users and raised questions about how quickly businesses would adopt the new devices.

Analysts were also concerned about the delay in the launch of the devices in the United States. RIM said the devices would not be available in the country until March.

National Bank Financial analysts said the delay was very disappointing since the U.S. enterprise, government and consumer is the most important market for the Z10.

The Z10 touchscreen device will be the first of the two models to hit the market, with a rollout that starts in Britain on Thursday.

(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed in Bangalore; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysts-greet-blackberry-launch-downgrades-104929948--sector.html

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Zaur Sadayev and Gabriel Kadiev, Muslim Chechens, Join Beitar Jerusalem Amid Protests

JERUSALEM ? An Israeli soccer club with an unofficial tradition of not signing Arab or Muslim players is welcoming two Muslim-Chechen players amid rising tensions from its fans.

Beitar Jerusalem's fans, known for being anti-Muslim, chanted anti-Muslim slogans at a game last week and unfurled a sign protesting the arrival of Zaur Sadayev and Gabriel Kadiev. Three fans were arrested for the behavior.

At a news conference Wednesday, Sadayev said he was "happy" to join the team. Kadiev says he's "not afraid" of threats from fans.

Jerusalem's mayor attended the news conference, highlighting the gravity of the fans' behavior.

Police beefed up security at a game Tuesday when Beitar played a team from an Arab town. Beitar's next game is Sunday.

Related on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/30/zaur-sadayev-and-gabriel-kadiev-muslim-chechens-join-beitar-jerusalem_n_2583974.html

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5 Professional Experiences Every College Student Should Have Before Graduation

Boost your resume with these undergrad opportunities

(Image: Thinkstock)

Outside of college being a time to master key skills and coursework related to your field of interest, it?s also a time to grow and mature professionally. The immediate goal after college is to get a job in your field and prove that all your hard work in college wasn?t in vain. However, in today?s economy more and more college graduates are finding it harder to gain employment. Below are five experiences that all students should have before walking across that graduation stage.

1. Internships: Scoring an internship has to be one of the most important and beneficial professional experiences during your college years. Internships will not only give you experience in your desired field, but it will also allow you to gain contacts and get a better idea of what kind of job you want post graduation.

2. Resume Workshops: While all resumes are subjective and no one resume will be perfect in everyone?s eyes, having someone assist you to create your resume can help you better organize your professional experiences on paper and prioritize which skills should be listed. Attending resume workshops will also give you a clearer picture of what it is employers are looking for when they pick up a resume from a potential employee.

3. Career Fairs: Most people wait until their senior year to attend college career fairs, which can be a huge mistake. With several companies attending college fairs for intern recruits as well as job candidates, it?ll be a huge bummer to realize your senior year that resources to land an internship with a reputable company have been at your fingertips since freshman year.

4. Mentorship: Just about every young professional has had someone in their career field who looked out for them and gave them the 411 on how to successfully make it in their industry. Having a mentor who has had more professional experience than you is vital in any profession because the advice they offer and business contacts they have can easily put you two steps ahead of the game when it comes to looking for a job.

5. Mock Interviews: You?d hate to be great on paper, but a professional disaster in person. Having mock interviews will help teach you the key steps to successfully marketing yourself, and it will help ease your nerves when put on the spot to talk about their past work experiences.

ACROSS THE WEB

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Source: http://www.blackenterprise.com/career/5-professional-experiences-college-students-should-have-before-graduation/

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Israel conducts airstrike on Syria

BEIRUT (AP) ? Regional security officials say Israel conducted an airstrike inside Syria overnight near the border with Lebanon.

The two officials did not say what the target was. But they said Wednesday that Israel had been making plans in the days leading up to the airstrike to hit a shipment of weapons bound for the anti-Israel militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon.

They said the shipment included sophisticated, Russian-made SA-17 anti-aircraft missiles, which would be strategically "game-changing" in the hands of Hezbollah.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israel-conducts-airstrike-syria-160148307.html

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John Kerry confirmed as secretary of state (Washington Post)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/281254876?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Nuclear Networking ? High Tech Forum

This past week I had the good fortune of going to Barcelona for a workshop on Recursive InternetWork Architecture (RINA), hosted by?i2cat, produced by the Pouzin Society,?and presenting work done under the IRATI programme. RINA is a radical alternative to the incumbent TCP/IP paradigm; the gulf is as wide as that between chemistry and alchemy. The intellectual thrust of the event was provided by John Day, a veteran of the early ARPANET, and author of one of the most brilliant books on computer networking ever written. The workshop was extremely educational, and I would like to share a few of the highlights, to the best of my own meagre understanding.The Internet is the Flat Earth network

To make sense of RINA?s very existence, you have to first understand its context, and the state of networking today. The Internet and TCP/IP are a product of a complex political, economic, social and technical process. The triumphant ?standard story? of the open packet Internet vanquishing the closed evil telco circuit empire is incomplete, misleading, or just simply wrong.

There are no original stone tablets on which these specifications were handed down from the mountain: it is an entirely man-made networking world. Why is TCP/IP dominant today? Try a free government-funded ISP, a gratis networking stack that didn?t need to earn its keep, a totalitarian approach to networking where everything has to be on IP, ongoing wars between IBM and telcos that hobbled better-engineered rivals, and a whole bunch of political manoeuvring (read the article and pay special attention to the words ?or had other motives?). Don?t take the victors? PR at face value!

TCP/IP is not derived from deep foundational principles in the same way that computation is anchored in the work of G?del, Turing, Church and von Neumann. Indeed, Internet Protocol is ?Bandwidth Division Multiplexing?! It?s just the new TDM, but with the time/space coin flipped over and a mirror set of issues. Rather than great flow isolation but weak multiplexing gain, we instead get weak flow isolation and great multiplexing gain. What we want is both to be great! (This is indeed possible ? see my previous newsletter ?Network of Probabilities?.)

We can now see how the flat Internet model is fundamentally constrained and flawed. The existence of a working alternative, one that allows us to peer over the networking horizon, proves that there are other ways of seeing the world. However, rather than being round, the networking world is recursive.

The Internet is not an inter-net

Our networking world is a product of trial and error. Unfortunately, there are a lot more errors than we would like. In the process of its birth, the Internet lost a layer, and ceased to be an inter-net. There are no inter-network gateways that hide the implementation of one network from the next. The most basic level of separation and abstraction is missing: the Internet is not an inter-net, but a concatenated network of networks.

As Day notes, that makes the Internet more like DOS than Windows. Sure it?s a ?success? ? and so was DOS. That doesn?t mean it?s the last word or the end of the technology journey. You can see a summary of these arguments in Day?s presentation ?How in the Heck Do You Lose a Layer!?? [PDF], or in the paper ?Is the Internet an unfinished demo?? [PDF].

What lies behind the Internet is an unconscious belief that networks deliver packets between computers. This is obvious, right? The problem is, it sees networking as a mechanistic activity, and fails to capture its true nature as a form of distributed computing that is all about moving information between computing processes, not network interfaces.

You can see this play out in the way IP only partially delivers data, as it addresses network interfaces, not the true destination application process. This absence of a separating layer between networks is the outcome of a basic mis-categorisation of what networks are. It ends up resulting in complex hacks at every stage to fill in the gaps and compensate for these errors.

Increasingly the work of the IETF and similar bodies is to create new hacks to deal with the side-effects of problems from the old ones! This presumes that the hacks work: packet fragmentation in IP has never worked, and new hacks (Codel is the latest and greatest) introduce unknown and unforeseen new hazards and failure modes.

Key features of RINA

RINA takes the polar opposite approach of ?rough consensus (and groupthink) and working code (with unknown failure modes)?. RINA is a return to the fundamentals of networking architecture, based on strong invariant design principles, and a rigorous and scientific approach to cause and effect.

The core insight behind RINA is the observation of a simple recurring pattern in all of distributed computing. ?Communicate this for me from here to over there? is a ?what?, which is then followed by a bunch of common functions that are the ?how?. Those ?how? functions relate to dividing the data stream up into datagrams and reassembling them. That can be done in any way the lower layer sees fit, subject to the contract it has with the upper layer.

Network nodes at a shared layer can collaborate on the ?how? as part of a ?team? structure (the Distributed Interface Function) which provides services to the ?what? (Distributed Application Function). It?s all unfamiliar and confusing, until you see its simplicity and beauty. There is just a single layer that recurses over and over, at different scopes, as we share distributed state by copying information. The very thing that is missing from the Internet ? inter-network gateways ? is actually the defining characteristic of how scalable distributed computing should actually work!

Benefits of RINA over TCP/IP

A lot of the benefits of RINA can be explained from this one slide being presented by John Day.

The number of distinct protocols and mechanisms required to deliver the equivalent core functionality of TCP/IP and RINA are compared thus:Protocols: Internet ? 15; RINA ? 3
Non-security mechanisms: Internet -?89; RINA ? 15
Security mechanisms:?Internet -?28; RINA ? 7

The simplicity speaks for itself.

The benefits of the RINA approach are numerous:

  • Scalability. The recursive structure scales indefinitely. No more router table size explosion.
  • Security. Each layer is a securable container, and most of your firewalls, session border controllers and intrusion systems disappear. No more port scanning, much less scope for mischief.
  • Performance. The overheads of routing are far lower, the algorithms can be implemented simply in silicon.
  • Manageability. You can swap out protocols and mechanisms at lower layers without upper layers knowing or caring. Reconfigure your data centre whilst it is running!
  • Flexibility. You can implement any and all QoS mechanisms within the architecture, not just ?best effort?, and (if the mechanism supports it) create a composable trading system for allocating resources according to any policy you see fit.
  • Reliability. Multi-homing goes from being complex to trivial. Reliability is ordinary, not outrageously hard.
  • Mobility. No more complexity to address mobility as a special case: it falls straight out of the architecture. You can shred a lot of your 3GPP standards, too.
  • Cost. No more hacks-upon-hacks. This is the minimal ?necessary and sufficient? amount of functionality needed.
The journey from theory to practiseThe technology being built using the RINA approach is currently at an early stage. There are prototype demos that work in the lab, being built by multiple teams. Many questions and issues are still being thrown up. A lot of PhD theses remain to be written. (Who will write the last ever PhD thesis on optimising TCP, I wonder, and when?)

So there remains a lot of work to do to take RINA from the laboratory demos under progress to commercial viable products. We will have to learn how to wrapper TCP/IP networks, bridge these technologies, and offer a viable escape route from the mistakes of the past. The early markets still need to be identified. I can think of some examples, but maybe I should talk to a patent lawyer before I tell you!

Perhaps the hardest thing for RINA will be to fully escape the failed ?network alchemy? approach of TCP/IP and fully adopt ?network science?. That means using algebra to model the entirety of the success and failure modes of the system. This deeply contrasts with the current approach of ?think of an algorithm, try it, tinker around a bit more, think of a theory to justify it, run it in a simulator, and extrapolate those specific results to be a general truth in the world?.

If you cannot spot the logical leap, then consider these sentences: ?The sky in Arizona is blue, so the sky is always blue everywhere.? ? ?This TCP/IP algorithm works now and here, so this TCP/IP algorithm works always and everywhere.? Much networking research is riddled with such basic methodological flaws.

Some controversial conclusions

There are some immediate ? and undoubtedly controversial ? consequences of this work on RINA.

The first is that IPv6 is a waste of time and money. It is the wrong answer to the wrong question. It fails to tackle the fundamental problems of Internet Protocol: addressing the wrong thing (interfaces, not applications); tightly coupling the whole system; confusing naming and addressing; perpetuating hacks like DNS and Mobile IP to paper over the gaps; and a host of other sins condemning us to networking purgatory. Indeed, IPv6 will create a whole new slew of performance, security and implementation problems we have yet to fully experience. The absence of user benefit explains the slow take-up.

The long-term future of the Internet, without a ?scientific networking revolution? is a gradual increase in complexity and cost, and gradual decrease in performance and security. There?s no sudden cliff and collapse. Whilst everyone admires the elaborate baroque architecture, the foundations are missing, and the cost of pinning the edifice upright keep rising. The current Internet is a digital Venice: fabulous, fancy and flawed as a long-term solution to the needs of a modern civilisation.

Welcome to Networking Science

This was perhaps the most profound professional event I have ever attended. I was fortunate enough to be asked to present an abbreviated version of my ?Lean Networking? presentation. In the audience was John Day, my colleague Neil Davies, as well as Louis Pouzin ? the inventor of the datagram (aka packet). It very much felt like presenting to Feynman, Bohr and Oppenheimer ? an experience I shall not forget in a hurry!

Indeed, those conversations reminded me of this Wikipedia quote:?Feynman was sought out by physicist Niels Bohr for one-on-one discussions. He later discovered the reason: most of the other physicists were too in awe of Bohr to argue with him. Feynman had no such inhibitions, vigorously pointing out anything he considered to be flawed in Bohr?s thinking. Feynman said he felt as much respect for Bohr as anyone else, but once anyone got him talking about physics, he would become so focused he forgot about social niceties.

The design principles behind RINA?[PDF], plus the 3 basic laws of ?Q, are effectively the foundational concepts of an emerging Networking Science. RINA is the necessary and sufficient instantiation of those design principles into an architecture. Likewise, Contention Management (CM) is the necessary and sufficient means of implementing control over allocation of ?Q. RINA requires letting go of a ?flat (Earth)? model of networks; CM requires letting go of a ?work? model of networks.

Both failed paradigms are unconscious anthropomorphic models of packet systems ? ?beads on a string? ? that treats packets as if they were physical objects, and misapplies the mathematics of the physical world to a virtual one. Letting go of both sets of false belief ? at the same time ? is something very few people have contemplated thus far.

Some distributed computing nuclear arms technology is about to enter a conventional networking war. My personal plan is to open a high-end arms dealership for exotic means of slaying the competition. You can be sure that only the finest quality of intellectual weaponry will be on offer.

[Editor's note: This article was originally published as a Future of Communications newsletter. You can subscribe at www.martingeddes.com.

My paper on RINA was generously supported by the Time Warner Cable Research Program; see it here: Remaking the Internet:?Taking Network Architecture to the Next Level]

Source: http://www.hightechforum.org/nuclear-networking/

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Bank of England's Miles plays down need for remit change

LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England does not need to give more guidance on the direction of monetary policy, and suspending its inflation target could be justified only "in exceptional circumstances", a senior policymaker said on Monday.

David Miles, an external member of the Monetary Policy Committee, played down the need for the Bank to adopt the kind of longer-term guidance favoured by the Bank of Canada, whose governor, Mark Carney, will take the top job at the Bank in July.

"I think we are able in the current framework to give plenty of guidance about our thinking and how we see the economy evolving," he told the Evening Standard newspaper.

"I don't think it would be helpful for the MPC to say here is where policy is going to be for the next several months. If we did that there wouldn't be any point in having monthly meetings," he added.

Miles said that a growth target for the Bank - another idea that has been associated with Carney in the past - could only ever be an emergency measure.

"As a temporary measure in exceptional circumstances there may be things to be said for it. I think I would need to be convinced that there were obvious advantages it gave you that you couldn't have with what I would describe as our current regime of flexible inflation targeting," he said.

(Reporting by David Milliken and Olesya Dmitracova)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bank-englands-miles-plays-down-remit-change-131307571--business.html

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Green Blog: A Solar-Powered Shed for India's Perishable Food

Milk? Garbage. Spinach? Garbage. Leftover Thai takeout? Garbage. For millions in the Northeast, clearing out the fridge after days without power was just one more unsavory chore that was part of the cleanup process after Hurricane Sandy passed through.

But in the developing world, throwing out food because of inadequate refrigeration isn?t just annoying, it?s a devastating and irreparable economic blow that keeps farmers trapped at the level of subsistence and threatens food security. In India, the government estimates that anywhere from 30 to 40 percent of food spoils long before it finds its way to the table.

Such waste is endemic because so few farmers have access to electricity. Even in Tamil Nadu, one of the most industrialized states in the country and sometimes referred to as India?s California, only 40 percent of the population has electricity. Without power, tomatoes and okra stand no chance in 104-degree weather.

To address the problem, business students and engineers from the University of Cincinnati have teamed with local Ohio companies to create a small solar-powered refrigerated shed for storing food. The SolerCool container runs on just eight solar panels and keeps produce at a comfortably cool temperature, even at night, thanks to a battery that charges during the day.

Mohsen Rezayat, chief solutions architect at Siemens PLM and an adjunct professor in the University of Cincinnati?s engineering school, helped bring all the technology for the shed together. One of its more unusual components is the compressor.

?Compressors, which generate the cold air for refrigeration, are huge energy hogs,? Dr. Rezayat noted. But the team found a company that had created a small portable one that could be run on the power from just a few solar panels.

The unit was designed so that vending machines wouldn?t have to be hauled out for repair, he said. ?When something went wrong with the cooling system, a new one could just be popped in like a fresh ink cartridge,? Dr. Rezayat explained. ?Turns out, what?s good for vending machines at universities in Ohio is good for cabbages on farms in India. ?

For now, the cold shed costs about $5,000, a price that the Ohio team knows is well beyond the reach of most small farmers.

?At the moment the price means that several farms would have to pool resources and share one unit,? Dr. Reyazat said. ?We are very price-conscious and are looking at ways to bring the price down to really help the poorest of the poor increase their earning potential.? One possibility is to manufacture some smaller units for farmers with just a few acres.

In the meantime, a field prototype is on its way to an aloe farm near Pune, India, to see if it performs as well in that climate as it does in Ohio.

Source: http://green.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/28/a-solar-powered-shed-for-indias-perishable-food/?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Background checks for gun purchases up since Newtown massacre: FBI data

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Background checks for firearms purchases spiked after the December 14 mass shooting at a school in Newtown, Connecticut, new data from the FBI showed on Monday.

According to data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation's National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS), nine of the top 10 days for firearms checks from November 30, 1998, to January 27, 2013, including December 14, 2012, occurred since Adam Lanza killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School and then shot and killed himself.

Lanza also killed his mother before the school massacre. His use of an AR 15 assault-type rifle and high-capacity ammunition magazines have been at the heart of the contentious debate over gun control.

The NICS is a nationwide system for checking criminal records, developed by the FBI with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and local and state law enforcement agencies. The system is run by the FBI.

According to the FBI data, the leading six days for background checks before the sale of firearms occurred after December 14, 2012. The top five weeks for background checks were the week of the massacre and afterward.

Since November 30, 1998, the top day for background checks before gun sales was December 21, 2012, a week after the massacre. Checks that day numbered 177,170.

The top week since November 30, 1998, was December 17 to December 23, 2012, when 953,613 background checks were requested.

Gun control advocates argue that civilians do not need to own assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. Gun rights supporters argue that efforts to ban assault weapons are an attack on the second amendment right of the U.S. constitution, which addresses the right to bear arms.

(Reporting By Nick Carey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/background-checks-gun-purchases-since-newtown-massacre-fbi-011131718.html

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Sarah Palin vows to fight on without Fox News gig

Sarah Palin has parted ways with Fox News, but says, 'we haven't begun to fight!' even though polls show declining support for the tea party movement. In particular, she promises to 'shake up the GOP machine.'

By Brad Knickerbocker,?Staff writer / January 27, 2013

Former vice presidential candidate and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin addresses a Tea Partly Express Rally in Manchester, N.H., in 2011. Palin is no longer a Fox News contributor, but she vows to fight on for tea party values.

Stephan Savoia/AP

Enlarge

The ?lamestream media,? as Sarah Palin calls it, may have written her off now that the former vice presidential candidate and tea party favorite has lost her principal media voice as a well-paid commentator on Fox News.

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But there?s no indication that Ms. Palin will go back to life in Alaska as the former mayor of a small town and then governor for two years, fishing and hunting with her family before Sen. John McCain picked her out of relative political obscurity to be his running mate in 2008.

?I?was raised to never retreat and to pick battles wisely, and all in due season,? she said in the one substantial interview she?s given since Real Clear Politics first reported that Palin and Fox had parted ways. ?When it comes to defending our republic, we haven?t begun to fight!?But we delight in those who underestimate us.?

How well do you know Sarah Palin? A quiz.

The extent to which the conservative-leaning TV enterprise tried to keep her onboard is still unclear.

Fox reportedly offered Palin far less than the million-dollar annual contract that had included a broadcast studio at her home in Wasilla, Alaska. She turned it down, and Fox had no inclination to up the ante.

?What happened, quite simply, is that Palin?s star had faded,? Howard Kurtz wrote in Newsweek?s the Daily Beast. ?She was no longer the rock star of 2008, her future presidential ambitions the subject of constant speculation.?

For Fox News, it seemed to be largely a business decision. Or as CEO Roger Ailes put it in 2011, ?I hired Sarah Palin because she was hot and got ratings.? But there was more to it than that, it seems.

?The political climate shifted as well, with Republicans, having been shellacked in their second straight presidential election, debating a future involving [Marco] Rubio and [Chris] Christie and [Paul] Ryan but not Palin,? Kurtz wrote. ?And the atmosphere at Fox shifted as well. It was no longer a network in the throes of a tea party revolt and providing a platform for Glenn Beck. Fox edged a bit closer to the center, and Palin began to seem more the [actor] Julianne Moore of [the HBO movie] ?Game Change? than a political force.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/MHN-m1PoLGM/Sarah-Palin-vows-to-fight-on-without-Fox-News-gig

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Best bets: Happy trails to J.R. Ewing

By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Larry Hagman's J.R. Ewing made an indelible mark on television history. His final episodes on the new version of "Dallas" start this week. More familiar faces: Keri Russell has a new show, and Al Pacino, Christopher Walken, and Alan Arkin have a new movie.

Hulton Archive / Getty Images

MONDAY: 'Dallas' returns
J.R. Ewing was one of television's most captivating villains on the original run of "Dallas," and he was the reason the show's return in 2012 was so well-received. The cowboy hat-wearing oil baron was conniving and charming, and it's impossible to imagine anyone but Larry Hagman playing him. Now that Hagman has died, the show must bid farewell to J.R. in a deserving manner. He couldn't ever be recast. The cast and crew of the new "Dallas" have promised to make his on-screen funeral one to remember. Happy trails, J.R. ("Dallas" returns with the first of Hagman's final two episodes Jan. 28, 9 p.m., TNT.)

WEDNESDAY: 'The Americans'
FX's new show, "The Americans," has a delightfully creepy, if dated, premise. Back in the 1980s, the KGB has settled a bunch of its agents in the U.S. as sleeper agents, even with unsuspecting families. Keri Russell (hi, Felicity!) and Matthew Rhys are a spy couple with kids who don't suspect Mom and Dad are Reds. USA! USA! (Premieres Jan. 30, 10 p.m., FX.)

FRIDAY: 'Stand Up Guys'
They're senior-citizen criminals, geezer gangsters. In "Stand Up Guys," Al Pacino and Christopher Walken play old buddies in crime who team up once Pacino gets out of prison, and also meet up with their former getaway driver, Alan Arkin. Reviews are mixed -- some critics think it's an unfunny slog of Viagra jokes -- but those are three veteran stars who command attention. (Opens Feb. 1.)

Related content:

Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/14/16510766-best-bets-happy-trails-to-jr-ewing?lite

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Eyeing rich bounty, China in line for Afghan role

KABUL (AP) ? China, long a bystander to the conflict in Afghanistan, is stepping up its involvement as U.S.-led forces prepare to withdraw, attracted by the country's vast mineral resources but concerned that any post-2014 chaos could embolden Islamist insurgents in its own territory.

Cheered on by the U.S. and other Western governments, which see Asia's giant as a potentially stabilizing force, China could prove the ultimate winner in Afghanistan ? having shed no blood and not much aid.

Security ? or the lack of it ? remains the key challenge: Chinese enterprises have already bagged three multibillion dollar investment projects, but they won't be able to go forward unless conditions get safer. While the Chinese do not appear ready to rush into any vacuum left by the withdrawal of foreign troops, a definite shift toward a more hands-on approach to Afghanistan is under way.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? This story is part of "China's Reach," a project tracking China's influence on its trading partners over three decades and exploring how that is changing business, politics and daily life. Keep up with AP's reporting on China's Reach, and join the conversation about it, using the hashtag (hash)APChinaReach on Twitter.

___

Beijing signed a strategic partnership last summer with the war-torn country. This was followed in September with a trip to Kabul by its top security official, the first by a leading Chinese government figure in 46 years, and the announcement that China would train 300 Afghan police officers. China is also showing signs of willingness to help negotiate a peace agreement as NATO prepares to pull out in two years.

It's a new role for China, as its growing economic might gives it a bigger stake in global affairs. Success, though far from guaranteed, could mean a big payoff for a country hungry for resources to sustain its economic growth and eager to maintain stability in Xinjiang.

"If you are able to see a more or less stable situation in Afghanistan, if it becomes another relatively normal Central Asian state, China will be the natural beneficiary," says Andrew Small, a China expert at The German Marshall Fund of the United States, an American research institute. "If you look across Central Asia, that is what has already happened. ... China is the only actor who can foot the level of investment needed in Afghanistan to make it succeed and stick it out."

Over the past decade, China's trade has boomed with Afghanistan's resource-rich neighbors in Central Asia. For Turkmenistan, China trade reached 21 percent of GDP in 2011, up from 1 percent five years earlier, according to an Associated Press analysis of International Monetary Fund data. The equivalent figure for Tajikistan is 32 percent of GDP, versus 12 percent in 2006. China's trade with Afghanistan stood at a modest 1.3 percent of GDP in 2011.

Eyeing Afghanistan's estimated $1 trillion worth of unexploited minerals, Chinese companies have acquired rights to extract vast quantities of copper and coal and snapped up the first oil exploration concessions granted to foreigners in decades. China is also eyeing extensive deposits of lithium, uses of which range from batteries to nuclear components.

The Chinese are also showing interest in investing in hydropower, agriculture and construction. Preliminary talks have been held about a direct road link to China across the remote 76-kilometer (47-mile) border between the two countries, according to Afghanistan's Foreign Ministry.

Wang Lian, a Central Asia expert at Beijing University, notes that superpowers have historically been involved in Afghanistan because it is an Asian crossroads ? and China would be no exception.

"It's unquestionable that China bears the responsibility to participate in the political and economic reconstruction of Afghanistan," he says. "A stable Afghanistan is of vital importance to (China). China can't afford to stand aside following the U.S. troop withdrawal and in the process of political transition."

A stable Afghanistan, Wang says, is vital to the security of Xinjiang, China's far west where Islamic militants are seeking independence. Some have gained sanctuary and training in Pakistan and along the Pakistan-Afghan border. Beijing fears chaos, or victory by the Taliban, would allow these groups greater leeway.

The U.S. is encouraging Beijing to boost its investment and aid in Afghanistan and backs its participation in various peace-seeking initiatives, including a Pakistan-Afghanistan-China forum that met last month for the second time.

Afghan Foreign Ministry spokesman Janan Mosazai says there has been a greater sharing of intelligence between his country and China, and a joint U.S.-Chinese program to mentor junior Afghan diplomats. In one of the only cases of such cooperation in the world, the U.S. brought 15 diplomats to Washington, D.C., last month, after they had received similar training in China. Similar three-way programs are being developed in health and agriculture.

"Recently, China has taken a keener interest in the security situation and the transition process, and we are more than happy that this is increasing," Mosazai says. "It's certainly a change, a welcome change."

He adds that Beijing could play a crucial role in forging peace in Afghanistan because of its close relations to Pakistan, which has long-standing links to the Taliban, whose leadership is widely believed to operate from the country.

Davood Moradian, who heads the Afghan Institute for Strategic Studies in Kabul, says the Chinese are treading carefully, realizing they lack expertise in a complex political landscape that has tripped up other great powers.

"The Chinese are ambiguous. They don't want the Taliban to return to power and are concerned about a vacuum after 2014 that the Taliban could fill, but they also don't like having U.S. troops in their neighborhood," he says.

Should the Chinese step into the peace process, either as a principal intermediary or through Pakistan, they could carry considerable weight.

"They are rare among the actors in Afghanistan in that they are not seen as having been too close to any side of the conflict. All sides are happy to see China's expanded role," Small says.

Though China doesn't want a Taliban takeover, Beijing regards the group as a "legitimate political force," says Small. Beijing was on its way to recognizing the Taliban as the government of Afghanistan before the 9/11 attacks that led to the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan.

The Afghan government has backed off from earlier criticism that the Chinese were not contributing their share to security and reconstruction of the country.

"There was an attitude that the Chinese were just interested in profiting from other people's loss, the blood and sweat of American and other troops," says Moradian. "But that is changing."

___

Associated Press reporters Yu Bing in Beijing and Amir Shah in Kabul contributed to this story.

EDITOR'S NOTE _ This story is part of "China's Reach," a project tracking China's influence on its trading partners over three decades and exploring how that is changing business, politics and daily life. Keep up with AP's reporting on China's Reach, and join the conversation about it, using the hashtag (hash)APChinaReach on Twitter.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/eyeing-rich-bounty-china-line-afghan-role-130247113.html

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Enhance Your Future With Our Personal Finance Tips - ProjectPB ...

It is important to budget and track your income and expenses before making major purchases like cars, vacations and a home. Read this article for useful tips to better manage your personal finances.

Having a higher credit score can get your further when trying to apply for a loan. There are a couple of ways to do this. You can either take out a small personal loan and repay it on an accelerated schedule, or open a couple of credit cards and build an excellent payment history. It is also important to cover more than just the minimum on all possible bills.

Use your annual tax refund to make an extra payment on any outstanding loans or credit card debt. A lot of people buy unimportant things with their refund, instead of working on the amounts they already owe. Unfortunately, the money is spent quickly and the debt still remains.

If you?re looking to have good personal finances you have to avoid getting too many credit lines taken out. Once you are overextended with too many credit lines, your credit rating may go down and you may end up paying higher annual interest rates.

Saving money for an account is important for managing your finances. A savings account is a great place to store money for buying a major appliance or to take a vacation. Consider a variety of retirement plans and find out if the company you work for offers any type of retirement incentives or savings. If your expenses are less than your income, you should be able to save money every month.

Next time you?re at the supermarket, stock up on store brands rather than choosing the more expensive name brand items. Much of the time, you cannot tell the difference. The two products? lists of ingredients are often identical. You can stretch your food budget a lot further by using generics, so go ahead and give them a try.

TIP! A savings account full of liquid assets is a boon to anyone. Although interest rates are relatively low on straight savings accounts, it is still important to search around for the highest interest rate on a savings account that you can find.

Understand your priorities when it comes to money. Once you understand your thoughts about money, you can aim to improve your current financial situation. Analyse your perspective on material possessions and write down some thoughts on your attitude toward money. See if they are related to events in your past. This will enable you to tackle your financial future more successfully.

Establish an emergency fund through automatic deductions from your paycheck. If you have the money automatically transferred to a savings account, you won?t miss it. Building a little savings will help out in the case of illness or unemployment.

Younger people looking to stay out in front of their finances would do well to discover the wonders of compounding interest. Save your money in an account where you will make money off of the interest that you earn as well as your initial investment.

Work out a budget, and stick to it. You may assume you are spending your money wisely, but there is a chance that you?re spending beyond your means. Make a note of each purchase, whether small or large. Read over all of it near the end of the month. This way you will know what needs trimming.

TIP! Avoiding debt wherever possible is a simple and powerful guideline for keeping personal finances under control. A home loan or car is fine because those are important things you need.

Check over your bank statement every month. This way you can keep track of the rates and fees. Your bank might raise your fees without notifying you and keep billing you for services you do not need. Because of this, you should look over each statement with care.

As just mentioned, if you take care of your personal finances now, you will be able to save for more expensive purchases in the future. The advice in this article can help you to be educated about your money and how to make wise decisions.

Source: http://www.projectpb.net/blog/index.php/personal_finance/enhance-your-future-with-our-personal-finance-tips-5/

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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Clean, refreshing, pure spirits at Dillon's Small ... - Wines In Niagara

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By Michael Lowe

The cold of winter may be upon us, but here?s a way to warm up and lift your spirits at the same time.

Dillon?s Small Batch Distillers, located in Beamsville, has been creating quite a buzz on Twitter and Facebook since they opened last December. No wonder ? Distiller Geoff Dillon is creating some amazingly pure, clean, and tasty spirits. The heart of the distillery is a bank of shiny new pot and column stills that were custom made in Germany.

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Dillons Still Plates_1

Dillon?s father, Peter, has spent a good portion of his life experimenting with herbs and botanicals. As such, he is the man behind the flavours you will find in their intriguing, unique gin. Unlike the traditional London Dry style, which relies heavily on juniper berries for its flavour profile, Dillon?s is? refreshingly different.

The juniper takes a bit of back seat here, allowing the delicate aromas of the 22 botanicals used in the unfiltered distillate to shine. The nose presents more citrus, spice and star anise, with orange peel and the anise lingering on the palate.

DSC05823

Dillon?s ?Method 95? vodka

Here?s a recipe I concocted based on the classic ?Vesper? martini popularized in the James Bond film Casino Royale

Let?s ?Bond? Martini
2 Parts Dillon?s Gin
2 Parts Dillon?s Method 95 [Vodka]
1/2- 3/4 Part Dry Vermouth
2 Drops of Dillon?s Bitter Lemon
Shake with ice, strain into cocktail glass
Garnish with twist of lemon and orange

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Dillon?s White Rye and the ?Niagarita?

Dillon?s White Rye is one of my favourites of the current product portfolio. Now, I?m no bartender but this rye presents endless possibilities in the art of mixology. As expected, rye grain aromas dominate the nose supported by delicate spiciness. The whisky is at first slightly sweet on the palate, full and round in texture, followed by a peppery finish. I couldn?t help but try switching it for tequila in another classic drink. The result? something I?m calling the Niagarita.

The Niagarita

3 Parts Dillon?s White Rye
1 Part Triple Sec (or other orange liqueur)
5 Drops Dillon?s Bitter Lime
Juice of 1/2 lime
Shake with ice, strain into cocktail glass rimmed with a mixture of 1/2 salt, 1/2 sugar & lime zest.

Geoff Dillon Distiller_1

Geoff Dillon

If you haven?t been to Dillon?s Small Batch Distillery yet, I encourage you to stop by. Swirl, sniff, sip and savour the spirits with an open mind and let these refreshing new products inspire the bartender in you.

Cheers!

Dillon?s Small Batch Distillery
4833 Tufford Rd.,
Beamsville, ON
905- 563- 3030
Twitter: @dillonsdistills

?

Source: http://winesinniagara.com/2013/01/clean-refreshing-pure-spirits-at-dillons-small-batch-distillery-in-niagara/

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Hackers claim attack on Justice Department website (reuters)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/279726052?client_source=feed&format=rss

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louboutin How To Help Grieving Teens Cope With Death

written by bianhu8v722 on January 26, 2013 in Uncategorized with no comments

For grieving teens, the value of availability from their family and friends is what they really need especially in these trying times of mourning and death. When we talk about being available, I mean being approachable, caring,abercrombie milano, sympathetic and most of all,louboutin pas cher, being appropriate?like stop saying some things offensive and jokes must be minimized?for now.

Teens and grieving are two most sensitive issues to deal with, since individuals at this stage in their lives are sensitive, how much more if they deal with the topic of death and bereavement. It?s more helpful if they have an adult caregiver, but their family and close friends can suffice if the grieving teens know that people close to them are always willing to talk to them anytime and no matter what it?s all about,louboutin, just as long as they have someone to hear their hearts out,moncler.

Though you?re dealing with grieving teens,hollister deutschland, treat them as adults and talk to them as honestly as you can and this includes doing away with the use of euphemisms; for example, don?t refer to death as ?passed away? or ?left us?. Also, never assume that grieving teens would come to you and initiate a conversation.

They?re very vulnerable at this stage, and they?re be thankful if you ask them if they want to have a talk about whatever it is they want to open up. But then again, it?s perfectly fine if you?re being asked a difficult question and you don?t know how to answer it, so you can say,hollister uk, ?I don?t know.? It?s better than trying to be pretentious that you know but in fact you don?t.

Most especially if they got some spiritual questions that?s way beyond your knowledge. It?s best to admit your limitations and seek the help of your spiritual professional such as your priest,hollister, rabbi,hollister france, imam, minister,hollister, etc. If ever you?re teenager is expressing some beliefs or faith which is different from the traditional family customs, try your best not to react disapprovingly.

Bear in mind that some older teenagers may start to widen their own beliefs and faith practices to prepare themselves for potential losses in the future,air jordan. And this may necessitate some religious ?testing? of some sort on the teen?s part. If this happens, you can refer him/her to your local faith professional.

Grieving teens may also be susceptible to some sudden mood swings expressed at unexpected times. Hence, support groups and grief counseling are also helpful ways to cope with grief and loss.

About The Author
The author of this article,abercrombie, Amy Twain, is a Self Improvement Coach who has been successfully coaching and guiding clients for many years,doudoune moncler. Amy recently published a new home study course on how to boost your Self Esteem. Click here to get more info about her Quick-Action Plan for A More Confident You.
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Source: http://minecrafthostbox.com/index.php/2013/01/louboutin-how-to-help-grieving-teens-cope-with-death/

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Asia stock markets mixed, Japan's Nikkei jumps

BANGKOK (AP) ? Japan's benchmark stock index jumped Friday as the yen continued to retreat against the dollar and investors cheered the new government's plans to boost the economy. Other Asian stock markets were mixed.

Evan Lucas of IG Markets in Melbourne said he expect to see surges in Japan's Nikkei 225 index after Yasutoshi Nishimura, a senior vice minister of the Japanese government's Cabinet Office, commented that the yen would fall further. The Nikkei in Tokyo rose 2 percent to 10,832.48.

The recent decline in the yen's value against the dollar and drops against other major currencies have been driven by expectations that Japan's central bank will try to engineer inflation by increasing the amount of money in circulation.

The bank has been under pressure from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who took office a month ago, to do more to end Japan's prolonged spell of falling prices known as deflation. The ultimate aim is to create a recovery for Japan's moribund economy.

South Korea's Kospi fell amid fears that the exporters could be slammed by Japan's dropping yen, which makes Japanese products less expensive overseas. The benchmark fell 1.1 percent to 1,943.82. Hong Kong's Hang Seng lost 0.2 percent to 23,550.21. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.4 percent to 4,829.40.

Europe's stock markets were broadly higher Thursday amid signs the continent's services and manufacturing slump was easing. Surveys showing a smaller-than-forecast contraction in both manufacturing and services in the 17-country eurozone this month.

Markets shrugged off news from Germany's banking sector, where Commerzbank said it planned as many as 6,000 job cuts over the next three years. The country's second-largest bank, which was bailed out by the government in 2009, expects to cut between 4,000 and 6,000 jobs by 2016.

Grim employment data in Spain also failed to dent markets optimism. Spain's unemployment rate shot up to a record 26.02 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012, leaving almost 6 million Spaniards out of work, the country's statistics agency said.

On Wall Street, a sharp drop in Apple's stock pulled the Nasdaq down after the tech giant warned of weaker sales. Other stock market indexes posted slight gains.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.3 percent to close at 13,825.33. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose less than 0.1 percent to 1,494.82. The Nasdaq composite lost 0.7 percent to 3,130.38.

Benchmark oil for March was down 6 cents to $95.89 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract gained 72 cents to finish at $95.95 a barrel on the Nymex on Thursday.

In currencies, the euro fell to $1.3360 from $1.3371 late Thursday in New York. The dollar rose to 90.54 yen from 89.96 yen.

___

Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/asia-stock-markets-mixed-japans-nikkei-jumps-032805220--finance.html

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Obama picks former prosecutor to head SEC

Mary Joe White speaks as President Barack Obama listens in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, after he announced that he will nominate White to lead the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), and re-nominate Richard Cordray to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a role that he has held for the last year under a recess appointment. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Mary Joe White speaks as President Barack Obama listens in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, after he announced that he will nominate White to lead the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), and re-nominate Richard Cordray to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a role that he has held for the last year under a recess appointment. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Mary Joe White stands by as President Barack Obama announces in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013, that he will nominate White to lead the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), and re-nominate Richard Cordray to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a role that he has held for the last year under a recess appointment. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama sent his strongest signal yet Thursday that he wants the government to get tougher with Wall Street, appointing a former prosecutor to head the Securities and Exchange Commission for the first time in the agency's 79-year history.

Mary Jo White, former U.S. attorney in Manhattan, has an extensive record of prosecuting white-collar crime, won convictions in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and the 1998 terrorist attacks on two U.S. embassies in Africa, and put crime boss John Gotti away.

If confirmed, she will have the job of enforcing complicated regulations written in response to the worst financial crisis since the Depression.

"You don't want to mess with Mary Jo," the president said at the White House with White at his side. "As one former SEC chairman said, Mary Jo does not intimidate easily, and that's important because she's got a big job ahead of her."

White would take over at the SEC from Elisse Walter, who has been interim chairwoman since Mary Schapiro resigned in December.

Obama also re-nominated Richard Cordray as head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, created after the financial meltdown. The president used a recess appointment last year to circumvent Congress and install Cordray. That appointment expires at the end of this year.

White, 65, was the first woman ever to be named U.S. attorney in Manhattan, one of the most prestigious jobs in law enforcement.

Colleagues and politicians describe her as tough, no-nonsense and fiercely competitive. And she brings a wealth of legal bona fides to an agency that, critics say, failed to act aggressively to charge top individuals at the nation's largest banks who may have contributed to the financial crisis.

Under Schapiro, the SEC brought civil charges with record penalties against Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup, among others. But those settlements left top executives at the banks free from blame.

James Cox, a Duke University law professor and expert on the SEC, predicted White will push the SEC away from "being just a tollkeeper" that collects settlements and make it a forceful agency that brings meaningful sanctions against senior individuals.

"She has a high sense of the public purpose of the law," Cox said. "You've got to change the culture of the SEC to the point where you're willing to say, 'We're going to go after the individual.'"

In 2000, White led the prosecution of more than 100 people ? including members of all five New York Mafia families ? accused of strong-arming brokers and manipulating prices of penny stocks. The action was one of the biggest crackdowns on securities fraud in U.S. history at the time.

White's office also won a record $606 million in restitution from the securities arm of the Republic New York Corp. bank in 2001. The bank pleaded guilty to conspiring with an investment adviser to hide hundreds of millions of dollars in losses from Japanese investors.

She heads the litigation department at the law firm Debevoise & Plimpton.

White said that if she is confirmed, he will work to "fulfill the agency's mission to protect investors and to ensure the strength, efficiency and the transparency of our capital markets."

"The SEC, long a vital and positive force for the markets, has a lot of hard and important work ahead of it," she said.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., a senior member of the Senate Banking Committee, called White "a fearless, tough-as-nails prosecutor with the knowledge of industry to keep up with the markets' swift innovation." He said she will easily win Senate confirmation.

White graduated first in her law school class at Columbia University in 1974. Much of her early career was spent as an assistant U.S. attorney, first in the Southern District, which includes Manhattan, and later in the Eastern District, home to Brooklyn and in the 1990s a hotbed of organized crime.

She led the prosecution of Gotti, who was convicted in 1992 of murder, racketeering and other offenses. He died in prison in 2002.

In 1993, shortly after the bombing of the World Trade Center, President Bill Clinton appointed her U.S. attorney.

When Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind of the bombing, was captured in Pakistan, a U.S. military plane was sent there to bring him to the U.S. She demanded the plane land within the Southern District so that she could prosecute him in Manhattan. Under the law, a defendant extradited to the U.S. must be tried in the first jurisdiction in which the plane sets down.

Beyond pursuing cases related to the financial meltdown, the SEC is deeply involved in writing new rules. It is seeking stricter regulations for money-market mutual funds.

And it must come up with the final wording of the so-called Volcker Rule, which regulators hope will limit the kind of risky trading by banks that contributed to the financial crisis and forced taxpayers to bail out the institutions.

___

Associated Press writers Darlene Superville in Washington and Larry Neumeister in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-24-Obama-SEC/id-836a6f33d8b7456bb805bd4ead770752

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Realtime Polling Startup GoPollGo Begins To Show Real Business Potential With ?Promoted Polls?

iphone5_1Back in early 2011, Ben Schaechter, Sam Grossberg and Paul Kompfner launched GoPollGo to address a perceived deficiency in analytics, geographical info and social integrations from the Web's go-to polling platforms. Six-months later, with a round of seed funding in tow, the startup decided to re-focus on Twitter -- on providing everyday users with the ability to more easily poll their users and drill down into realtime analytics, not unlike WayIn.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/5BNJoN7eH8w/

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Love Of Family & Home: Happily Ever Before & After Week 18: Guest ...


Happy Friday Friends!!

Do you all have anything fun & exciting planned for this weekend? As of right now, it looks like we'll be spending most of our weekend at home! Not much on our agenda, so hopefully I can finish up a few projects I've been working on lately and maybe even share them here on the blog next week! Fingers crossed!! :)

For this week's Happily Ever Before & After post, I am featuring a simple, but beautiful guest bedroom makeover courtesy of Christa at Brown Sugar Toast.?

Christa is a loving wife & mommy of two. She has a passion for Jesus, cooking up yummy recipes for her little family, and decorating her home. ?She states in her "About Me" Page that the main goal she has in blogging is that she wants to encourage others to live a creative & joyful life in Christ. Isn't that a wonderful goal to have?! I just love that!

Christa had a guest bedroom that was just begging for some attention. With a half bath attached to this room, Christa knew it would make a perfect space for visiting guests. She wanted to make it a warm & inviting place for their visitors, but also give the space a little personality. You'll see in just a minute, that she totally accomplished that goal!

Let's take a look at the room "Before"....


Pretty much a blank slate!?

Like most of us, Christa turned to Pinterest & other sources on the web for paint & color inspiration for the room. ?After finding a few inspiring photos, she figured out the direction she wanted to go with this space. Wanna see it?!

Let's take a look at the "After" photo....


SO PRETTY!!

I love the dark blue walls with the pops of yellow in the room. The yellow is such a great contrasting color...don't ya think?!

I also love the decision to go with white bedding for the room! The bedding & the white furniture really help to balance out the dark walls. I think its important to bring in lighter & brighter pieces when going with a bold & dark wall color like she did.

Christa made almost all of the accessories for this room....the throw pillows, the curtains, & wall art. Be sure to head on over to her blog to learn more about those projects & to see more inspiring photos of her new room!! You won't be disappointed! CLICK HERE

Looking for more room makeover inspiration?!?

Be sure to check out my?"Happily Ever Before & After" Page.

Gotta makeover that you would like to see featured in this segment?!
Email me: tdiehl2005 (at) yahoo (dot) com

Thanks so much for stopping by!! I hope you all have a great weekend!!

Don't Miss Out -?DIY projects, home decorating, crafts & more by checking out?my subscribe page.

Source: http://www.loveoffamilyandhome.net/2013/01/navy-yellow-bedroom-makeover.html

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Unions suffer steep decline in membership

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The nation's labor unions suffered sharp declines in membership last year, led by losses among public sector workers in cash-strapped states, cities, counties and towns.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics says the unionization rate fell from 11.8 percent to 11.3 percent of all workers, the lowest level since the 1930s.

Total union membership fell by about 400,000 workers to 14.4 million. Teachers unions were among the hardest hit, with the ranks of public school teachers and educators falling sharply.

Unions also saw losses in the private sector, even as the economy expanded modestly. The private sector unionization rate fell from 6.9 percent to 6.6 percent.

Unions have steadily lost members since their peak in the 1950s, when about one of every three workers was in a union.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/unions-suffer-steep-decline-membership-151525987.html

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

H&M clothing store to open at Farmington's Station Park

FARMINGTON -- H&M, Hennes & Mauritz, a global retailer known for offering fashion-forward apparel and quality basics, will open its third Utah store this Spring in Farmington?s Station Park Center.

Opened in 2012, Station Park has become a retail, entertainment and dining destination, located at the intersection of Interstate 15 and Highway 89.

The approximately 24,000 square foot store at Station Park will include collections for ladies, men, young ladies and young men, with separate ?store within store? section for accessories, lingerie, maternity and sports apparel. This location will also carry H&M?s new plus-size line, H&M+, as well as the retailer?s fantastic children?s collection, which features quality clothing for newborn up to kids age 14.

Since H&M opened its first store on New York?s Fifth Avenue 13 years ago, the U.S. has been one of the retailer?s most important markets. The company has 272 locations across the country. Internationally, H&M has more than 2,800 stores in 48 markets.

Source: http://www.standard.net/stories/2013/01/24/hm-clothing-store-open-farmingtons-station-park

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HMO-Like Plans May Be Poised To Make Comeback In Online ...

It's back to the future for insurers, which plan to sharply limit the choice of doctors and hospitals in some policies marketed to consumers under the health law, starting next fall.

Such plans, similar to the HMOs of old, fell into disfavor with consumers in the 1980s and 1990s, when they rebelled against a lack of choice.

But limited network plans -- which have begun a comeback among employers looking to slow rising premiums -- are expected to play a prominent role in new online markets, called exchanges, where individuals and small businesses will shop for coverage starting Oct. 1. That trend worries consumer advocates, who fear skimpy networks could translate into inadequate care or big bills for those who develop complicated health problems.

Because such policies can offer lower premiums, insurers are betting they will appeal to some consumers, especially younger and healthier people who might see little need for more expensive policies.

Insurers, who are currently designing their plans for next fall, "will start with as tight a network control as they can," says Ana Gupte, a managed care analyst with Sanford Bernstein.

Plans may also benefit from offering such policies because they are less attractive to those with medical problems, who can no longer be turned away beginning in January 2014.

"Plans will basically say they can minimize their risk by creating narrow networks," says John Weis, president of Quest Analytics, an Appleton, Wis., firm that analyzes provider networks for insurers.

State or?federal regulators, who must review the plans sold in the online markets, are unlikely to permit them to exclude an entire class of doctors, such as cancer or diabetes specialists.? But there might be more subtle ways to discourage consumers with medical problems.

"They might have too few oncologists, or only general oncologists," for example, says Stephen Finan, senior director of policy with the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, an advocacy group in Washington.

Cost Vs. Choice

"Narrow networks may be more than adequate 90 percent of the time," Finan says, but are "not well-suited to deal with complicated medical conditions and chronic diseases."

That?s because there may be few or no specialists available for certain complex conditions, so patients may have to seek care outside of the networks. If the policy doesn't cover non-network care, they may end up footing the bill themselves. Even if policies allow for outside the network coverage, patients can incur large copays or other costs. "Your (financial) exposure could be high," Finan says.

The federal health law requires the policies to include a standard set of essential benefits, from emergency room and hospital care to prescription drugs, but the law is less prescriptive about the size of the policies? networks of participating doctors and hospitals.

In March, the Obama administration issued?rules stating that insurers must "maintain a network of a sufficient number and type of providers, including providers that specialize in mental health and substance abuse, to assure that all services will be available without unreasonable delay."

That fell short of the specific standards sought by some consumer advocates, but pleased other groups that say insurers should have broad discretion to shape their networks to meet regional needs.

The administration noted that "nothing in the final rule limits an exchange?s ability to establish more rigorous standards."

Shaving Costs

Insurers contend that by limiting network size, they can offer plans with higher quality or more efficient doctors and hospitals, which might slow spending or improve care.

Networks are already part of most health plans. For doctors and hospitals, joining a network brings in business. In exchange, they agree to negotiate their prices with insurers.

Driven by consumer and employer demand for lower-cost plans, insurers are already rolling out narrow network policies that have shaved premiums 10 percent or more.? A?recent survey by benefit firm Mercer found that 23 percent of large employers offered such plans this year, usually among a choice of plans, up from 14 percent in 2011.

In Massachusetts, insurer?Harvard Pilgrim launched its?Focus Network in April, touting 10 percent lower premiums. While it includes 50 hospitals and 16,000 physicians, it excludes some of the state?s highest-cost systems.

In California, Blue Shield has a number of?SaveNet HMO plans that contract with select doctor and hospital groups, creating networks averaging a little more than half the size of its standard ones. Next year, for example, one serving Marin and Sonoma counties will offer a network of about 100 primary care doctors and 325 specialists.

Still, narrow network plans are a hard sell to employers, particularly the large ones, which don?t want to hear gripes from workers about limited choice of doctors simply to save 10 percent on premium costs.

But small businesses and individuals buying their own coverage in the online markets might regard that tradeoff differently.? "If my doctor is in the [narrow] network and cheaper, it might work," says Wall Street analyst Carl McDonald at Citi Research, a division of Citigroup Global Markets.

Competing On Price

To stand out from competitors, some plans may choose to offer the lowest possible rates, and would "narrow their networks" to do so, says Chet Burrell, CEO of insurer CareFirst in Maryland.? He acknowledged that narrow networks could be "a subtle but powerful way" to discourage less-than-healthy applicants. "The question will be what degree of tolerance will a state have to permit narrow networks?"

State rules on what makes an adequate insurance network vary.? Some states, including?California, specify that specialists must be available within a certain driving time or distance. Others simply say insurers must have sufficient numbers of providers.? Some states don't have any requirements.

"State rules are very, very loose," says Weis at Quest, who says states should consider adopting the rules that now apply to Medicare Advantage, the private market alternative to Medicare.? In that program, the federal government requires networks to include primary care physicians and more than 25 types of specialists, and sets county-level requirements on both the minimum number of doctors required in each category and how far patients might have to travel to see one.

Even though state rules vary, regulators say plans that are too skimpy will be called out by regulators, consumers or both.

"We will look very closely at how plans put their packages together," says Sandy Praeger, the elected insurance commissioner in Kansas.

"If you have a crummy network, no one will buy the plan," says consultant Robert Laszewski, a former insurance executive, adding the law also includes programs that financially reward insurers that get a large share of sicker patients and penalize those that get a healthier and more profitable bunch.

Many policies that currently offer a limited network of doctors and hospitals generally allow patients to go to out-of-network providers, with whom they do not have negotiated prices. But patients who seek such care face significant co-payments, which often start at 30 percent of the bill and can go as high as 50 percent.?

It is often hard for consumers to figure out how much they might be charged if they go out of network, says Lynn Quincy, senior policy analyst at Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports magazine.? In addition to meeting separate annual deductibles for out-of-network care, patients can be "balance-billed" by doctors or hospitals for the difference between what the insurer pays them and their total charges.

That doesn't change under the federal health law, so consumers could be left on the hook for tens of thousands of dollars.

"There's no escaping that we're going to see" insurance policies that include networks both wide and narrow,?says Quincy. "That can be OK if there are much better tools to reveal to consumers how adequate those networks are and how much it might cost to go outside of them."

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Source: http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org/Stories/2013/January/23/HMO-limited-networks-comeback-in-exchanges.aspx

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