Sunday, 27 November 2011

Thousands queue in Indonesia to buy new Blackberry (AP)

JAKARTA, Indonesia ? Thousands of Indonesians jammed into a glitzy shopping mall Friday to get hold of the first BlackBerry Bold 9790s being sold worldwide.

Fearing a riot, hundreds of police were deployed outside, tying up traffic in the heart of the capital for hours.

With a 50 percent discount on the $540 phone for the first 1,000 buyers, lines started forming in front of Pacific Place mall on Thursday night. By daybreak, impatient shoppers started rattling the gates.

And when rumors spread that the new smartphones ? commonly known as Bellagio ? had already sold out, the crowd of 3,000 went crazy. Several people fainted in the crush.

Indonesia, a nation of 240 million people, has experienced a come-from-nowhere tech frenzy in recent years.

With 6 million users, BlackBerry dominates the smartphone market.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_hi_te/as_indonesia_blackberry_frenzy

loma prieta loma prieta harold camping ucla football kim kardashian and kris humphries kim kardashian and kris humphries chris morris

Good Reads: Iran, Israel, and Qatar. What's their game?

Israel denies killing an Iranian weapons scientist. Iran detains and releases a Taliban insider. Qatar foments an Arab Spring. Why is everyone suddenly acting like bit players in a Graham Greene novel??

It?s a question very much on people?s minds these days: What is Iran?s game plan?

Skip to next paragraph

The country is allegedly still engaged in a nuclear weapons program, although it denies this. It continues to prop up allies and militant groups throughout the Middle East, including Syria?s embattled President Bashar al-Assad and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. And they?ve been detaining and releasing a number of top Al Qaeda and Afghan Taliban leaders since the fall of the Taliban in late 2001.

What possible use might Iran have for a bunch of elderly Islamists under house arrest?

Leah Farrall, writing for The Atlantic magazine, met one of the Taliban?s foremost advisers, the Egyptian-born journalist Mustafa Hamid, recently at a cafe in Alexandria, Egypt. They discussed his years in detention and his own theories about Iran?s ambitions in the Middle East. Mr. Hamid says he is at a loss to understand why Iran held onto him so long, but he believes the Islamic Republic had more than compassion on its mind when they released him two months ago.

?"Iran only kept those who it could use as playing cards," Hamid says. "Because the Americans say I am important, they thought that they had caught a big fish." Hamid believes that those who remain in Iran ? which reportedly include senior al Qaeda and Egyptian Islamic Jihad leaders as well as a number of other militants of significant stature or experience ? are being held as bargaining chips. "The others who remain, they are being treated as playing cards," he said. "Iran wants to use them to make a deal, and so I don't feel that they are going to release them for this reason."

If, as Hamid believes, Iran is playing a game in the Middle East, it is not the only nation to do so.

Scott Peterson, in yesterday?s Christian Science Monitor, writes a well-researched piece tracing a string of assassinations against Iran?s nuclear scientists and weapons experts. The latest to die, on Saturday at a mysterious blast at a weapons depot outside of Tehran, was Maj. Gen. Hassan Moghaddam, the proclaimed ?father? of Iran?s missile program.

Iran claims that the blast was an accident. Regional experts note that Iran has had a number of strange accidents lately, including a computer virus that accidentally shut down 1,000 of its 8,000 uranium-enrichment centrifuges; and two nuclear scientists who accidently drove past motorcycles who accidently placed ?sticky bombs? to the side of their cars. One of those scientists accidentally died.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/6qkD_toc2X8/Good-Reads-Iran-Israel-and-Qatar.-What-s-their-game

corn maze icloud apple update apple update download ios 5

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Galaxy Tab gets a taste of Kindle Fire, but things aren't all silky smooth

Did you jump on the bandwagon when the tablet craze hit by getting an original Galaxy Tab, but now you feel a tinge of jealousy seeing the more modern UIs on newer slates? Well, you can rid yourself of that envious feeling by loading the Kindle Fire's software onto that old Tab of yours. Giga OM did the deed, giving us an overview of the process -- it's mainly a matter of extracting the code from Amazon's slate and installing it on Sammy's -- along with its results. Turns out, the Tab doesn't have all of the Fire's functionality, though the basic bookshelf interface (which is akin to an app launcher), video app, books, and magazines are all available along with the Fire's custom Amazon Store. Unfortunately, the Silk browser has yet to be enabled, and the UI still crashes on the regular, but teaching an old dog new tricks isn't easy, okay? Head on down to the Source for the full rundown, and there's even more details at XDA-Developers for those daring enough to do this bit of software switcharoo themselves.

Galaxy Tab gets a taste of Kindle Fire, but things aren't all silky smooth originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Nov 2011 18:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGiga OM  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/aLq3l1KwYoc/

jacqueline laurita mcfadden mcfadden ponder ponder loretta lynn extract

Mexico army seizes drug lord's $15 million

Mexico's army seized nearly $15.4 million from the organization of the country's most powerful drug lord, Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, officials said Tuesday, marking a rare financial blow to cartels.

The seizure was revealed the same day U.S. border police revealed the third discovery in a week of drug-smuggling tunnel under the border with Mexico.

In Mexico, the military said it found the cash was found in a vehicle on Nov. 18 in the northern border city of Tijuana and that it was linked to Guzman's operations.

The haul marked the second-largest cash seizure by the military since President Felipe Calderon sent the country's armed forces out to battle drug cartels in 2006, the statement said. Some $26 million was captured in September 2008 in Culiacan, the capital of Guzman's home state of Sinaloa.

  1. Only on msnbc.com

    1. PVC pipes killing thousands of birds in Nevada
    2. Chinese activist Ai Weiwei answers reader questions
    3. As floods recede, Bangkok blame game begins
    4. US retirement out of reach, couple heads to Panama
    5. Office holiday parties 2011: Tamer, less booze
    6. Fishermen's tuna gets taken ? by the law
    7. How Huguette Clark's millions were spent

About 45,000 people have died in the conflict in the last five years and the government has captured or killed dozens of top level drug smugglers.

Story: 3 police officers found dead in Mexico border city

But critics complain the government has barely dented cartel finances. Total seizures add up to only a tiny fraction of the $18 billion to $39 billion in estimated annual revenue generated by Mexican and Colombian drug traffickers.

Mexico's biggest cash seizure to date was made by the attorney general's office when officials found more than $200 million stuffed in the walls of a Mexico City mansion in 2007, which at the time was the world's biggest ever seizure of drug money.

Guzman, Mexico's most wanted man, runs an empire of methamphetamine, marijuana and cocaine smuggling that has earned him a spot on Forbes magazine's list of billionaires.

Tunnel in Arizona
In Nogales, Ariz., the U.S. Border Patrol said a 319-foot long tunnel was discovered on Monday. It measured 3-feet wide by 2-feet tall, and ran for 100 feet into Mexico at a depth of about 20 feet.

It was chiseled through solid rock and was equipped with electricity, lighting and water pumps, and it was held up by support beams and plywood shoring, the Border Patrol's Tucson sector said in a news release.

While securing the tunnel, agents also found 26 bundles of marijuana weighing more than 430 pounds. One suspect was arrested by authorities in Mexico, Border Patrol agent Colleen Agle said.

The tunnel was the third discovered running under the porous U.S.-Mexico border in less than a week, and the 21st illicit passageway found beneath the streets of Nogales in the past two years.

Last Wednesday Authorities in California announced the find of an underground passageway that stretched 400 yards to an industrial park south of San Diego from Tijuana, Mexico. They seized more than 17 tons of marijuana and arrested two men.

The same day, authorities in Nogales found another smaller passageway beneath the porch of a house that ran 70 feet from a drain in Nogales in Mexico.

Agle said Mexican smugglers are increasingly turning to tunneling in a bid to beat beefed-up border security in the city, where a tall, new steel border fence was completed earlier this year.

"As we have been putting more resources along the border in this area, we are really taking away a lot of the traditional avenues for smuggling contraband and illegal aliens," Agle told Reuters.

She added that the majority of illicit passageways found under the city keyed into the extensive storm drain system that runs under the two Nogales, and contributes to making them such a hotspot for tunnelers.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45408974/ns/world_news-americas/

kelly ripa reno wildfire reno wildfire osu osu reno news syracuse

Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Night-flowering orchid discovered

A night-flowering orchid, the first of its kind known to science, has been described by a team of botanists.

Experts say the "remarkable" species is the only orchid known to consistently flower at night, but why it has adopted this behaviour remains a mystery.

The plant was discovered by a Dutch researcher during an expedition to New Britain, an island near Papua New Guinea.

The findings appear in the Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society.

"It was so unexpected because there are so many species of orchids and not one was known to be pollinated at night," said co-author Andre Schuiteman, senior researcher and an orchid expert at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.

"It was quite remarkable to find one, after so many years of orchid research, that is night-flowering," he told BBC News.

The specimen was discovered by co-author Ed de Vogel during a field trip in a region of lowland rainforest on the South-East Asian island.

One-night stand

Its unique flowering behaviour only came to light after the specimen was taken back to the Netherlands.

Dr de Vogel took the plant home in an attempt to understand why its buds appeared to wither when they reached a size that would normally produce 2cm flowers.

Continue reading the main story

DAY OR NIGHT?

  • Although the tiny Bulbophyllum nocturnum is the first known night-flowering orchid, it is not uncommon for plants to flower at night. Most orchids though, flower both day and night.
  • The most famous night-flowering plant it the queen of the night cactus (Selenicereus grandiflorus) (see above). Each individual dinner plate-sized flower opens for one night per year (although each cactus can have several flowers). The blooms attract pollinating bats.
  • It is not clear exactly what pollinates Bulbophyllum nocturnum, but scientists think the job is carried out by nocturnal flies. Many night-flowering orchids are strongly scented in order to attract moths, but this orchid is the wrong shape and size for that.
  • The orchid family has evolved some special tricks to attract its pollinators. Many look like pollinating insects, in order to fool those insects into attempting to mate with them. Some even smell like rotten meat, which attracts flies.

To his surprise, he observed the flowers open a few hours after dusk and remain open until a few hours after sunrise.

The flowers opened for one night only, explaining why the buds appeared to be preparing to open one day, yet be withered the next day.

The specimen has been identified as belonging to the Bulbophyllum genus, which - with about 2,000 species - is the largest group in the orchid family.

While there are a number of orchids that do attract night-time pollinators, B. nocturnum is the first known species that exclusively flowers at night.

Mr Schuiteman said it still remained a mystery why the plant had developed such behaviour.

"We think related species are pollinated by tiny flies that think they are visiting fungi," he explained.

"The flowers mimic fungi, that's what the details of the flowers look like they do.

"The flies are looking for somewhere to lay eggs, and it is most probably [a species] that forages at night."

He added: "The orchid probably has a smell, not detectable by humans, to attract insects from a distance - and when they are nearby, the shape and physical aspects of the flower probably play a role too.

'Double-edged sword'

Mr Schuiteman said the exact reason why B. nocturnum only flowered at night would remain a mystery until further field studies had been completed.

However, time may be against them as the location in western New Britain where the original specimen was found lay within a logging area.

"It was previously inaccessible but now the area has been opened by logging," Mr Schuiteman said, adding that was an area that needed to be explored because there were probably many more species waiting to be described.

He said the logging activity was a double-edged sword because Papua New Guinea's government had granted logging licences in the area meant that it created roads that had allowed the plant hunters to carry out their exploration, yet it was an activity that could threaten the long-term survival of the species.

"My colleague who discovered it got permission from the logging company to go into the area, they even gave him a car to use.

"They realised that it would have been a shame to log the trees and destroy the orchids because they would be left lying on the ground exposed to full sunlight."

He called for areas to be left untouched: "It is the government that gives permits to log a particular area, so we should be asking them to protect areas and not issue permits for everything."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-15818662

wisconsin badgers football easter island dallas weather badgers badgers the killing fields the killing fields

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

GOP debate: Will Newt Gingrich widen lead over Mitt Romney?

Newt Gingrich leads the GOP presidential candidate race, say polls. Will the gap between Gingrich and Mitt Romney widen during tonight's CNN GOP debate over Iran, Pakistan, and other foreign policy issues?

The Republican presidential hopefuls meet on Tuesday for their second foreign policy debate in 10 days, with Newt Gingrich looking to extend a campaign surge that has propelled him to a lead over Mitt Romney in polls for the 2012 race.

Skip to next paragraph

The debate will shine a spotlight on Republican differences over Iran, Pakistan, the use of waterboarding, and foreign aid in a race that so far has focused largely on economic issues and featured few policy clashes among the top contenders.

Gingrich, Romney and six other Republicans take part in the 8 p.m. debate at Washington's DAR Constitution Hall, which airs live on CNN.

IN PICTURES: Newt Gingrich now and then

Gingrich could have the most to lose in Tuesday's showdown. He is the latest in a series of conservatives to challenge the more moderate Romney for the top spot in the Republican race for the right to face Democratic President Barack Obama in 2012.

A CNN/Opinion Research poll on Monday showed Gingrich, a former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, with a 4-point national edge over Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who has hovered near the top of polls all year.

Conservatives have failed to coalesce around a clear alternative to Romney, but Gingrich's campaign has soared in recent weeks as rivals like businessman Herman Cain and Texas Governor Rick Perry faltered in the spotlight.

The debate, the 11th of the year for the Republican candidates, comes barely more than a month before Iowa kicks off the state-by-state nominating fight. But the focus on foreign policy, which has taken a backseat to the economy, could limit its long-term impact.

"There are differences in views among the Republican presidential candidates on foreign policy, but that isn't where the interest has been for voters or the media," Republican strategist Matt Mackowiak said.

FOREIGN POLICY DIFFERENCES

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/NASkI4i6Rfc/GOP-debate-Will-Newt-Gingrich-widen-lead-over-Mitt-Romney

caleb hanie nascar bcs bcs rankings bcs standings 2011 rhodes scholarship rhodes scholarship

Obama Gets a Taste of 'The Human Microphone' (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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 and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/165275354?client_source=feed&format=rss

andrew mason once in a blue moon gwar guitarist gwar guitarist tower heist daylight savings time humpback whale

No. 15 Wolverines beat No. 8 Tigers 73-61 at Maui

Memphis guard Wesley Witherspoon, back, gives chase to Michigan guard Tim Hardaway Jr. (10) in the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Michigan defeated Memphis 73-61. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Memphis guard Wesley Witherspoon, back, gives chase to Michigan guard Tim Hardaway Jr. (10) in the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Michigan defeated Memphis 73-61. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Michigan forward Jon Horford dunks during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Michigan defeated Memphis 73-61. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Michigan guard Zack Novak, left, has the basketball stolen away by Memphis' Wesley Witherspoon (11) in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Michigan forward Jordan Morgan (52) puts up a jump shot while Memphis guard Chris Crawford (3) and Memphis forward Tarik Black (10) look on in the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. Michigan defeated Memphis 73-61. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

Memphis head coach Josh Pastner encourages his team in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Monday, Nov. 21, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii. (AP Photo/Eugene Tanner)

(AP) ? Those three opening wins for Michigan were nice.

To knock off a top-10 team in their return to Maui? That's a better gauge of just how good this team can be.

Tim Hardaway Jr. had 21 points, Trey Burke added 14 and the No. 15 Wolverines beat No. 8 Memphis 73-61 in the opening round of the Maui Invitational on Monday.

Back in Maui for the first time since 1998, Michigan (4-0) looked right at home in paradise, using its ability to penetrate to shoot 54 percent while hounding the Tigers with a variety of defenses.

The two-time tournament champions move on to face the winner between No. 6 Duke and Tennessee in Tuesday's semifinals.

"We're really pleased we could come away with a win today," Michigan coach John Beilein said. "Memphis presents some very big challenges. They're a very good defense. We haven't seen anything like that."

Memphis (1-1) backed up an easy season-opening win with a shaky performance against the experienced Wolverines.

The Tigers had trouble containing Michigan's guards and took some questionable shots at the other end, hitting 33 percent from the floor and 4 of 20 from 3-point range to get bounced into the loser's bracket.

Charles Carmouche led Memphis with 14 points.

"They hit some big shots, we tried to speed them up on some things and we turned it over," Memphis coach Josh Pastner said. "But in the end, we didn't make some shots we needed to hit. We missed some short shots, but that's a credit to obviously Michigan. They're a very good basketball team."

Michigan has made a quick turnaround since a disappointing 2009-10 season.

The Wolverines used a late run to get back into the NCAA Tournament last season and came into this year with plenty of expectations, returning nearly everyone except Darius Morris, an NBA second-round pick.

Michigan opened the season with a pair of easy wins, rolling over Ferris State and Towson, then had to hold on for a 59-55 victory against Western Illinois.

The Wolverines shot well early against Memphis, thanks to penetration by Hardaway and Burke, but was uncharacteristically sloppy with the ball against the Tigers' pressure.

Michigan, which led the nation with 10 turnovers per game last season, had eight in the first half. It made up for it by shooting 15 of 25 and assembling a 10-0 run over the final 3:02 to go up 37-31 at halftime.

The half ended with Burke swatting Joe Jackson's last-second shot out of bounds and players from both sides got tangled at midcourt as they headed toward the locker rooms. Memphis' Will Barton and Michigan's Zack Novak were both hit with technicals for the altercation.

Tempers remained calm in the second half and Michigan gradually pulled away, going up 53-41 on Eso Akunne's 3-pointer in transition with 12? minutes left. The Wolverines kept hitting shots, took better care of the ball and used their defensive pressure to prevent the Tigers from making a run.

"We hit some tough shots in the beginning, but you can't keep that going all game," Novak said. "They made a little run there where our tough shots stopped falling and we got it together, got back with it ? slowed down and had good shots, played hard basketball."

Memphis has made a nice recovery since coach John Calipari left for Kentucky in 2009 and took most of the nation's No. 1 recruiting class with him.

The ever-enthusiastic Pastner has put Memphis back among the elite with some not-so-bad recruiting chops of his own, bringing in one of the best classes in 2010.

The Tigers lost in the opening round of last year's NCAA Tournament with a freshmen-heavy roster, but opened this season with the type of expectations that were common when Calipari was coach.

With five starters and 10 players back, Memphis was 11th in the preseason poll and moved up three spots over the season's first two weeks.

The Tigers beat Belmont 97-81 in their opening game of the Maui Invitational behind Will Barton's 23 points and 22 from Wesley Witherspoon.

Back in Maui for the first time since 2006, Memphis created problems for Michigan in the first half with its defensive pressure, but couldn't keep Hardaway (11 points) and Burke (nine) out of the lane. The Tigers also struggled to hit shots from the perimeter against Michigan's mix of zone and man defenses, hitting just 2 of 12 from 3-point range.

Memphis tried to make a run after falling behind 14 in the second half, but had dug too deep of a hole and ran out of gas down the stretch.

"We stopped attacking the basket. We started settling for jump shots," said Barton, who had nine points on 3-of-12 shooting. "We didn't do a good job in transition defense, stopping the ball when they swung in transition, closing out guys and calling out misses. That's when they hurt us the most."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-11-21-T25-Michigan-Memphis/id-d162db028737421e95630dd0bb5d2e0a

greg jennings thanksgiving recipes thanksgiving recipes pepper spray mashed potato recipe mashed potato recipe cranberry sauce

Monday, 21 November 2011

Clue Why LMAS Communications Are Disastrous

November 21st, 2011 by jake ? 12 Comments

Don?t even have to explain this one.

Look closely:


Huge clue to why communications at Louisville Metro Animal Services are an absolute disaster.

Tags: Metro Government ? Oops ? Possibility City

Source: http://thevillevoice.com/2011/11/21/clue-why-lmas-communications-are-disastrous/

les miles les miles lsu fred davis fred davis fracking fracking

Prominent Nigeria newspaper publisher dies at 66 (AP)

LAGOS, Nigeria ? Alex Ibru, the publisher of Nigerian newspaper The Guardian and a harsh critic of late dictator Sani Abacha, has died. He was 66.

Ibru's newspaper, which he founded in 1983, announced his death Sunday. The newspaper said he died "in the course of an illness."

Ibru, a former government minister, was a powerful critic of the kleptocratic rule of dictator Sani Abacha. Abacha's regime banned the newspaper from publishing for a year, then masked men set fire to its offices when it resumed printing.

The publisher escaped death after gunmen shot him several times in the head in February 1996. Many blamed the attack on Abacha's regime and a criminal case over the shooting remains in court.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111120/ap_on_re_af/af_nigeria_obit_ibru

john edward psychic john edward psychic brandon marshall headless horseman headless horseman brandon lloyd brandon lloyd

Video: Chimp attack victim: ?I don?t think about my face?

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26184891/vp/45380208#45380208

brian wilson freedom writers lemony snicket lemony snicket jim thome jim thome fun fun fun fest

Sunday, 20 November 2011

How Huguette Clark's millions were spent

Associated Press

This is the last known photo of Huguette Clark, taken 80 years ago. She hid away in a New York hospital room for at least the past 22 years, until her death in May. This photo was made on Aug. 11, 1930, the day of her divorce, in Reno, Nev. Her marriage lasted two years. She had no children.

NEW YORK ? More than $3 million dollars on dolls. Nearly $2 million?to her attorney's favorite charity. Another $380,000 in checks written to the staff on a single day, just as the press started to ask questions. And a magic bottomless checking account with $43 million to spend.

These details emerge from court documents filed in the early stages of a legal battle over the $400 million copper-mining fortune of the late reclusive heiress Huguette Clark. The documents give us new glimpses into the life of one of America's richest and oddest families. And they raise new questions about the actions of her attorney and accountant, who remain under criminal investigation even after her death in May at 104.

Attorneys are readying for a massive battle in the probate court known as Surrogate's Court in Manhattan. The building is less than a mile from Exchange Place near Wall Street, where Clark's father, former U.S. Sen. William Andrews Clark, managed the fortune he made from the mines of Montana and Arizona, and from banks, railroads and other ventures. Clark's relatives, kin from her father's first marriage, are expected in coming weeks to challenge her last will and testament, which cut out her family entirely, leaving about $34 million to her nurse and more than $17 million to her attorney and accountant through fees and direct bequests.

In this early phase of the massive estate case, her attorney and accountant have had to account to the court for all financial transactions they made using her legal power of attorney. They held that power, in various forms, for the last 15 years of her life, beginning in July 1996 when she was 90 years old.

The attorney and accountant are also?being investigated by the Manhattan district attorney after questions were raised in a series of articles on msnbc.com about the sale of various properties owned by Clark, and about how the attorney and accountant ended up owning one of the homes of another elderly client. The pair?asked the court to keep their financial accounting secret, arguing that they wanted to protect Clark's privacy. But the court rejected their request, making the following details available for anyone to read at the Surrogate's Clerks office.

In all, the records show $126.3 million in spending by her attorney and accountant from her accounts during those 15 years, and another $43.3 million that was transferred into her personal account, apparently to cover her own spending. The total of $170 million works out to?$1 million per month for a woman who never left her hospital room during that time.

Among the highlights of the financial disclosure, drawn from the hundreds of pages of court records:

While her attorney and accountant were writing the checks for all the expenses for her three empty mansions, for her health care, for her staff, her legal expenses and all the rest, Huguette Clark had her own personal checkbook. We don't yet have the details of the checks that she wrote, but the accounting does show how much was transferred into her checking account, in lumps of $50,000, $200,000, even $5 million at a time. Between January 1997 and February 2009, a period of 12 years when she was between 90 and 102 years old, her magic checkbook was refilled in the amount of $43,325,000.

Au Nain Bleu, a renowned doll and toy shop in Paris, was paid $2.5 million in 110 separate payments from 1997 to 2006. One of Clark's friends has said that her dolls were "her closest companions." The largest payment was for $82,513 in February 2004.

Theriault's doll auctions received $729,000 in 21 payments from 1997 to 2009. The largest was $232,680 in July 2007.

Christopher Sadowski

Attorney Wallace "Wally" Bock says he has always done exactly what his client, heiress Huguette Clark, has asked. He acknowledged soliciting from her a gift of $1.5 million for the community where his daughter and grandchildren live. Court records show the amount to be $1.85 million.

Clark, who was raised a Roman Catholic, made several large contributions to Jewish settlements on the West Bank, where her attorney's daughter lives. Msnbc.com disclosed in 2010 that the attorney, Wallace "Wally" Bock, 79, asked Clark to contribute $1.5 million to a security system for his daughter's settlement. Bock acknowledged that payment in a legal filing last year. The new accounting shows that the total was actually $1.85 million. Bock or Clark's accountant, convicted felon and registered sex offender Irving Kamsler, 64, wrote four checks on her account totaling $1.65 million from 2000 through 2002 to the Central Fund of Israel. Then in September 2003, Bock wrote a check on her account for $200,000 to American Friends of New Communities in Israel.

The accounting shows that Kamsler received a stipend for his accounting services, peaking at $7,500 a month, or a rate of $90,000 per year. Bock's law firm was paid $18,000 to $25,000 per month, or about $250,000 per year. If the will is upheld, they stand to gain much more. Bock and Kamsler would receive $500,000 each as beneficiaries, and about $8 million each if the court allows them to serve as executors of her estate, with additional fees or salary as directors of a charitable foundation to be established to show her art in her California mansion. Both men have declined to comment on their actions, but their spokesmen have said the men both acted honorably in carrying out Clark's wishes.

The most remarkable day covered by the financial disclosure may have been Nov. 16, 2009. This was one month after this reporter met with Bock at his office and made clear that msnbc.com was going to publish a story raising questions about Clark's whereabouts and financial affairs. On that Monday in November, Bock or Kamsler wrote $380,000 in checks on Clark's personal account, which apparently hadn't been used in nine months. Checks went to Dr. Henry Singman, her internist, for $50,000; nurse Hadassah Peri for $60,000; her husband Daniel Peri for $60,000; accountant Kamsler for $60,000; personal assistant Christopher Sattler for $60,000; nurse Geraldine Coffey for $30,000; goddaughter Wanda Styka for $50,000, and nurse Erlinda Ysit for $10,000. That was followed three weeks later by a check to attorney Bock for $60,000. In all, $440,000.

Claudio Papapietro

Irving Kamsler, Huguette Clark's longtime accountant, pleaded guilty in October 2008 to attempting to disseminate indecent material to minors on AOL. The court sentenced him to five years of probation, but he was allowed to keep his license as a certified public accountant. In a letter he told his client only the barest details of the case.

Through the years her main private nurse, Hadassah Peri, received $2,520 a week, or $131,040 a year. She also was paid a lump sum of $5 million in 2009. As previously reported, Clark gave Peri the money to buy four homes for herself and her children. If the will is upheld, Peri would receive about $34 million, in addition to Clark's doll collection, value unknown.

Beth Israel Medical Center, the New York hospital where she lived for years, received $4.9 million from December 1997 through February 2011, not counting payments to various doctors and departments. That works out to about $1,000 per day. The hospital has declined to explain why it allowed Clark, who was said to be quite healthy, to live in hospital rooms for the last 22 years of her life.

Her primary physician, internist Dr. Henry S. Singman, received regular monthly payments peaking at $5,000 a month, or $521,000 during this period. He is named in her will for another $100,000.

Her closest friend, Suzanne Pierre, received regular payments of $50,000 for service as a social secretary, totaling $1.7 million. Pierre also received a $10 million gift back in 2000. Pierre, who was the widow of Clark's physician, died just weeks before Clark.

Only a few public charities appear in the accounting. The largest is $810,000 to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., where the bulk of her father's art collection resides. In the will, the Corcoran stands to receive one of Monet's Water Lilies series, a small canvas valued at roughly $25 million. The painting has not been seen publicly since 1925.

Bock or Kamsler wrote checks for other small charitable gifts: $1,000 to the Music Academy of the West, $100 to the New Canaan Firefighters Benevolent Fund, $25,000 to the Santa Barbara Community Arts Music Association. Two gifts were made in the spring of 2010, just after her case came to light: $10,000 to the Paul Clark Home founded by her father in Butte, Mont., and $1,000 to the Spence School, her alma mater in Manhattan. Other charitable gifts may have been made from her personal checkbook.

Clark, who had no children of her own, apparently paid tuition and fees for several students. Bock or Kamsler wrote checks to Boston College ($53,000), Boston University ($20,000), New York City College of Technology ($6,600), and four Catholic Schools: Long Beach Catholic School ($25,000), Sacred Heart Academy ($47,700), St. Bernard's School ($15,000), and Saint Ignatius Loyola School ($500).

She made payments to the IRS for $45 million, and New York state income tax of $15 million. And state gift tax payments of $975,000.

Her unoccupied 5th Avenue apartments, said to be the largest property under a single ownership anywhere on the prestigious avenue, cost $3.75 million during these 15 years just for the taxes and co-op fees, peaking at $28,844 per month. She has 15,0000 square feet on two floors of 907 Fifth Ave. at 71st Street. Another $900,000 went to Anton Sattler Management Co., which handled affairs at her apartment. And $1.5 million was paid through the years to Christopher Sattler, who worked as a personal assistant and property manager. He also would receive $500,000 if the will is upheld.

Her vacant country home in New Canaan, Conn., on the market for several years at $24 million,?cost over $100,000 a year just to pay the property taxes.

Her unoccupied Santa Barbara oceanfront estate, with an estimated value of $100 million,?cost her $8.8 million in various operating costs from 1997 to 2011.

All of Clark's properties are locked down now, protected by the court until the case is resolved.

The expenditures will be investigated by attorneys for the New York County Public Administrator, whose office was appointed by the Surrogate's Court to serve as a third temporary executor, along with Bock and Kamsler. One of the roles of the Public Administrator in this case is to make sure the estate was protected, both before and after Clark's death.

To keep up with the spending, her attorney and accountant were?raising money during this period as well: $87 million transferred in from a custody account at J.P. Morgan, $15 million from a Bank of America account, a $5 million loan from J.P. Morgan in 2009, the $6 million sale of one of her Stradivarius violins, and $52 million in sales at Sotheby's. (Her last major purchase at Sotheby's was in 2000 for $124,000.)

Huguette Clark did save considerable money through the years in one respect: electricity. As she lived in a hospital room on the Lower East Side, the Con Edison bill at her 15,000-square-foot apartments on Fifth Avenue rarely rose above $100 a month.

---

If you have information on Huguette Clark's finances, use the links below to contact Bill Dedman.

The full archive of Clark stories, photos and videos?is at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38810137/.

Source: http://openchannel.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/19/8905755-the-1-percent-of-the-1-percent-how-huguette-clarks-millions-were-spent

jason wu the fall the fall kellen winslow ben folds apple announcement sprint iphone

House approves bill averting government shutdown (AP)

WASHINGTON ? A weekend government shutdown that neither party wants would be averted under a compromise spending bill the House approved Thursday despite complaints from lawmakers left and right about provisions ranging from school lunch standards to the size of federally backed loans.

The House approved the measure 298-121. The Senate debated the measure and seemed ready to pass it and send the measure to President Barack Obama later in the evening.

The House vote highlighted fissures in the chamber's GOP majority as 133 Republicans voted for the legislation and 101 voted against. Conservatives in both chambers were unhappy that the bipartisan legislation would spend too much and potentially leave taxpayers on the hook for even more by expanding the size of mortgages that could be insured by the Federal Housing Administration in wealthy areas from $625,500 to $729,750.

"We know what's coming," Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., said during Senate debate on the bill, describing the fiscal calamities rocking indebted European countries. "How bad does it have to get, how close does it have to get to us before we will act in the best interests of the country instead of the best interests of partisanship or the best interests of our careers?"

Democrats supported the measure overwhelmingly, with only 20 of them voting "no." Liberals mocked a provision blocking Obama administration efforts to prod schools to put healthier foods on their lunch menus, including a proposal to no longer consider the tomato paste on pizza to be a vegetable.

"What's next? Are Twinkies going to be considered a vegetable?" said Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo., who voted against passage.

Despite the objections, passage was never in real doubt. Both parties were eager to avoid further tarnishing Congress' ghastly public image, which took a beating after partisan standoffs nearly caused a government shutdown this past spring and a federal default in the summer.

"It's a good bill. It's not perfect but it's a lot better than the alternative," said Rep. Norm Dicks of Washington, top Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee.

The government's new fiscal year started Oct. 1 without enactment of any yearlong spending bills. A temporary measure that has been financing federal agencies expires after midnight Friday.

The legislation would keep the government's doors open through Dec. 16, giving lawmakers more time to catch up on their tardy budget work. It would also provide $182 billion to finance the departments of Housing and Urban Development, Transportation, Agriculture, Commerce and Justice, and many smaller agencies through the rest of the government's budget year.

Supporters said the bill honors a summer compromise between Obama and Republicans to limit overall spending on federal agencies to just over $1 trillion, which is $7 billion less than last year.

"This bill is the next step in breaking the status quo of excessive federal spending that is throwing our budgets out of whack," said Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky., chairman of the House Appropriations Committee.

To try winning over skeptics, GOP leaders told their rank-and-file that the bill would eliminate 20 federal programs. All were relatively small, including a $35 million Agriculture Department healthy food initiative and a $12 million National Science Foundation underground science lab.

They also noted that the bill provided none of the $8 billion Obama requested for building high-speed rail lines and none of the $322 million the president sought to establish a climate change office in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Obama's request for an additional $308 million for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is responsible for implementing much of last year's financial law, was cut to $205 million. Reductions were also included for NASA.

Democrats boasted that unlike an earlier House-passed version, the compromise bill lacked GOP language blocking enforcement of parts of last year's law overhauling the regulation of financial markets and preventing the government from regulating the RU-486 birth control pill.

They also said it included more money than Republicans wanted for providing food to poor women, children and older people; helping communities hire police officers; operating federal prisons; financing the National Science Foundation; and highway and transit programs.

The bill also would extend to Dec. 16 the deadline by which the ailing U.S. Postal Service must pay $5.5 billion to the Treasury for future retiree health benefits. Postal officials have warned they have no cash and would default on the annual payment, which was originally due Sept. 30.

The Agriculture Department had proposed improving school lunches by steps like limiting potatoes and salt and promoting whole grains.

The legislation blocked those rules. As a result, the bill would allow the tomato paste typically topping pizzas to be considered a vegetable, a practice the Agriculture Department wanted to curb.

Federally subsidized school meals must contain certain amounts of vegetables, and the proposed rules could have forced schools to remove foods like pizza and french fries from their cafeterias.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/education/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111117/ap_on_go_co/us_congress_spending

brian urlacher matt forte dr conrad murray verdict take care childish gambino camp drake take care tracklist drake take care tracklist

Saturday, 19 November 2011

Congress OKs bill averting government shutdown

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif. gestures during her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011. (AP Photo/Harry Hamburg)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif. gestures during her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011. (AP Photo/Harry Hamburg)

(AP) ? Congress has approved a big compromise spending bill that averts a weekend government shutdown that neither party wanted.

Passage of the bill Thursday came despite conservatives' complaints about excessive spending and liberals' objections to a provision letting the government continue classifying pizza sauces served to school children as a vegetable.

The Senate approved the measure Thursday evening, shortly after the House passed it.

The legislation would keep the government's doors open through Dec. 16. The government's new budget year started Oct. 1 but since Congress hasn't finished a single spending bill for the year, agencies have been functioning on temporary authority that expires after midnight Friday.

The votes highlighted fissures among Republicans, with many GOP lawmakers voting against passage.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-11-17-Congress-Spending/id-a9610b4c6400493e84be8c45571fda41

john lackey ed lee ed lee garmin nuvi 1450 amzn tommy john surgery colorado weather

Death and Life as the Stuff of Design


ShareShare ?ShareEmail



A terrific talk by artist and designer Daisy Ginsberg on synthetic biology, design, and synthetic aesthetics at PopTech:

Christina AgapakisAbout the Author: Christina Agapakis is a biological designer who blogs about biology, engineering, engineering biology, and biologically inspired engineering. Follow on Twitter @thisischristina.

The views expressed are those of the author and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=78812de86425e2680c0b8b5c4ef3e13f

beef wellington ronnie brown man up man up wayne newton naomi wolf ron paul 2012

Facebook's porn and gore attack: Who gets the blame?

msnbc.com

By Helen A.S. Popkin

Some of it was just funny ? an image of Justin Bieber passionately singing into a man's ... um ... appendage pasted where the microphone should be.

Other hardcore porn images were of the banal fare so easily found outside Facebook's gated Internet community. But there was also the Newsfeed spam featuring child pornography reported by some. The bloody dead dog and decapitated corpses were also among the shocking fare Facebook users found themselves subjected to when the week began and the world's largest social network battled "a coordinated spam attack that exploited a browser vulnerability."

"XSS, as I suspected," Jay Asworth, this computer nerd I know from Facebook, said following confirmation of the days-long debate by security experts and civilians alike over what caused ? and who was behind ? the gore and porn spreading across the social network. An XXS scam ? or cross-site scripting ? is as common as Facebook scams come, spread largely because of uneducated and/or insatiably curious Facebook users tricked into copying and pasting offending JavaScript into a vulnerable browser.

Here's Facebook's official statement:

Live Poll

Who's at fault for the Facebook porn n' gore scam?

  • 167979

    Users who pass this junk along!

    30%

  • 167980

    Facebook and its Swiss cheese security!

    18%

  • 167981

    The lunks behind the spam!

    16%

  • 167982

    All of the above, plus my neighbor's dog!

    35%

  • 167983

    Other! (Explain in comments.)

    1%

VoteTotal Votes: 371

Protecting the people who use Facebook from spam and malicious content is a top priority for us, and we are always working to improve our systems to isolate and remove material that violates our terms. Recently, we experienced a coordinated spam attack that exploited a browser vulnerability. Our efforts have drastically limited the damage caused by this attack, and we are now in the process of investigating to identify those responsible.??

During this spam attack users were tricked into pasting and executing malicious JavaScript in their browser URL bar causing them to unknowingly share this offensive content. Our engineers have been working diligently on this self-XSS vulnerability in the browser. We've built enforcement mechanisms to quickly shut down the malicious Pages and accounts that attempt to exploit it. We have also been putting those affected through educational checkpoints so they know how to protect themselves. We've put in place backend measures to reduce the rate of these attacks and will continue to iterate on our defenses to find new ways to protect people.

Oh, and you can bet they are. While many users threatened to quit the site and made accusations that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg couldn't care less about the ick that might very well have caught the eye of Grandma and/or all those 11-year-olds parents allow to lie about their age to be on the social network, Facebook wants the nude splatter-fest out of your News Feed even more than you do. Because it's a business. Businesses are customarily not fans of outside influences that drive away customers. And therein ? as the much-abused Hamlet quote goes ? lies the rub.

While Facebook points to a flaw in a browser, it won't identify which browser allowed the malicious code to?spam violated Facebook accounts.?While naked people and blood splatter grabs the headlines, less sensational XXS and clickjacking scams such as tricking Facebook users into clicking on "Why were you tagged in this video?" or pasting code into browsers in the hopes of getting a free meal at Olive Garden are so quickly forgotten they're often repeated.

"The bigger question is what motivated the attackers to use this flaw in such a strange way?" Chester Wisniewski?of Sophos writes in the security company's Naked Security blog.?"We investigate lots of Facebook scams here at Naked Security, and I would guess that nearly 100 percent?of them lead to some financial payout for the scammer." Usually, scammers earn money when Facebook users are tricked into viewing advertising.

The latest outbreak "seems to be a purely malicious act," Wisniewski writes. "Facebook has a reputation for maintaining a reasonably family friendly environment and most Facebook users don't expect dead dogs and penises showing up on their wall."

The lack of monetary motivation has led security experts and others to speculate whether this was an attack by the hacker collective Anonymous, but there are no clues or confirmation. Facebook is letting it be known that it's on the case.

"In addition to the engineering teams that build tools to block spam we also have a dedicated enforcement team that has already identified those responsible?and is working with our legal team to ensure appropriate consequences follow," Facebook said in an email statement. The site cited two prominent anti-spam legal victories.

In 2009, Facebook successfully sued "Spam King? Sanford Wallace for spamming users' Facebook walls in a lawsuit that resulted in a $711 million judgment in the social network's favor and possible jail time for Wallace. In 2011, Facebook was awarded more than $360 million in statutory damages from spammer Philip Porembski, who grabbed the login info of at least 116,000 accounts, which he used to spam 7.2 million users.

Meanwhile, Facebook users can do a lot to prevent spam simply by not clicking on suspicious links. Viral scams persist on Facebook?because Facebook users continue to click malicious links.?Over the last year, Facebook stepped up its defenses?against these seemingly unstoppable pests by launching a variety of new security tools to help prevent spam and educate users.

To review, here are some things you can safely assume you won't see via Facebook: Osama bin Laden's body, that video of that thing Justin Bieber did to that girl, what happened when that girl's dad walked in on her, an app that reveals?who has?been looking at your profile, or any "authentic" message from Facebook WRITTEN IN ALL CAPS.

If you do get sucked into this or any Facebook spam scam, it's easy to remove the application, using Facebook settings, so that it no longer accesses your profile.?Here's how:

  • Remove any content the rogue app may have posted on your Facebook wall.
  • Go to the Account Settings drop-down menu in the upper right side of your screen.
  • From the Account Settings drop-down menu, choose Privacy Settings.
  • On the bottom right side of the Privacy Settings Page, click the Apps & websites link "Edit your settings."
  • On the App page, next to "Apps you use," select edit settings.
  • There you will see the third-party apps that have access to your Facebook profile. Delete any rogue applications. (It's a good idea to check this setting regularly, anyway.)
  • Send an apology to all your Facebook friends who may have been tagged, and advise them to do the same.
  • Join Facebook's Security page as well as the Sophos security page on Facebook to stay up-to-date on the latest security issues.

?More on the annoying way we live now:

?Helen A.S. Popkin?goes blah blah blah about the Internet. Tell her to get a real job on Twitter and/or Facebook.?Also, Google+.

Source: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/16/8838807-facebooks-porn-and-gore-attack-who-gets-the-blame

west virginia football wvu football meteor shower tonight district 9 district 9 pandaria pandaria

Friday, 18 November 2011

Merkel and Cameron to discuss clashing euro views (Reuters)

BERLIN (Reuters) ? Angela Merkel and David Cameron will try to resolve clashing views on the euro crisis on Friday with London accused of being selfish for opposing a tax on banks and Berlin touching off British sensitivities about transferring power to Europe.

London wanted the prime minister's visit to be low-profile, but such hopes were dashed after two lawmakers high up in Merkel's ruling party blasted euro-outsider Britain's stance in the days before the visit.

The chancellor told a congress of her Christian Democratic Union's (CDU) this week that Europe faced its "toughest hour since World War Two."

She wants to change the European Union's Lisbon Treaty to impose German-style budget discipline, preferably on all 27 members of the EU rather than just the 17 countries in the euro zone.

"Plans for a possible treaty change are now at a very interesting point and we expect to exchange views with our British partners," Peter Altmaier, chief whip of Merkel's conservatives in the Bundestag, told Reuters.

But talk of treaty change has unnerved Cameron's conservative-led coalition and touched a raw nerve in Britain about ceding more sovereignty to the European Commission in Brussels. It falls short of the "big bazooka" response Cameron has called for from Merkel.

Britain is especially worried Germany's proposals for a tax on financial transactions -- which it wants to introduce in Europe after rejection by the Group of 20 leading economies -- would hurt London's competitiveness as a financial hub.

At the CDU meeting in Leipzig, the parliamentary leader from Merkel's party Volker Kauder told delegates to rapturous applause that Germany would not accept Britain "only defending its own interests" and especially those of the City of London's financiers.

"What is England still doing in the EU?" asked top-selling German daily Bild on the morning of Cameron's visit.

The Financial Times reported that Cameron might be ready to back Merkel's plans for treaty change to create more unity in the euro zone, in exchange for safeguards for the City against any threat to its activity from European legislation.

Cameron, whose aides did not want the visit to include a news conference but ceded to the insistence of their German hosts, will restate his opposition to the Franco-German push for the so-called "Tobin tax" on banks, said the FT.

Berlin has already suggested that if non-euro countries like Britain object, the treaty changes could be limited to members of the currency bloc.

The leader of euro member Ireland, Enda Kenny, told Merkel this week Dublin would need a referendum on treaty changes, and the premier of euro outsider Denmark, Helle Thorning-Schmidt, told her Europe should "first focus on solving the crisis."

BAFFLED BY BRITS

Kauder's comment that Berlin's approach to the crisis was so widely accepted now that "Europe is speaking German all of a sudden," prompted jingoistic British headlines.

The Daily Mail wrote: "We no longer need to fear the jackboot but we have a great deal to fear from German bossy boots."

"Germany is making the running ... in a way she has not presumed to do since World War Two," the conservative Mail said.

Bild responded with the taunt: "Europe speaks German, Herr Cameron!" But Suedeutsche Zeitung chided Kauder for "further emotionalizing" Britain's fraught EU debate by fuelling preconceptions about power-hungry Germans.

The British government's response was more muted.

Business Secretary Vincent Cable, from Cameron's more pro-Europe Liberal Democrat coalition partners, said Germany's stance on the transaction tax was "completely unjustified."

Cameron said in a speech this week, in an apparent response to Merkel's calls for greater political and fiscal convergence, that Europe needed "the flexibility of a network, not the rigidity of a bloc."

Britain's conservative leader is in a quandary on the euro, realizing his country's exports could be harmed by a collapse that most likely would be avoided by more unity among euro zone leaders -- however much that goes against the grain in London.

Another top lawmaker from Merkel's CDU, Michael Meister, told Reuters he was "baffled that in Great Britain there doesn't seem to be a clear view of the consequences a collapse of the euro would have for the City of London."

London fears being left out of crucial decisions regarding the European single market, which it greatly values.

With the Bank of England warning that Britain's economy will struggle to grow until mid-2012, in contrast to Germany's, it is tempting for London to deflect blame onto the euro zone.

Cameron's "big bazooka" response would involve the European Central Bank becoming the lender of last resort to prop up debt-ridden countries such as Greece and Italy - much in line with U.S. President Barack Obama's call for drastic action.

Such an infringement of the ECB's independence and its focus on price stability is completely taboo for Merkel. But she has taken a more diplomatic approach than France's Nicolas Sarkozy, who told Cameron in October: "We are sick of you criticizing us."

Berlin recognizes Cameron's troubles with backbenchers who voted in large numbers last month in favor of a referendum on EU membership, and the Germans recall his campaign vow that any transfer of sovereignty would be put to a referendum.

Fears that France and Italy are being sucked into the debt maelstrom have taken the two-year-old crisis to a new level in recent weeks.

** For the latest news on Europe's debt crisis, see

(Additional reporting by Matt Falloon in London and Andreas Rinke in Berlin; Writing by Stephen Brown; Editing by Noah Barkin)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111118/bs_nm/us_eurozone_germany_britain

the big year breast cancer walk breast cancer walk detroit tigers major league major league mlk memorial

Fresh iPhone Apps for Nov. 17: Minecraft, RPM: Gymkhana Racing, Superman, Bullet Time HD (Appolicious)

This week?s big games release in the iTunes App Store sees the addition of Minecraft: Pocket Edition, an iOS version of the incredibly popular indie PC sensation in which players have built all kinds of amazing, huge structures. Following that is RPM: Gymkhana Racing, a racing game that puts the emphasis on insane drifts and finesse. Superman finally comes to iOS care of Chillingo in a side-scrolling action game, and twin-stick shooter Bullet Time HD packs role-playing elements to make a deep action experience that includes multiplayer support.

A monster indie hit on the PC, Minecraft has already made its way to Google?s Android operating system, and now finally shows up on the iPhone and iPad. The first-person game is all about mining for various resources, cutting down trees and gathering items to use to construct all kinds of things ? think ?virtual LEGO? and you have the right idea.

This version of Minecraft isn?t quite as complete as the one available on PC, lacking things like animals, online multiplayer support and the frightening ?creepers? that attack players within the game. Instead, it focuses on constructing things in the game world. It also includes local multiplayer over a Wi-Fi network, so you can join in with your friends to build houses, towns or even scale models of the Starship Enterprise (yes, somebody did that).

Top-down racing game RPM: Gymkhana Racing isn?t just about posting top times on each track. To really rack-up high scores and grab the best times in the game, you need to master the ability to drift around corners. This lets you max out your car?s top speed as well as score points. In each race, you?ll also have objectives to meet, like grabbing certain objects or avoiding collisions.

RPM packs 25 tracks across five different locales, ranging from New York to Dubai. You can work through tracks in a variety of ways, and locating shortcuts is key to your success. As you clear tracks, you?ll also unlock new cars and accessories to further your racing ambitions.

Superman (iPhone, iPad) $0.99

The Man of Steel finally has an iOS game of his own. With a comic book look and feel, Superman puts you in the role of the iconic superhero as you fight through waves of dangers and crimes taking place in Metropolis. You?ll fly around the city to blast space probes with Superman?s heat vision, fly at super-speeds to take down thieves, and bash missiles until they explode harmlessly before impacting the city.

Superman has simple controls that allow you to use a host of his abilities while utilizing only a couple of virtual buttons on your iOS device?s screen. The game packs 18 levels to play through, and in each you?ll be scored on how quickly and efficiently you defeat your enemies. It also has Game Center support for achievements and leaderboards.

Grab your guns and get ready to take on mutants in Bullet Time, a twin-stick shooter with some great graphics optimized for the iPhone 4S and iPad 2. The game is filled with fast-paced shooter action as blade-wielding mutants charge you, flanked by their gun-toting allies. You?ll need to take them all down carefully while completing other objectives in order to move forward through the game?s two big single-player campaigns.

Bullet Time also contains quite a few role-playing game elements, like the ability to find or buy new weapons and armor to better your character over time. It also includes a pretty robust cooperative multiplayer mode, allowing you to take on the game with up to two friends. You can track your scores using Game Center?s online leaderboards.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/videogames/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/appolicious_rss/rss_appolicious_tc/http___www_appolicious_com_articles10229_fresh_iphone_apps_for_nov_17_minecraft_rpm_gymkhana_racing_superman_bullet_time_hd/43631061/SIG=1435ploui/*http%3A//www.appolicious.com/tech/articles/10229-fresh-iphone-apps-for-nov-17-minecraft-rpm-gymkhana-racing-superman-bullet-time-hd

hunger games trailer hunger games trailer gabrielle giffords austin rivers austin rivers ows kindle fire review

Thursday, 17 November 2011

Turkey cancels oil search plans in Syria (AP)

ANKARA, Turkey ? Turkey on Tuesday canceled plans for oil exploration in Syria, while also threatening to cut electricity supplies after a spate of attacks by supporters of Syrian President Bashar Assad on its diplomatic missions.

Energy Minister Taner Yildiz announced that Turkey had shelved plans for Turkey's petroleum company, TPAO, to jointly explore oil with Syria's state oil company in six wells. Yildiz also threatened that Turkey could review supplies of electricity to the troubled country if tensions continue.

"Right now, we are providing electricity (to Syria)," Yildiz said. "If (Syria) continues on this course, then we might have to reconsider these decisions."

A Turkish Energy Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with ministry regulations, told The Associated Press that Turkish companies provide Syria with on average 2 billion kilowatt/hour of electricity per year ? around 10 percent of Syria's annual power consumption

But Turkish Energy Analyst Necdet Pamir said Syria produces an excess of some 10 billion kilowatt/hour, and was therefore not likely to suffer from any possible Turkish move.

"The cut may affect some parts of Syria for a short period of time, but it does not amount to a huge loss," Pamir said.

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan slammed Assad for his brutal crackdown on opponents and attacks by his supporters on Turkish diplomatic missions on Saturday.

Turkey no longer has confidence in the Syrian regime, Erdogan said, warning Assad that his brutal crackdown on opponents threatens to place him on a list of leaders who "feed on blood."

Erdogan also urged Assad to punish those responsible for attacks on Turkish diplomatic missions in Syria.

Addressing Assad disrespectfully by his first name, Erdogan said: "Bashar, you who have thousands of people in jail, must find those who attacked the Turkish flag and punish them," in reference to burning of the Turkish flag in Saturday's attack on the Turkish consulate in the Syrian city of Latakia.

Turkey's Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Turkey was "determined to implement the most effective sanctions that will not harm the people of Syria." The minister was speaking to Turkish journalists in Rabat where he is holding talks with Arab foreign ministers.

Assad's supporters tried to break into Turkish missions on Saturday to denounce an Arab League decision to suspend Syria's membership over its crackdown on the eight-month uprising. Turkey is not a member of the league, but welcomed the decision.

Erdogan took pains to note that his comments were politically neutral.

"It is not among our expectations that the Assad regime meet all the demands of the (Syrian) people," Erdogan said. "Our wish is that it (the Assad regime), which is now on a knife-edge, does not enter this road of no return, which leads to the edge of the abyss."

Turkey evacuated the families of diplomats after Saturday's attacks on its embassy in Damascus and its consulates in the cities of Aleppo and Latakia.

"I again strongly condemn the attack on the Turkish flag and our missions," Erdogan said.

Turkish President Abdullah Gul warned Syria that it must protect Turkish missions.

"If they don't take necessary measures, no doubt our reaction will be different if it is repeated," Gul said.

Turkey has long urged Syria to end the crackdown, which the U.N. estimates has killed more than 3,500 people since mid-March.

"No regime can survive by killing or jailing," Erdogan said. "No one can build a future over the blood of the oppressed."

Turkey's government had cultivated warm ties with Assad, but has grown highly critical of his government. Turkey has imposed an arms embargo on Syria and is expected to announce other sanctions. Turkey has also opened its borders to Syrians fleeing the violence. More than 7,700 refugees are being sheltered in several Turkish camps along the Syrian border.

Turkey has also allowed a Syrian opposition group, the Syrian National Council, to hold meetings in Turkey.

The council, a broad-based opposition umbrella group, was formed in Istanbul in September. No country has recognized it so far as a legal representative of the country and Syria has threatened tough measures against any country that does.

___

Associated Press writer Suzan Fraser contributed.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111115/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_syria

roddy white green river killer bohemian grove amazing race michael oher showtime the prisoner