Monday, October 31, 2011

Reports: Prosecutions going up for war zone crime

Afghan people gather at the site of Saturday's suicide car bomber in Kabul, Afghanistan, Sunday, Oct. 30, 2011. A Taliban suicide bomber rammed a vehicle loaded with explosives into an armored NATO bus on a busy thoroughfare in Kabul, killing 17 people including a dozen Americans in the deadliest strike against the U.S.-led coalition in the Afghan capital since the war began. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

Afghan people gather at the site of Saturday's suicide car bomber in Kabul, Afghanistan, Sunday, Oct. 30, 2011. A Taliban suicide bomber rammed a vehicle loaded with explosives into an armored NATO bus on a busy thoroughfare in Kabul, killing 17 people including a dozen Americans in the deadliest strike against the U.S.-led coalition in the Afghan capital since the war began. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

In this Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011 handout photo, the first truck of a large convoy carrying U.S. military tactical vehicles to be shipped out of Iraq pulls out of the staging area on Contingency Operating Base Adder, south of Baghdad, Iraq. President Barack Obama announced Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 that the U.S. has abandoned plans to keep a substantial force in Iraq and that all service members will be home by Dec. 31.(AP Photo/Spc. Anthony T Zane, U.S. Army, HO)

In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011 handout photo, U.S. Army soldiers with the 20th Engineer Brigade, Headquarters Company, unload duffel bags to be palletized to load on aircraft for their flight home on Contingency Operating Base Adder, south of Baghdad, Iraq. President Barack Obama announced Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 that the U.S. has abandoned plans to keep a substantial force in Iraq and that all service members will be home by Dec. 31.(AP Photo/Pvt. Andrew Slovensky, U.S. Army, HO)

In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011 handout photo, U.S. Army soldiers with the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 8th Cavalry Regiment, load their equipment onto pallets on Contingency Operating Base Adder, south of Baghdad, Iraq, as they begin their journey home. President Barack Obama announced Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 that the U.S. has abandoned plans to keep a substantial force in Iraq and that all service members will be home by Dec. 31.(AP Photo/Pvt. Andrew Slovensky, U.S. Army, HO)

(AP) ? A Marine in Iraq sent home $43,000 in stolen cash by hiding it in a footlocker among American flags. A soldier shipped thousands more concealed in a toy stuffed animal. An embassy employee tricked the State Department into wiring $240,000 into his foreign bank account.

As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan wind down, the number of people indicted and convicted by the U.S. for bribery, theft and other reconstruction-related crimes in both countries is rapidly rising, according to two government reports released Sunday.

"This is a boom industry for us," Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, said in an interview.

"Investigators and auditors had a productive quarter," said a report on the theft of Afghanistan aid by Steven Trent, who holds the same job for Afghanistan. His report covered August through October.

In the past 13 months U.S. investigators in Iraq secured the indictments of 22 people for alleged aid-related offenses, bringing to 69 the total since the SIGIR office was created in 2004. Convictions stand at 57. Several hundred more suspects are under scrutiny in 102 open investigations and those numbers are expected to climb.

The rise in caseloads derives partly from spinoff investigations, where suspects facing prosecution lead investigators to other suspects, said Jon Novak, SIGIR's assistant inspector general for investigations.

"More and more people are ratting out their associates," he said, turning in conspirators who helped launder money after it was stolen, others who were aware of it and others implicated in the crimes.

As investigators gain experience, they're received better information from a growing network of sources in Iraq, said Dan Willkens, Novak's deputy. Development of an automated data-mining system for investigations has helped, he said, as did a decision two years ago to speed prosecutions by hiring three former assistant U.S. attorneys and detailing them to the Department of Justice.

At the inspector general's office for Afghan reconstruction, created in 2008, officials report only nine indictments and seven convictions so far. They say they're trying to ramp up after years of upheaval and charges the office was mismanaged. Trent was named acting inspector general after his predecessor left in August and is the third person to hold the job.

Still, Trent reported that during the last quarter, an investigation initiated by his office netted the largest bribery case in Afghanistan's 10-year war. A former Army Reserve captain, Sidharth "Tony" Handa of Charlotte, N.C., was convicted, sentenced to prison and fined for soliciting $1.3 million in bribes from contractors working on reconstruction projects.

Most crimes uncovered by U.S. investigators in the two war zones include bribery, kickbacks and theft, inspired in part by the deep and pervasive cultures of corruption indigenous to the countries themselves.

Among some of the cases listed in the reports were those of:

Gunnery Sgt. Eric Hamilton, who pleaded guilty to conspiracy in what prosecutors say was a scheme to help Iraqi contractors steal 70 generators that were meant to supply electricity for fellow Marines. He sent some of their payments home in a footlocker and had other money wired, the report said.

Several U.S. government employees, who received kickbacks for steering contracts to local conspirators and providing inside information to people competing for contracts. A former army sergeant, who was not identified, is charged with pocketing more than $12,000 in cash that a contractor never picked up after the money was allegedly stolen by another army sergeant and mailed to California inside a stuffed animal.

Jordanian national and U.S. Embassy employee Osama Esam Saleem Ayesh, who was convicted in April for stealing nearly $240,000 intended to cover shipping and customs charges the State Department incurs when it moves household goods of its employees. The money wound up in Ayesh's bank in Jordan.

Money stolen from reconstruction projects also has been shipped off of U.S. battlefields tucked into letters home and stuffed in a military vest. Tens of thousands of dollars were once sewn into a Santa Claus suit.

Prosecutors have retrieved some of the money. More than $83 million will be returned to the U.S. from Iraq cases completed in the budget year that ended Sept. 30, bringing the total recovered over the last seven years to nearly $155 million, Bowen's office said.

As well as stolen cash, the total includes court-ordered restitution, fines and proceeds from the sale of merchandise seized from those convicted, including Rolex watches, luxury cars, plasma TVs and houses.

Prosecutions by Trent's office recovered $51 million over the past year, his report said.

But the amount recovered is believed to be a tiny fraction of what's been stolen in the two war zones, a figure that will probably never be known for certain. Far more money is believed to have been lost through waste and abuse that resulted from poor management and the often-questioned U.S. strategy of trying to rebuild nations that are still at war.

The U.S. has committed $62 billion to rebuilding Iraq and $72 billion for the reconstruction of Afghanistan.

The independent Commission on Wartime Contracting estimated in August that at least $31 billion has been lost to waste and fraud in Iraq and Afghanistan, adding that the total could be as high as $60 billion. It studied not just reconstruction spending, but $206 billion for the logistical support of coalition forces and the performance of security functions.

The commission found that from 10 to 20 percent of the $206 billion in spending was wasted, while fraud accounted for the loss of another 5 to 9 percent.

Bowen called the cost of fraud "egregious."

"This is open crime occurring in a war zone," he said. "And the purpose of a lot of these expenditures is to win hearts and minds. Obviously we lose hearts and minds" when local populations see foreigners steal money meant to help rebuild their country.

The inspectors general are only two of the U.S. government offices looking into fraud, waste and abuse. Others include State Department inspectors and Army criminal investigators.

___

Online:

Afghanistan inspector general: http://www.sigar.mil

Iraq inspector general: http://www.sigir.mil

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-30-US-Rebuilding-War-Zones/id-c584abb7acaa4f87b2afbf01fc0f61f5

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Consumer spending rises, weak incomes a worry (Reuters)

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

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

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

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

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

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

SAVING SOFTENS

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

INFLATION SLOWS

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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BYD's e6 goes on sale in China, still mulling trek across Pacific

While it has yet to show up stateside as promised, that hasn't stopped BYD from beginning consumer sales of its EV back home in China. Shenzhen citizens are finally getting a crack at owning an e6 after seeing it on the city's streets in taxi and governmental garb for over a year. On sale for 369,800 RMB (or about $57,000), buyers will only have to part with 249,800 RMB (or about $38,000) come check writing time, thanks to extensive rebates from the government. In exchange for all that cash, you'll get an auto equipped with BYD's "i" system, which lets you access vehicle functions and info (like keyless entry and the car's location) from your smartphone. BYD-i comes onboard a five-seat crossover with a range of up to 190 miles (!) that supports rapid charging -- apparently there's plenty of the speedy power stations in Shenzhen. Those keen to charge at home will also get some installation "assistance" from the automaker, which we'll assume means a subsidy. Given that BYD's electric buses will hit our shores soon, China's first "domestic, long-range, all-electric" crossover can't be that far behind, right? PR awaits you, after the break.

Continue reading BYD's e6 goes on sale in China, still mulling trek across Pacific

BYD's e6 goes on sale in China, still mulling trek across Pacific originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Oct 2011 18:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Obama: 'We Can't Wait' on Jobs (ABC News)

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/155020373?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Liberty Legal Foundation Website Hacked| The Post & Email

WEBSITE HACKED AFTER ANNOUNCING MULTI-STATE LAWSUIT AGAINST OBAMA?S ELIGIBILITY

The Liberty Legal Foundation lawsuits contend that Obama is ineligible to serve as president because one of his parents was not a U.S. citizen

(Oct. 27, 2011) ? Our last email directed you to our updated site at www.libertylegalfoundation.com. Unfortunately, our site was hacked shortly after sending that email.

Our older site, www.libertylegalfoundation.net, is up and running. You can find all the information about the new class action against the Democratic Party there.

Very soon the ?.com? site will forward to the ?.net? site so there won?t be any more confusion.

We apologize for the inconvenience.

If you would like to join the new certification class action lawsuit, log in to your profile then go to http://www.libertylegalfoundation.net/upgrade-membership-to-cca-member/ to sign up.

The fact that our site was hacked a few hours after we sent out press releases tells us just how much our opponents fear our efforts. We will not let them slow us down. Please double your efforts to help us get the word out about the Certification Class Action lawsuit.

In Liberty,

Van Irion

Co-Founder, Lead Counsel

LIBERTY LEGAL FOUNDATION

? 2011, The Post & Email. All rights reserved internationally, unless otherwise specified. To read more on our copyright restrictions, see our Copyright notice on the subheader of every page, along the left margin.

Source: http://www.thepostemail.com/2011/10/27/liberty-legal-foundation-website-hacked/

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Season ends, Pujols talks can resume

By R.B. FALLSTROM

updated 12:12 a.m. ET Oct. 29, 2011

ST. LOUIS - This time, it really was Albert Pujols' final at-bat of the season, and perhaps as a Cardinal.

The flashbulbs popped furiously in appreciation of the three-time NL MVP, who struck out in the seventh inning of Game 7.

One last send-off. Now, it's time to start talking.

After 11 seasons with the team that drafted him, Pujols is a free agent for the first time.

Pujols played a quiet support role in the Cardinals' Series-clinching 6-2 victory over the Texas Rangers on Friday night with a walk, hit by pitch and two runs scored. That's been the case most of the series except for his historic Game 3 explosion, when he joined Babe Ruth as the only players to hit three homers in a World Series game while matching records with five hits and six RBIs.

He totaled one hit the rest of the Series. batting .240 overall with five intentional walks.

But just like 2006, when Pujols batted .200 with one RBI as the Cardinals polished off the Tigers in five games, the Cardinals needed his presence in the lineup, at first base and in the clubhouse, to pull it off.

The 31-year-old Pujols has repeatedly expressed his desire to stay put in a city full of fans who believe he can do no wrong and with an organization whose chairman referred to him as irreplaceable.

After the game, Pujols was focused on celebrating, not contract talks.

"You know what? I'm not even thinking about that," Pujols said. "I'm thinking about, you know, we're the world champions and I'm going to celebrate and whenever that time comes, you know, then we'll deal with it. But right now, you know, I enjoy this. You never know when it's going to be your last one so I'm going to enjoy this one like the same way that I did my first one. So thank you to all the fans for the support."

The Cardinals exercised a $16 million option on Pujols' contract after last season. The three-time NL MVP rejected a multiyear extension that included a small percentage of the franchise during the winter and cut off negotiations on the first day of spring training.

And that's where it stands.

Neither side has had much to say on the subject. Earlier in the postseason, general manager John Mozeliak refused to handicap the odds on keeping him.

The Cardinals have addressed several offseason concerns already, picking up two-year options on twin aces Chris Carpenter and Adam Wainwright, plus signing Lance Berkman to a one-year deal. That should make it easier to concentrate on the key questions: Can they afford Pujols?

If Pujols leaves, the Cardinals could move Berkman to first base and put Allen Craig, who has had a breakout October, in right field, and have millions left to spend on upgrades elsewhere.

After earning $111 million the last eight seasons, Pujols hits the market, along with Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder. Both could exit the NL Central.

The Cardinals' payroll was about $110 million this season, and chairman Bill DeWitt anticipates it'll be in that range next season. So far, the Cardinals have committed about $70 million to a half-dozen core players.

It remains to be see whether Pujols' historic performance in Game 3 will raise the price tag. Or whether his complementary role the rest of the series will bring it down.

Tony La Russa, who needs just 36 wins to become second on the career managing victories list, has said several times that Pujols is the best player he's ever had. He batted .300 with 30 homers and 100 RBIs each of his first 10 seasons.

Pujols hit 37 homers this year, running that streak to 11 years, and barely missed on the other two with a .299 average and 99 RBIs.

Locally, Pujols is revered almost on a par with the legendary Stan Musial and sure to merit a statue or two outside Busch Stadium one day. In between innings of Game 6, a female fan in the upper deck held up a homemade sign celebrating the Pujols era with No. 11 atop the team's trademark birds on bat.

Any time Pujols comes to bat, the crowd comes to life. Even an infield pop-up initially gets fans screaming, if it's hit high enough.

A cautionary note: Though there's no question he's among the elite players in the game if not the best, Pujols' numbers in nearly every major offensive category are on a three-year decline including hits (186-183-173), doubles (45-39-29), homers (47-42-37), RBIs (135-118-99), walks (115-103-61), average (.327-.317-.299) and on-base percentage (.443-.414-.366).

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


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Cards hold the winning hand

The St. Louis Cardinals won a remarkable World Series they weren't even supposed to reach, beating the Texas Rangers 6-2 in Game 7 on Friday night with another key hit by hometown star David Freese and six gutty innings from Chris Carpenter.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45085307/ns/sports-baseball/

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Weekly Highlights #10

Kathleen Raven, from Grady school of journalism, in UGA Today:

Blood pressure-lowering drug after stroke aids recovery, study finds:

A commonly prescribed blood pressure-lowering medication appears to kick start recovery in the unaffected brain hemisphere after a stroke by boosting blood vessel growth, a new University of Georgia study has found.

The discovery, based on a study using rats and published recently in the online journal PLoS ONE, occurred only because the team, led by Susan Fagan, professor of clinical and administrative pharmacy at the UGA College of Pharmacy, struck a new path in stroke research by examining the healthy side of brain after the stroke occurred?

Cholesterol Conundrum: Changing HDL and LDL levels does not always alter heart disease or stroke risk:

Francie Diep, from NYU, at Scientific American:

Most people who are even a little bit concerned about their cholesterol know that there is a ?good? kind?known as HDL?and a ?bad? kind?known as LDL. Research has shown that the higher the amount of HDL and the lower the amount of LDL in the blood, the less likely a person is to suffer a heart attack or stroke. As for the one in six Americans with unhealthy cholesterol levels, well, they can always hope to change their luck with a cholesterol-changing medication or two. Or can they?

Abby McBride, from MIT, at PLoS Blogs:

On paleontologists, paper dolls, and the human family tree:

To a paleontologist, early humans and their relatives are a bit like paper dolls. Instead of hats or dresses, the interchangeable pieces are an array of fossilized body parts, ranging from apelike to almost human?.

Blair Hickman, from NYU, at Dowser Media:

How To Cover Social Innovation: Start Small, Build Big:

Last Wednesday, our founder David Bornstein gave a talk about Solution Journalism to Studio20, a graduate program at NYU studying the future of journalism (from which I?m about to graduate.) They seemed to get it. But their overwhelming reaction ? which mirrors most journalists? responses ? was ?Wow, this is really big. Where do you even begin???

Taylor Beck, from MIT, at PLoS Blogs:

Hooked on the funnies: Does laughter prime humans for companionship?:

Laughter is like dope: addictive and inebriating. People use laughs as social lubricant, the way we drink alcohol to ease tension and loosen up.

But this laughter high may be more than a metaphor, a study from Oxford University suggests. Laughing together may drug our brains with the opiates that numb pain. Laughter?s intoxicating effect on the brain, like the buzz we get from morphine, sex, or running, may also help hook us on companionship. The study?s lead author, Robin Dunbar, argues that humans may have evolved laughter to promote group-bonding?.

Melissae Fellet, from UCSC, in The New Scientist:

A revolution of universally average art:

Jonathon Keats wants to inspire others to create universally mediocre art. And, yes, he?s completely serious. Keats, a San Francisco-based artist and self-proclaimed experimental philosopher, blends science and art to inspire questions about the universe and our place in it. He once sold real estate in extra dimensions and played prayer music to cyanobacteria and fruit flies in an attempt to genetically engineer God.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=15af97d2fe630747062ecdb5161287ec

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Gaming Everything ? Blog Archive ? First Saints: Row The Third ...

October 27th, 2011 Posted in 360, News, PC, PS3 Posted By: Valay

The first Saints Row: The Third reviews have been released through the latest issues of Play UK and Australian publication ?Hyper?. THQ?s sandbox title performed rather well in both magazines.

Play UK wrote the following about Saints Row: The Third:

?It has its issues, it has its drawbacks, but Saints Row: The Third is an utterly wanton, totally ridiculous bag of laughs. It?s difficult to dislike anyway, and even harder to dislike with such an enjoyable, escalatory campaign. Great stuff.?

Play UK awarded the title an 88%. Hyper?s score was similar, coming in at 9/10.

Expect more reviews of Saints Row: The Third as its November 15 launch date approaches.

Source

Source: http://gamingeverything.com/11101/first-saints-row-the-third-reviews-are-in/

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Real Estate Investing Websites With Integrated Social Media ...

A real estate investing firm that also builds real estate investor websites, www.RealEstateInvestorsWebsites.net, has rolled out an upgraded release of websites for real estate investing.

Real estate investors can now take advantage of the inbuilt social media features for marketing. Websites visitors can make comments through their facebook accounts directly on the websites, and share these comments with their friends without leaving the websites.

The visitors can also use the Like feature that has become quite popular with the social media such as Facebook, Twitter and Google Plus.

This release is an enhancement of previous releases that add to the marketing features built into the websites.

With superior search engine optimization, the websites are built to attract targeted visitors. A life-like video speaking model instantly attracts attention and delivers a down to earth, believable message that entices them to take action now.

Visitors can also request free pre-loaded Ebooks that deliver valuable information, and the websites? automatically follow up with them using in-built automation and pre-loaded autoresponder messages. The websites are therefore created to attract visitors and convert them into closed real estate deals.

Being controlled from a simple virtual back office, they are easy to manage even for real estate investors who are new to computers. They come loaded with numerous designs and features, and can be fully personalized and adapted to suit any real estate investing business model.

Most importantly, each website is delivered fully customized and personalized ready for business usually within one hour.

For more information, please visit www.RealEstateInvestorsWebsites.net or call 214-227-8718.

Tags: real estate investing, real estate investor, real estate investor websites, social media marketing

Source: http://www.realestateinvestorswebsites.net/real-estate-investing-web-sites/real-estate-investing-websites-with-integrated-social-media-marketing-released/

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Telescopes solve 2,000-year-old stellar mystery (AP)

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ? Astronomers finally know why the first documented supernova was super-sized.

The exploded star was observed by the ancient Chinese in the year 185, and visible for eight months. It was later found to be a bigger-than-expected supernova remnant, 8,000 light years away. Each light year is about 6 trillion miles.

New observations in the infrared show the explosion took place in a cavity in space. The cavity allowed the stellar shrapnel to shoot faster and farther out into the universe.

The star ? similar to our sun ? died peacefully and turned into a dense white dwarf. It sucked up material from another star, and then exploded in a supernova.

NASA announced the findings Monday. Four space telescopes were used in the study.

___

Online:

NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/spitzer/multimedia/pia14872.html

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_sc/us_sci_stellar_mystery

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Walmart offers holiday shopping price guarantee (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Wal-Mart Stores Inc is once again touting itself as the low-cost leader, offering its U.S. shoppers gift cards if they buy items and then see lower prices advertised at other stores during the holiday season.

The "Christmas Price Guarantee" announced on Monday will apply to products bought at U.S. Walmart stores between November 1 and December 25. Customers who buy something at Walmart and then find the identical product listed for a lower price at another store can receive a gift card for the difference.

Items placed on layaway, where a buyer reserves merchandise by paying a deposit, are also be eligible for the program.

The world's largest retailer is marketing itself heavily as the low-price shopping destination leading up to the crucial winter holiday season.

The season, which traditionally runs from the day after U.S. Thanksgiving through Christmas, is the most important time of year for retailers. In recent years, Walmart and other U.S. chains have advertised earlier and offered deeper discounts to draw shoppers amid the struggling economy.

The push comes as Walmart tries to sustain its recent momentum. Sales at existing U.S. stores rose in July, August and September after nine quarterly declines.

The plan announced on Monday has several restrictions. It excludes Black Friday ads, expired ads, Internet prices, percentage-off ads, clearance ads, and certain other offers. Shoppers must bring in their Walmart receipt and a competitor's printed ad by December 25 to get the gift card.

Walmart has already brought thousands of items back to stores, cut prices and advertised that it will match competitors' in-store prices. It also brought back holiday layaway on toys and electronics after other chains received a boost by offering the service during the downturn.

The company is trying to gain loyalty among shoppers who now spend more at competitors such as dollar stores and other chains that offer a wide assortment of goods at low prices.

Walmart is offering interest-free shopping during November and December to holders of its credit card if they pay in full within six months. It also extended a 10-cent-per-gallon discount on gasoline through December 24 for users of its credit card, gift card or MoneyCard.

Shares of Wal-Mart were down 0.2 percent at $56.78 in early trading.

(Reporting by Maneesha Tiwari in Bangalore and Jessica Wohl in Chicago; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter and Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/us_nm/us_walmart

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Samsung Exhibit II 4G to be shown off for T-Mobile at Walmart tomorrow, official channels November 2nd

The original Samsung Exhibit was a mere blip on T-Mobile's radar screen when it originally launched, being obscured by titans like the HTC Sensation 4G. The sequel, curiously coming out a whole four months after its predecessor, is ready to see if it can buck the trend and offer a decent option to those seeking an inexpensive Android device. Starting at $30 after mail in rebate and with a two-year commitment, it's poised to launch tomorrow in Walmart stores nationwide, with stock coming into official T-Mobile channels on November 2nd. If you're feeling contract-averse, however, you can still procure the device for two Benjamins. Not bad for a phone that comes with Gingerbread, a 3.7-inch WVGA display, 1GHz single-core Snapdragon CPU, 4G access and a 3MP shooter with a front-facing camera. Also up for exhibit is the press release, shown after the break.

Continue reading Samsung Exhibit II 4G to be shown off for T-Mobile at Walmart tomorrow, official channels November 2nd

Samsung Exhibit II 4G to be shown off for T-Mobile at Walmart tomorrow, official channels November 2nd originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 00:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/26/samsung-exhibit-ii-4g-to-be-shown-off-for-t-mobile-at-walmart-to/

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Left-handed people more likely to have sleep disorder

Left-handed people more likely to have sleep disorder [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Oct-2011
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Contact: Sue Roberts
sroberts@chestnet.org
847-498-8334
American College of Chest Physicians

The presence of rhythmic limb movements when sleeping, which may vary in intensity, may be an indicator of periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD).

In a study of 100 patients with PMLD, presented at CHEST 2011, the 77th annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP), researchers from Toledo, Ohio divided the patients into those who were right-handed and those who were left-handed.

Of the 84 right-handed and 16 left-handed patients, 69% of right-handed patients had bilateral limb movements compared with 94% of left-handed patients, irrespective of age, sex, and race.

Their findings indicate that left-handed people have significantly higher chances of having bilateral limb movements, indicating the potential for PLMD.

###



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Left-handed people more likely to have sleep disorder [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Sue Roberts
sroberts@chestnet.org
847-498-8334
American College of Chest Physicians

The presence of rhythmic limb movements when sleeping, which may vary in intensity, may be an indicator of periodic limb movement disorder (PLMD).

In a study of 100 patients with PMLD, presented at CHEST 2011, the 77th annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP), researchers from Toledo, Ohio divided the patients into those who were right-handed and those who were left-handed.

Of the 84 right-handed and 16 left-handed patients, 69% of right-handed patients had bilateral limb movements compared with 94% of left-handed patients, irrespective of age, sex, and race.

Their findings indicate that left-handed people have significantly higher chances of having bilateral limb movements, indicating the potential for PLMD.

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-10/acoc-lpm101411.php

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

'European GPS' set for lift-off

Europe is finally set to begin the rollout of its long-awaited satellite navigation system, Galileo

Two spacecraft will ride to orbit atop a Soyuz rocket from French Guiana.

The pair incorporate next-generation technologies that should deliver more precise timing and location data than the current American GPS network.

But Galileo is still years away from full operation. A further 28 satellites will be needed to complete its orbiting constellation.

So far, the European Commission (EC), which initiated the project, has purchased only 18 satellites. These will fly between now and early 2015.

Lift-off for the Soyuz is timed for 07:34 local time (10:34 GMT; 11:34 BST).

The event will have double significance because it will mark the first time that the Russian rocket has operated from Western territory. The vehicles normally fly from the Baikonur and Plesetsk spaceports, in Kazakhstan and northern Russia respectively.

The European Space Agency (Esa) has acted as the EC's technical agent on Galileo, leading the procurement of the satellites.

Its director-general, Jean-Jacques Dordain, admitted to having some eve-of-launch nerves.

Continue reading the main story

GALILEO UNDER CONSTRUCTION

  • A project of the European Commission and the European Space Agency
  • Some 30 satellites are likely to be launched in batches in the coming years
  • Galileo will work alongside the US GPS and the Russian Glonass sat-nav systems
  • Europe's full system promises real-time positioning down to a metre or less
  • It should deepen and extend high-value markets already initiated by GPS
  • Some say economies are over-reliant on GPS; Galileo ought to make sat-nav more robust

"I've always said that a rocket is a complex machine and even though the Soyuz is the world's most reliable launcher, I will be pleased to get past Thursday," he told BBC News. "A launch is always an achievement."

The Soyuz will put the two Galileo spacecraft at an altitude of 23,222km, where they will circle the globe every 14 hours on a path inclined 56 degrees to the equator. Together with two additional platforms to be launched next year, they will test and validate the Galileo system end-to-end.

Assuming no major flaws are found, 14 further spacecraft will then be despatched in twos and fours to take the network to the provisional operating constellation of 18.

Compared with GPS, Galileo carries more precise atomic clocks - the heart of any sat-nav system. In theory, the data transmitted by Galileo should be significantly better than its American counterpart. Whereas a position fixed by the publicly availably GPS signal might have an error of about 10m, Galileo's errors should be on the scale of a metre or so.

But the systems will be interoperable, meaning the biggest, most obvious benefit to users will simply be the fact that they can see more satellites in the sky.

So, as the decade progresses and the number of spacecraft in orbit increases, the performance of all sat-nav devices should improve. Fixes should be faster and more reliable, even in testing environments such as big cities where tall buildings will often obscure a receiver's view of the transmitting spacecraft.

Few people perhaps recognise the full extent of GPS usage today. It is not just drivers on the roads who rely on it - banks employ GPS time to stamp global financial transactions; telecommunications and computer networks, and electricity grids are synchronised on the "ticks" of its orbiting atomic clocks.

"I am convinced not only that Europe needs Galileo but the whole needs it, too," said Mr Dordain. "More and more services are based on navigation signals. To have two or even three constellations would therefore make these services more accurate and more robust."

The feasibility of developing a European satellite-navigation system was first studied in the early 1990s.

Initially conceived as a joint venture between the public and private sectors, the project very nearly collapsed in 2007.

Even at that stage, it was running behind schedule. Myriad technical, financial and political obstacles had been thrown in its path.

The EC eventually decided to fund the project entirely from the public purse, significantly increasing the expected burden on taxpayers.

What should have cost EU citizens a little more than one billion euros will now cost them well in excess of five billion. That is in addition to annual running costs above 800m euros a year.

The EC's continued commitment to the project despite its many problems is based on the belief that huge returns to the European economy will accrue from the investment.

Already, GPS is said to underpin global markets that are worth several tens of billions of euros annually.

The new European constellation is expected to deepen and extend those markets as sat-nav functionality becomes ubiquitous in consumer devices such as mobile phones.

  1. Like Baikonur, Sinnamary has a large flame bowl under the pad
  2. A key difference is the mobile gantry, withdrawn prior to launch
  3. Soyuz receives a big boost by launching closer to the equator
  4. Rockets are brought to the pad along a 700m-long rail line
  5. The segments of a Soyuz are assembled in the MIK building
  6. Launch control is just 1km from the pad, in a secure bunker
  7. Other buildings on the 120ha site include propellant storage areas

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/science-environment-15372540

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Exclusive: Nasdaq hackers spied on company boards (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Hackers who infiltrated the Nasdaq's computer systems last year installed malicious software that allowed them to spy on the directors of publicly held companies, according to two people familiar with an investigation into the matter.

The new details showed the cyber attack was more serious than previously thought, as Nasdaq OMX Group had said in February that there was no evidence the hackers accessed customer information.

It was not known what information the hackers might have stolen. The investigation into the attack, involving the FBI and National Security Agency, is ongoing.

"God knows exactly what they have done. The long term impact of such attack is still unknown," said Tom Kellermann, a well-known cyber security expert with years of experience protecting central banks and other high-profile financial institutions from attack.

The case is an example of a "blended attack," where elite hackers infiltrate one target to facilitate access to another. In March hackers stole digital security keys from EMC Corp's RSA Security division that they later used to breach the networks of defense contractor Lockheed Martin Corp.

Nasdaq had previously said that its trading platforms were not compromised by the hackers, but they attacked a Web-based software program called Directors Desk, used by corporate boards to share documents and communicate with executives, among other things.

By infecting Directors Desk, the hackers were able to access confidential documents and the communications of board directors, said Kellermann, chief technology officer at security technology firm AirPatrol Corp.

Investigators have learned that hackers were able to spy on "scores" of directors who logged onto directorsdesk.com before the malicious software was removed, said Kellermann and another person familiar with the investigation who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

It was still unclear how long Nasdaq's system was breached before the attack was discovered last October.

A Nasdaq spokesman confirmed the investigation into the attack continues, but declined to give further details.

NSA HELPS NASDAQ

Executive Assistant FBI Director Shawn Henry said the financial services sector was losing hundreds of millions of dollars to hackers every year, and the attacks were increasingly "destructive" in nature.

"We know adversaries have full unfettered access to certain networks. Once there they have the ability to destroy data," he told Reuters in a phone interview. "We see that as a credible threat to all sectors, but specifically the financial services sector." Henry declined to comment on the Nasdaq attack.

U.S. Army General Keith Alexander, head of the National Security Agency and U.S. Cyber Command, said the NSA was working with Nasdaq to help protect its network against further attacks.

Alexander told security experts at a Baltimore conference that the United States was shoring up its defenses, but still had "tremendous vulnerabilities" to a growing number of increasingly destructive electronic attacks.

"Nation states, non-nation state actors and hacker groups are creating tools that are increasingly more persistent and threatening, and we have to be ready for that," he said.

Amid a spate of high-profile cyber crimes, the Obama administration wants Congress to pass comprehensive cyber-security legislation that would increase the government's ability to thwart the growing threat.

Alexander and other top officials held a classified meeting with lawmakers on Wednesday and Thursday to discuss the issue, according to sources familiar with the meeting.

Nasdaq CEO Robert Greifeld said in July that the exchange is under constant attack, requiring it to spend nearly a billion dollars a year on information security.

"As we sit here, there are people trying to slam into our system every day," Greifeld said in the interview. "So we have to be ever vigilant against an ever-changing foe."

(Reporting by Jim Finkle. Additional reporting by Jonathan Spicer in New York, Andrea Shalal-Esa in Baltimore and Diane Bartz in Washington. Editing by Tim Dobbyn, Tiffany Wu, and Bob Burgdorfer

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111020/bs_nm/us_nasdaq_hacking

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Motorola Droid RAZR hands-on video

I was able to get my hands on a Droid RAZR and duck out long enough to get a video walk-through, and I'm really glad I did. Photos can only do this device so much justice, but when you get to hold it in your hands, you'll really be able to see what Motorola and Verizon are bragging about. 

While it may not be clear in the video above, the screen and size are the real stars here. The  4.3-inch Super AMOLED display is vivid, rich, and super vibrant, and the phone itself is mind-blowingly thin and light. It's unlike any other LTE device on the market today, and is a true gamechanger in 4G technology. 

Check out all of my initial impressions here, and let's all bide our time wisely until the Droid RAZR's "early November" lauch. 

Droid RAZR hands-on | Droid RAZR Forums | Droid RAZR Specs | Droid RAZR Gallery


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/j0pjx8fTuI8/motorola-droid-razr-hands-video

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Simple nerve cells regulate swimming depth of marine plankton

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

As planktonic organisms the larvae of the marine annelid Platynereis swim freely in the open water. They move by activity of their cilia, thousands of tiny hair-like structures forming a band along the larval body and beating coordinately. With changing environmental conditions the larvae swim upward and downward to their appropriate water depth. Scientists of the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology in T?bingen, Germany have now identified some signalling substances in the larval nervous system regulating swimming depth of the larvae. These substances influence the ciliary beating and thus hold the larvae in the preferred water depth. The scientists discovered a very simple circuitry of nerve cells underlying this regulation, reflecting an early evolutionary state of the nervous system.

The locomotory system of many animals is muscle based. However, small marine animals often move by cilia. This type of locomotion is more ancient in evolution than muscle-based locomotion and very common in marine plankton. Besides the annelid larvae, the larvae of many marine invertebrates are part of this plankton, for example larvae of snails, sea shells and starfish.

"Not much is known about how the nervous systems of the marine plankton regulate ciliary beating, since the locomotion of intensely explored model organisms like the fruit fly is based on muscles," says G?sp?r J?kely. Together with his team at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology and in cooperation with Thomas A. M?nch at the Centre for Integrative Neuroscience in T?bingen, he has examined in detail the nervous system of marine annelid larvae of Platynereis dumerilii.

The ciliary band of Platynereis larvae serves as a swimming motor in the seawater: When cilia beat fast and continuously, larvae swim upward, and when cilia cease beating, the larvae sink. These larvae sense different environmental conditions, e.g. they react to changes in temperature, light and food supply, and alter their movement in the water column accordingly.

In order to gain insight into the regulation of this behaviour, the T?bingen scientists analysed the genes of Platynereis. They discovered several neuronal signalling substances, so-called neuropeptides in their Platynereis gene databases. Moreover, the scientists found that these neuropeptides are produced in single sensory nerve cells of the larva and are released directly at the ciliary band. The scientists concluded that these nerve cells send the sensory information directly on to the cilia. Some of these neuropeptides influence over cilia beating frequency, others act on the frequency of cilia holdups as well. By means of the neuropeptides, the scientists could control the up and down movement of freely swimming larvae and change their swimming depth in the water column deliberately.

"We have discovered that the responsible nervous circuitries are built in an unusually simple way. The sensory nerve cells have motor function at the same time, that is, they send the motion impulse directly to the ciliary band," says Markus Conzelmann from the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, first author of the study. Such simple circuitries are not known from the regulation of muscle-based locomotion. "We were astonished to find not only one neuropeptide as part of such a simple circuitry, but eleven different ones."

According to the scientists this discovery gives insights into the form and function of nerve systems in an early stage of evolution. Moreover, the results could be interesting for other fields of marine biology: "We now have a suitable model to further explore the regulation of swimming depth in marine plankton. Since the swimming behaviour of plankton is crucial for the survival and prevalence of thousands of marine animal species, our research results could be relevant for marine ecology," explains G?sp?r J?kely. In his future research he wants to reveal how single nerve cells process the different sensory information from water pressure, temperature or salinity.

###

Markus Conzelmann, Sarah-Lena Offenburger, Albina Asadulina, Timea Keller, Thomas A. M?nch and G?sp?r J?kely: Neuropeptides regulate swimming depth of Platynereis larvae. PNAS, doi: 10.1073/pnas.1109085108

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft: http://www.mpg.de

Thanks to Max-Planck-Gesellschaft for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/114405/Simple_nerve_cells_regulate_swimming_depth_of_marine_plankton

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Coca-Cola Q3 profit beats Street by a penny (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Coca-Cola Co (KO.N) reported a quarterly profit on Tuesday that slightly beat Wall Street estimates, as sales increased worldwide.

The world's largest soft-drink maker, whose brands range from Sprite to Minute Maid and Powerade, said net income was $2.22 billion, or 95 cents per share in the third quarter, up from $2.06 billion, or 88 cents per share, a year earlier.

Excluding items, earnings were $1.03 per share. On that basis, analysts on average were expecting $1.02 per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Revenue jumped 45 percent to $12.25 billion, boosted by last year's acquisition of its North American bottling operations, price increases and a 5 percentage-point currency benefit. Analysts expected revenue of $12.01 billion.

Worldwide volume rose 5 percent. Volume in North America also rose 5 percent, helped by the addition of new cross-licensed brands such as Dr Pepper. Excluding those brands, North American volume rose 1 percent.

Volume increased 7 percent in Latin America, 2 percent in Europe, 7 percent in the Eurasia and Africa segment and 6 percent in the Pacific region.

Coca-Cola shares fell 20 cents to $66.80 in premarket trading.

(Reporting by Martinne Geller in New York; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111018/bs_nm/us_cocacola

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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Accused Halle Berry stalker ordered to stand trial

FILE - In this May 25, 2011 file photo, actress Halle Berry attends The Fragrance Foundation's 2011 FiFi Awards at The Tent at Lincoln Center in New York. A judge on Monday, Oct. 17, 2011 ordered a man accused of stalking Halle Berry to stand trial. Richard A. Franco remains jailed on $150,000 bail. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, file)

FILE - In this May 25, 2011 file photo, actress Halle Berry attends The Fragrance Foundation's 2011 FiFi Awards at The Tent at Lincoln Center in New York. A judge on Monday, Oct. 17, 2011 ordered a man accused of stalking Halle Berry to stand trial. Richard A. Franco remains jailed on $150,000 bail. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, file)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? A judge ruled Monday that a man charged with stalking Halle Berry should stand trial on two charges filed after he was repeatedly seen on the actress' property earlier this year.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Melissa Widdifield issued her ruling after hearing from two witnesses called during a preliminary hearing to show some of evidence against Richard A. Franco, who has pleaded not guilty to burglary and stalking charges.

He was charged after police arrested him outside Berry's home in July after he was seen on the property three times in three days.

Los Angeles police Detective John Gregozek testified that when Franco was caught, he was carrying a key to Berry's guesthouse, where the Oscar-winning actress has her beauty salon and some of her wardrobe.

Gregozek said Franco apparently obtained the key on July 10, when he entered the house for about 20 seconds after Berry left the salon area to go to her kitchen. Franco was standing outside her kitchen door when Berry spotted him and locked the door and called police.

Berry did not attend the hearing, but Gregozek told the judge the actress is still afraid of Franco.

The following night, after Berry had hired private security, Franco was seen climbing over the actress' gate and coming onto her property. Joseph Vach, a retired California Highway Patrol officer, was working as private security and helped detain Franco. The man was carrying a notebook that included references to Berry and entering her home, Vach testified.

Franco, who was dressed in a jail jumpsuit, will remain jailed on $150,000 bail, Widdifield ruled. He returns to court on Oct. 31 for arraignment.

Berry obtained a civil restraining order against Franco after his arrest. "This person has invaded and trampled upon the most fundamental sense of security I have, and I am extremely frightened of him and what he might do to me or those I love," she wrote in her July petition.

___

Anthony McCartney can be reached at http://twitter.com/mccartneyAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-17-US-People-Halle-Berry/id-0533d23c030b43ef9719b29677f639be

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Daniel Barenboim named music director at La Scala (Reuters)

MILAN (Reuters) ? Milan's La Scala opera house said on Thursday Israeli pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim would serve as its new music director from December for the next five years.

The Argentine-born musician will help prepare operas, concerts and tours at the glitzy opera house for about four months each year, La Scala said in a statement.

Barenboim, 68, has been principal guest conductor at La Scala since 2006. The 233-year old institution has not had a music director since Riccardo Muti's exit in 2005.

Currently music director at Berlin's Staatsoper, Barenboim is also renowned for his work with the West-Eastern Divan youth orchestra, which brings together Arabs and Israelis.

(Writing by Catherine Hornby; editing by Andrew Roche)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111013/music_nm/us_daniel_barenboim

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The 'painful' deal to free Israel's Gilad Shalit: Winners and losers (The Week)

New York ? Israel strikes an agreement with Hamas, freeing 1,000 Palestinians in exchange for a single Israeli soldier

Israel and the militant Islamist group Hamas announced Tuesday that they had reached a deal to free Staff Sgt. Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held captive in the Gaza Strip for five years, in exchange for the release of more than 1,000 Palestinians from Israeli prisons. Palestinians celebrated in the streets after hearing the news, and Shalit's parents thanked supporters, although they stopped short of dismantling the protest tent they put up a year ago to push for their son's freedom. If the deal is implemented, freed prisoners could start going home early next week. Here, a look at who benefits from the deal, and who gets hurt:

WINNERS

Israelis
Shalit's release will lift a heavy emotional burden for the young soldier, his family, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Israelis in general. "The modest smiles on the faces of his parents, Noam and Aviva Shalit, upon hearing the news that their son will finally see the light of day after five years and four months of grueling secret captivity, will be hailed as an iconic moment in Israel," says Tony Karon at?TIME. Netanyahu also wins kudos for striking a "painful deal" that was necessary to remove "a source of enduring national anguish and pain."

Hamas
"Hamas will benefit politically from this deal," says Robert M. Danin at the Council on Foreign Relations. This strengthens the group's argument that its "hard-line approach pays greater dividends than the nonviolent tactics employed by Fatah's leader Mahmoud Abbas." And now, when Hamas-Fatah reunification talks inevitably begin again, Hamas, "having just secured so many prisoners," will have a stronger bargaining position than ever.

Egypt
Egypt was a key player in helping to broker this deal ? a much-needed victory. The country's transitional government and military leadership have been undermined by a string of embarrassments recently, say Daniel Nisman and Avi Yesawich at The Jerusalem Post. First came attacks on the Israeli embassy. Next up was sectarian violence between Egyptian Muslims and Coptic Christians ? capped by a deadly police crackdown on Coptic protesters. But now, the key role Egypt played "in the brokerage of the prisoner swap allows them the renewed prestige of regional leader ? even if it proves temporary."

LOSERS

Mahmoud Abbas
"There's little political gain in the deal for Abbas," says Karon at?TIME. He's touring the world to rally support for his push to get the U.N. to recognize a Palestinian state. Publicly, Abbas says he's happy about the release of any Palestinian, whether from Fatah or Hamas. But his Palestinian Authority had nothing to do with the deal, so deep down he's probably hoping that "the attention garnered by the prisoner swap passes quickly" so his "diplomatic quest" can return to center stage.

Benjamin Netanyahu
Israel's prime minister wrote the book, literally, on why it's important not to negotiate with terrorists, says Danin at the Council on Foreign Relations. So for Netanyahu, opening the prison gates "is a heavy price to pay" to win the freedom of a soldier. "It signals that Israel will indeed negotiate, albeit under duress, for hostages and with an organization that most of the world regards as terrorists." Netanyahu will also have to explain why he's willing to talk to Hamas, says Tod Robberson at The Dallas Morning News, but not to re-open peace talks with the Abbas' Palestinian government.

Yesterday's victims... and tomorrow's
Among the Palestinians to be released are "400 serving long sentences for some of the worst terrorist atrocities in the country's history," says Melanie Philips at Britain's Daily Mail. It's unclear whether they will be able to go home or have to live in exile, but their release will only encourage Islamists to capture more Israeli Defense Force soldiers as bargaining chips. It also "makes it more likely that more Israelis will be murdered by terrorism in Israel, and demoralizes those IDF soldiers who brought these 1,000 terrorists to justice in the first place."

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111012/cm_theweek/220225

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