শনিবার, ৩১ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

Lawrence O?Donnell Compares GOP Candidates To Porn Producers

VIDEO

Thursday night, Lawrence O?Donnell brought up a Los Angeles primary ballot measure ? a possible law that would require porn stars to wear condoms while filming in Los Angeles ? and found a way to work in the GOP field of candidates, suggesting that the two groups were similar in not wanting to be burdened with any more regulations.

O?Donnell introduced the segment by using the brilliant segue of Newt GIngrich?s inability to get the 10,000 signatures required to get on the Virginia primary ballot. He noted that the measure that would require actors in porn to wear condoms while filming in the city of Los Angeles had collected 70,000.

?There is no clearer measure of the depths that the Gingrich campaign has sunk to than the fact that there are more people who want to protect the health of porn stars than there are people in the entire state of Virginia who want the chance to vote for Newt Gingrich for President.?

O?Donnell then said that ? if the field has at least two candidates by the time the California primary comes around and there is a debate ? the first question he wants to hear asked is, ?Are you in favor of porn stars being required to wear condoms?? O?Donnell considers it a trick question, saying that, to a GOP candidate, it?s a choice between being anti-tax and pro-porn producer.

The measure would collect a fee from the porn productions and create a job of ?porn set condom inspector,? O?Donnell reported. He imagined that while Ron Paul would be vehemently opposed to this, the rest of the field might be torn. ?Do they stand side by side with porn producers?? O?Donnell asked, then added:

?The only people who hate regulation even a little bit more than Republican presidential candidates are porn producers.?

Enjoy the ?Rewrite? clip below, courtesy of MSNBC:

Follow us on Twitter.

Sign up for Mediaite's daily newsletter.

filed under

share this post

Source: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/lawrence-odonnell-compares-gop-candidates-to-porn-producers/

white house shooting internet censorship sveum benetton ads cornucopia best buy black friday deals thanksgiving crafts

Cubs officially name Buckner as Boise coach

Bill Buckner

Cubs first baseman Bill Buckner in a Tribune archive file photo dated June 16, 1982.

6:34 p.m. CST, December 30, 2011

The Cubs named former first baseman Bill Buckner as the hitting coach at Class A Boise, confirming what has been known for a week.

Buckner, who won the 1980 batting title for the Cubs and served as White Sox hitting coach in 1996-97, rejoins the Cubs after a year as manager with the independent Brockton Sox (51-42).

Buckner is an Idaho native and has owned property in the northwest. Boise plays in the Northwest League as a short-season team, beginning play on June 15.

Buckner replaces Desi Wilson, who was named the hitting coach for the Cubs' Class A Daytona team.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/chicagotribune/sports/~3/YSxji53xrf4/chi-cubs-officially-name-buckner-as-boise-hitting-coach-20111230,0,3483396.story

dennys kindle fire glen davis kobe bryant war of the worlds a christmas story prime rib

শুক্রবার, ৩০ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

Avastin Can Help Ovarian Cancer Patients

POSTED: 5:40 pm EST December 29, 2011
UPDATED: 5:44 pm EST December 29, 2011

Two studies released in this week's New England Journal of Medicine suggest the drug Avastin may benefit some ovarian cancer patients.The two studies found that adding Avastin to chemotherapy treatment can stall the growth of cancer by almost four months. Avastin, which has the generic name Bevacizumab, stops the growth of blood vessels that feed cancerous tumors, say researchers. However, it is still unclear if it will extend patients' lives.Ovarian cancer is the fifth most common cancer for American women. According to the National Cancer Institute, 15,000 women in the United States die from it each year. It is frequently undetected until it has advanced to a late stage, making it the most fatal of all gynecological cancers.While Avastin has been approved by the FDA for some cancers, including kidney, brain, and colon cancer, it has come under fire for its use in breast cancer treatment. It was initially approved for breast cancer treatment in 2006. But late last month, the FDA revoked Avastin's approval for breast cancer because they felt the benefits did not outweigh the side effects. Avastin is produced by Genentech, a subdivision of Roche Pharmaceuticals.The two studies were funded by Roche.One study was led by the Gynecological Oncology Group and surveyed 1,873 women internationally who had been newly diagnosed with stage III or IV cancer. Women who received the drug as part of their chemotherapy regimen were found to increase their rate of progression-free survival, or the length of time before the cancer worsened, to 14 months. It was a four-month increase over patients who were just given the placebo and had a progression-free survival period of 10 months.Dr. Robert Burger of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia was the lead author of the study. "This is a new paradigm in the treatment of this disease," says Burger. He says that patients with Stage III or IV ovarian cancer "deserve to have this treatment as an option."The other study, led by the International Collaboration on Ovarian Neoplasms, looked at more than 1,500 women internationally. This study included women with less severe stages of cancer. Authors found women with the placebo had a 22-month progression-free survival period, versus 24 months for those on Avastin, for a two-month difference before the cancer worsened. However, when looking just at patients with stage III or IV cancer, the progression-free survival period for those on Avastin increased by over three months.While Avastin can delay the growth of cancers, researchers were unable to definitively say how it impacts survival rates for patients. They say that it will still take a few more years of tracking before they can fully determine that. Full survival data is not expected until at least next year.In addition, patients who did take Avastin in both studies did experience some side effects, including increased hypertension and tearing of the gastrointential wall. However, according to both studies, quality of life was not impacted by the side effects."I think this data is compelling. Improved control of disease is always a good endpoint, but living longer is a better endpoint," says Dr. Joanne Mortimer, who sat on the FDA advisory committee looking at Avastin for the treatment of breast cancer. Mortimer, who is not connected to the studies, is a bit cautious. "Without increased survival rates, are the side effects worth it?"Last week, the European Commission approved the use of Avastin in the treatment of ovarian cancer patients. However, Genentech says that based on the current findings of the studies, they will not ask the FDA to consider it for ovarian cancer treatment in the United States. They are still waiting for full survival data.

Copyright CNN 2011

Source: http://www.wpbf.com/health/30098827/detail.html

stanford when does daylight savings time end world series mvp rocky horror picture show risky business weather nj weather nj

iDiva: This #NewYear ?s Eve, don?t get left with a boring hairstyle. Star hairstylists vouch for the glamorous up-dos of 2011 http://t.co/8gHuy2vw

Twitter / iDiva: This #NewYear ?s Eve, don? ... Loader This ?s Eve, don?t get left with a boring hairstyle. Star hairstylists vouch for the glamorous up-dos of 2011

Source: http://twitter.com/iDiva/statuses/152627610814394368

new york jets nfl standings broncos broncos giants vs jets ny giants tony romo

Verizon experiencing nationwide data outage? (update: Verizon confirms)

That phone on Big Red having problems with data? Apparently you're not alone, as the carrier appears to be having issues again judging by the metric ton of emails we've gotten from you experiencing LTE, and in some cases EV-DO, blackouts across the country. Our Galaxy Nexus in New York is chugging along with 1xRTT while a Thunderbolt in Washington DC is doing just fine with EV-DO. We've just pinged Verizon and will update if we hear back.

Update: Verizon wrote in with the following statement:

We are investigating reports of some customers experiencing trouble accessing the 4GLTE network. The network itself continues to operate and all customers continue to be able to make calls, send text messages and utilize data services. 3G devices are operating normally.

Update 2: And it's back. Both our our Droid RAZR and Rezound are getting LTE goodness here in chilly San Francisco.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Verizon experiencing nationwide data outage? (update: Verizon confirms) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Dec 2011 14:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/iyXV623nRkE/

amy winehouse cause of death white witch white witch occupy san francisco occupy san francisco top chef just desserts jamarcus russell

This Nerdy Instrument is Part Atari Console Part Guitar [Video]

The gAtari is a "musical instrument" that basically consists of an Atari 2600 playing pre-programmed tunes, which has been hacked together with a few guitar effects processors. It's kind of like an Atari keytar. The resulting music is scatterbrained weirdness that's impossible to describe. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/ochBMkMyu6g/this-nerdy-instrument-is-part-atari-console-part-guitar

jenelle evans jenelle evans miami hurricanes vlad the impaler steven tyler michael lohan fiddler on the roof

বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৯ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

Inside border city that's deadlier than Afghanistan

In March, municipal police officers detained the two brothers of Armida Vazquez and whisked them away in patrol cars.

  1. Only on msnbc.com

    1. Pro-Gingrich Super PAC: Romney is 'dangerous'
    2. As North Korea mourns, its neighbor shrugs
    3. The top 11 scientific twists from 2011
    4. Bad gift? UPS sees high volume of returns
    5. Should scientists create deadly viruses?
    6. It's A Snap! Vote for your favorite photo
    7. Jilted gamer teaches vendor price of rudeness

Vazquez and her mother searched for Dante and Juan Carlos, cell phone shop workers in their mid-20s, and checked with the local and federal police here, to no avail. Nineteen days later, the strangled bodies of the brothers were found on the outskirts of this notoriously violent city. Witness testimony and other evidence led to three policemen, now in jail awaiting trial.

But the police pushed back. Policemen in civilian clothes, Vazquez says, approached her mother outside church and told her to stop making trouble. When Vazquez made a statement against the suspects last month, she says other policemen and relatives of the officers threatened her outside the courthouse.

Terrified, 20 members of the Vazquez family packed their bags and fled across the U.S. border to El Paso, Texas, a short trip into a world of gleaming shopping malls, well-kept highways and safe neighborhoods.

"We left all we had in Juarez, our house, everything," said a pregnant Vazquez, in the tiny apartment she and her three children now share with a sister in El Paso.

Tens of thousands more people like her have abandoned Ciudad Juarez, a city wrecked by Mexico's drug violence. Although official figures vary, the city this month likely surpassed 10,000 homicides in the past four years. That's more than Afghanistan's civilian casualties in the same period and more than double the number of U.S. troops killed in the entire Iraq war.

Story: Drug violence creeps into Mexico City

The violence here, as across the nation, fundamentally stems from a turf war among drug cartels. U.S. and Mexican officials say the battle in Ciudad Juarez pits the Sinaloa cartel, run by Mexico's most wanted man, Joaquin "Shorty" Guzman, against the Juarez cartel, with deep ties along Mexico's northern border.

But the Vazquez family's nightmare underscores another challenge in Mexico's war on drugs: the government's own warriors.

Business owners, security experts and ordinary residents told Reuters that official corruption at all levels of the security forces has fanned violence in the city, with local and federal police and soldiers complicit in, or actually committing, many of the murders.

The human rights commission of the local state of Chihuahua registered 1,250 complaints of torture, forced disappearances and extrajudicial executions by the army during its two-year deployment in Ciudad Juarez. It counts 400 similar grievances against the federal police who moved in when the soldiers were pulled out. These numbers document only 20 percent of the violations taking place, it estimates.

When President Felipe Calderon launched his war on drug cartels in late 2006, he meant it quite literally. He sent security forces to many parts of the country to try to put powerful drug gangs on the defensive. The nation's armed forces, in particular, were seen as a relatively clean player that would change the game.

Story: US mom, 2 daughters killed in Mexico attacks

The drug warriors have failed at every level of government in places like Ciudad Juarez. Before the army and federal police rolled into the city, many of the municipal and state police were paid operators for the Juarez cartel, government officials have conceded, directly involved in drug trafficking, kidnappings and murder. It has now come full circle: The army left Juarez in the face of a popular backlash, and the local police force is back in charge of the city's security, struggling to clean up its reputation.

While the problem is extreme in Ciudad Juarez, deep corruption inside the security forces is a problem across Mexico, a major weak spot in Calderon's campaign. It hinders efforts to end the violence that has killed more than 45,000 people around the country in the past five years.

Video: Inside Mexico?s Drug War, Part 1 (on this page)

Public outrage over the deaths is bleeding into debates ahead of next year's presidential election, with Calderon's strategy widely criticized and his conservative ruling party trailing in opinion polls.

In a speech this month, Calderon explained what he believes has happened. He said the crisis began in the 1990s when Mexican traffickers transporting Colombian cocaine north to consumers in the United States began receiving payment in kind. They found a ripe market among Mexicans and began selling drugs at home, which swelled the army of criminals and forced them to fight one another for territorial control.

"They no longer employ tens or hundreds of people, but thousands of people, thousands, extending their networks into areas that did not exist before," Calderon said. He said they get into other criminal activities, bribe authorities to look the other way and, if unchecked, ultimately create a "symbiosis where crime and security institutions are one and the same."

In Ciudad Juarez, many people believe Calderon's campaign was poorly designed and caused unnecessary suffering.

There were only 300 murders here in 2007, but when the violence arrived in early 2008 it rolled across the city with a vengeance. The government sent in 10,000 troops and federal police to try to quell the mayhem, but the deaths kept rising.

State officials counted 3,622 homicides in 2010, making Ciudad Juarez the city with the highest murder rate in the world at 272 per 100,000 residents. Authorities cite a drop in killings this year as a sign of success, but the murder rate is still more than six times higher than it was in 2007.

"As president, you should know what you are, and are not, capable of and not steer the country into the tragic situation we are in now," said Hugo Almada, an academic and psychotherapist who treats victims of violence in the city. "He calculated very badly."

Hit list
Ciudad Juarez was once a kind of Las Vegas during the U.S. Prohibition era of the 1920s and early 1930s, hosting American film stars and singers at its bars.

Named after Benito Juarez, a 19th-century president who in 1865 briefly took refuge here with his forces during the French invasion of Mexico, it is still scattered with dilapidated monuments that recall the fighting during the Mexican Revolution between 1910 and 1920. It later became famous for modern manufacturing industries that attracted workers from across the country and billions of dollars in foreign investment.

But it is now a shadow of its former self. The Autonomous University of Ciudad Juarez estimates 239,000 of the city's 1.3 million people have gone in the past four years. Nearly one in three of the businesses along the main boulevard is shuttered, often gutted by bands of looters who rip out copper wiring and the insulation in the walls.

Video: Inside the drug tunnels (on this page)

Some say the descent into chaos began on New Year's Day 2008 when a local cop turned up dead, riddled with bullets in his black Volkswagen Jetta. The killings continued, and later that month, an ominous hit list appeared on a monument honoring fallen policemen. Under a heading "for those who didn't believe," it named five recently murdered officers. Under "for those who continue not believing" were 17 more.

Most of the 17 were killed within the year, along with many others. Around 50 policemen had been killed by mid-year, and the murder rate in the city quintupled.

Experts believe many of the murdered policemen were working for "La Linea," or "The Line," the armed wing of the Juarez cartel, and were targeted by a rival gang, most likely the Sinaloa cartel.

The Juarez cartel is run by Vicente Carrillo, 49, a keen horseman who took charge in 1997 after his brother Amado died during plastic surgery in an attempt to change his appearance. Amado, the more flamboyant of the two, was known as "Lord of the Skies" for his prowess using a fleet of airplanes to ferry Colombian cocaine into Mexico.

The younger Carrillo now handles about a fifth of Mexico's $40 billion-a-year narcotics business, drug experts say, and has avoided capture for the past 13 years, in part by adeptly corrupting local officials.

"All our police forces are infiltrated. All of them, it's as simple as that," Chihuahua state's then-governor, Jose Reyes Baeza, said in 2008.

Junkyard murders
Along the bustling border, cars and mechanics are cheaper in Mexico than in the United States. Ciudad Juarez built up a busy auto parts business with around 600 junkyards, some legitimate and some chop shops for stolen cars.

Like others, the business has been ravaged by the cartels. Junkyard owners say the trouble started at the end of 2007, when a group of men contacted a leader of their business association demanding a collective protection fee. Fifteen days after he refused to pay, the first junkyard owner was kidnapped.

The group raised a complaint with the state police, said one leader of the junkyard industry. He says he found their reply menacing.

"Instead of getting a consoling response from them, the first commander said, 'I am not interested, I don't want to hear anything about it,'" he said. "And the second commander said, 'Well, when people start showing up wrapped in sheets and stuffed in boxes, you'll probably start paying attention'."

He interpreted it as a warning to just pay the gangs. "I left there really scared."

Since 2008, at least 30 junkyard owners have been kidnapped and some of them killed. More than three-quarters of the city's junkyard businessmen simply decided to shut down their shops, and most who stayed open have to pay regular protection money to the gangs, the leader said.

Send in the cavalry
Calderon sent 2,500 soldiers to Ciudad Juarez in March 2008, and more the following year. At first the crackdown was welcomed. People hoped the army would be less corrupt and less abusive than local authorities.

The army's first target was the police. Just one month after their arrival, soldiers arrested 21 police officers, stripping off their clothes, interrogating them and holding them for a day without charges. Some 400 police officers were fired after they failed federal background checks. Many others quit.

By mid-2008 there were fewer than 200 local police patrolling the streets per shift. Transit police were banned from carrying weapons, leaving them unprotected. Soldiers in charge of day-to-day security operations used the demoralized officers as chauffeurs, said Gustavo de la Rosa from the state human rights commission.

Accusations of torture and illegal detention against soldiers began to surface, and not even the harsh tactics had any impact on the surging homicide rate.

General Jorge Juarez, in charge of the mission in Ciudad Juarez and the rest of Chihuahua State at the time, told reporters they should stop writing about "one more death" and instead print that there was "one less criminal."

In a recent report, Human Rights Watch says army abuses are not unique to Ciudad Juarez but endemic across Mexico and that the government has failed to properly address most complaints.

Gerardo Baca filed one of them. He says his son Victor was just 21 when he was picked up by soldiers three years ago at a hot dog stand with a couple of friends. Victor has not been heard from since.

Video: Drug violence comes to Mexican resort (on this page)

Even after his friends were released claiming they were in custody with Victor, the army denies ever having held him. Baca goes every week to the morgue to scan records of unidentified bodies, hoping to find some characteristics matching his son. He has reported the case to every authority he can think of with no success.

"This is hell, we are living in a nightmare," Baca said in the small living room of his publicly subsidized home, pointing to pictures of Victor, one in a white cowboy hat, another in a plaid shirt. "I wouldn't wish this on anybody, not even the soldiers who detained my son."

The army did not respond to requests for information about specific cases for this article.

In his recent speech, President Calderon conceded the army has gone too far in some cases. "There have been excesses, that's true, unfortunately," he said. And we are very concerned and it's very serious. But believe me, my friends, that these cases, given the magnitude of the operations carried out, the arrests that are made daily, are the exception rather than the rule."

Video: Drug war leaves town in constant fear (on this page)

One former professional hitman says the abuses may have gone much deeper.

Interviewed by Reuters late last year, the hitman said he had worked with a group of 20 other paid assassins doing jobs for bosses he never met. He claimed his main contact was a former military officer, that he received training on a military base, and that he and other hitmen collaborated with soldiers.

"There are groups, paramilitary groups, that are the big ones in the army," said the man, who admitted to beheading and torturing his victims. Many times, he says, he did not know why he had been ordered to target the person he was killing.

"One time I saw the army wave through a checkpoint three vans filled with hitmen from Sinaloa with automatic weapons," he said. "They didn't wait in line, just gave a code, showed a paper and they let them through to do their work."

The army did not respond to questions about the claims, which couldn't be independently confirmed.

A spokesman for Calderon's government said in September that "there is no evidence that phenomenon of paramilitary groups exist."

Human Rights Watch found there were 921 investigations opened in the military justice system for abuses in Chihuahua between December 2006 and May 2011 ? more than any other state. Charges were brought in only two cases and no sentences were handed were down.

Rising disenchantment with the military siege sparked a series of public protests in Ciudad Juarez in late 2009. The army handed over control to the federal police in mid-2010, just as the violence was peaking.

A fightback
Once the federal police took charge, they went after the criminal gangs, arresting more than 400 suspected members of the Juarez and Sinaloa cartels along with over 5,000 other alleged criminals, breaking up kidnapping and extortion gangs.

Crime decreased, although the flow of narcotics was barely interrupted and the state human rights commission said complaints of corruption continued.

In what was dubbed "green zone," federal police set up checkpoints to patrol the main commercial strip of bars and discos near the border even after most businesses, squeezed by extortionists, had shut down or were set on fire. The intensive patrols were meant to encourage patrons to return to the area. They didn't work, in part because police were looking for bribes and potential customers were worried the police would be targets for criminals, making the area more dangerous.

Video: Drug flow from Mexico on the rise (on this page)

"People were not only afraid of the criminals but also of the police," said Federico Ziga, the head of the restaurant association.

The area is still largely abandoned. Places like the Sphinx, a once-popular nightclub shaped like a pyramid with a golden pharaoh's head on the roof, are up for rent.

In October, the federal police followed the army and left, handing command of the city's security back to the local authorities. Mayor Hector Murguia says he has beefed up the municipal police force to 2,600 officers, spending 47 percent of the city's budget on security.

He brought in a tough new police chief, a retired military man named Julian Leyzaola, last March. Praised by the socialite magazine "Quien" as one of Mexico's most influential people, Leyzaola is credited with bringing down crime rates in the violent border city of Tijuana, across from San Diego, Calif.

Leyzaola has said he helped purge the Tijuana force of corrupt and inefficient officers. Four local policemen in Tijuana say they were detained and tortured by Leyzaola, a charge he vehemently rejects. Leyzaola's office did not respond to requests for an interview for this article.

Mayor Murguia stands by the police chief. "I am not interested in these complaints, let them be pursued legally," the mayor said. "As far as I'm concerned he is showing results in Juarez and I think he is one of the best police commanders in this country."

Murguia, a member of the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, is in his second term as mayor.

During his latest election campaign, rival politicians, rights groups and drug trade experts accused Murguia of being in the pay of the Juarez cartel. He has never been charged and denies any wrongdoing.

Signs of life?
The government points to a drop in homicides, car thefts and armed robberies of businesses this year as a sign of success in Ciudad Juarez even as violent car-jackings rose.

Special agent Joseph Arabit at the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration in El Paso said improved intelligence sharing between the U.S. and Mexico has helped the two governments make more arrests.

Factory jobs in the city's more than 300 assembly plants for export, or "maquilas," are slowly picking up again after a steep drop in 2008 and 2009 during the U.S. recession. Ziga of the restaurant association said customers are venturing out again, encouraged by relatively calmer streets. And the mayor said there was a good turnout for Mexico's independence day celebrations, a sharp contrast to last year when most were canceled due to fear of attacks.

"We are much more effective at capturing criminals," said Murguia. "We have been able to reduce the kidnapping rate to basically zero."

Snacks protection racket? 5 bodies found in Mexico

Moments after the interview with Murguia, 15 minutes from his office, reporters crowded around a red Nissan with the windows shot out that had been abandoned in the middle of the street, the keys still in the ignition. It was another "levanton," or "pick up," where the fate of the driver is unknown. It didn't merit a mention in the next day's local newspaper.

Minutes later, on the same street, police cars chased armed men who had tried to rob a carwash. After a shootout, three men were arrested. Panicked witnesses crashed their cars trying to escape the scene.

Another day this month, a day like many others, 13 people were killed. Among the dead were four dialysis patients and a paramedic gunned down in an ambulance.

Additional reporting by Patricia Giovine in El Paso.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45796913/ns/world_news-americas/

big daddy role models lsu game lsu game animal house big ten championship game big ten championship game

Geico Turns One Man?s PR Trash Into Their Own PR Gold

GeicoAnd that, friends, is what we call seizing the moment. (Meme-ment?)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/jWksHZp0R1E/

williston north dakota kody brown transylvania terrell owens terrell owens carrie ann inaba california earthquake

Philippine storm death toll goes down to 1,249 (AP)

MANILA, Philippines ? Philippine disaster management officials say the number of people who died in massive flash floods in the southern Mindanao region a week ago was smaller than earlier reported.

Civil Defense chief Benito Ramos said Tuesday that he has corrected an earlier death toll from the health department of nearly 1,500 to 1,249 based on an actual count of identified and unidentified bodies recovered by soldiers, police, firemen and other rescue workers.

He says the exact number of missing could no longer be determined but the search for bodies will continue.

He says rains overnight Monday over the eastern provinces of Mindanao have forced the evacuation of thousands of families, many by helicopter.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_as/as_philippines_storm

storm in alaska storm in alaska asteroid eric johnson eric johnson russell pearce russell pearce

বুধবার, ২৮ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

Former manager of West Valley City credit union is sued

A former credit union employee is being sued after he embezzled more than $200,000 by opening fake auto loans in the names of credit union members.

Cumis Insurance Society on Friday filed a lawsuit against Javier Herrera, who worked as the West Valley City branch manager for Utah Central Credit Union from May 2008 until May 2010. Beginning in August 2008, the lawsuit alleges, he opened loans under members? names without their consent and then pocketed the money. When the scheme was discovered, and about $235,000 was missing, the man was terminated and the credit union made a claim on its insurance for protecting money lost due to employee dishonesty.

Cumis paid the credit union about $220,000 ? the total sum minus the deductible and interest potentially earned on the loans ? and then sued Herrera for the money.

The insurance company is asking for the money, and "punitive and exemplary" damages to be determined at trial and attorneys fees. The company is also asking that Herrera not be able to get rid of or sell any assets, and that a trust be created for all of Herrera?s single and joint accounts and property.

smcfarland@sltrib.com

Twitter: @sheena5427

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/53178258-78/credit-union-money-herrera.html.csp

geoffrey mutai wes welker brandon jacobs brandon jacobs fred davis fred davis fracking

Amy Poehler And Kathy Najimy Talk A Stroll Through The Big Apple

Amy Poehler and Kathy Najimy decided to enjoy the winter air and walk through the streets of NYC.

With Starbucks (peppermint mocha, maybe?)in tow, Peggy Hill Najimy sported a loooong pink scarf while Amy kept it chill with a faux fur ensemble.

Luckily, no snow has hit the Big Apple yet so the walk was less troublesome.

Check out the picture above for some gurl talk.

[Image via Ramey Pix.]

View full post on PerezHilton

Apple, Kathy, Najimy, Poehler, Stroll, talk, Through

Source: http://www.startalk.tv/amy-poehler-and-kathy-najimy-talk-a-stroll-through-the-big-apple/

erin andrews erin andrews blagojevich sentence mythbusters cannonball uss arizona myth busters tracy mcgrady

BulldogReporter: As Data-Protection Concerns Mount Around the Globe, Facebook Agrees To Greater Transparency For International Us... http://t.co/dnRc6Xh1

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
As Data-Protection Concerns Mount Around the Globe, Facebook Agrees To Greater Transparency For International Us... bit.ly/voZrKw BulldogReporter

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/BulldogReporter/statuses/151595663879184385

jeff probst jeff probst king jong il dead south korea baron davis duggar family dingo

Gingrich Off Virginia GOP Primary Ballot: Is His Campaign Already Over?

Like us on Facebook

Not Enough Signatures

To qualify for the primary election ballot, candidates must present the 10,000 signatures, and must also have a total that includes at least 400 voters from each of Virginia's 11 congressional districts.

According to Voice of America, both the Gingrich and Perry campaigns claimed they collected well over 11,000 signatures in the days leading up to the deadline.

But officials at the Republican Party of Virginia say that when it came time to tally the signatures, both men had less than required.

'A Failed System'

"Despite aggressive efforts collecting thousands of Virginia signatures after Governor Perry's mid-August entry into the race, we were notified this evening of apparently falling short of the 10,000 voter signatures needed to qualify," Perry's campaign said in a statement.

At the same time, Perry's legal advisers are reportedly reviewing the Virginia ruling, considering whether or not to challenge the GOP decision.

Gingrich's campaign, meanwhile, slammed the Virginia primary setup in general, saying the process needed to qualify to run on the ballot was deeply flawed.

"Voters deserve the right to vote for any top contender, especially leading candidates," Gingrich's campaign director Michael Krull said in a statement.

Krull claimed that "only a failed system" would eliminate a frontrunner and a longtime candidate from the race based on state signatures. He also said the campaign would attempt a write-in strategy if the decision wasn't altered.

"We will work with the Republican Party of Virginia to pursue an aggressive write-in campaign to make sure that all the voters of Virginia are able to vote for the candidate of their choice."

State law, however, prohibits write-in candidates in primaries.

"No write-in shall be permitted on ballots in primary elections," Virginia code reads, and Carl Tobias, a law professor at University of Richmond, agrees.

"Virginia code prohibits write-ins," Tobias told Fox News. "He can't do it."

The Importance of Virginia

News of the primary loss comes as a serious blow to both men, but especially to Newt Gingrich, who lives in a Virginia suburb.

Virginia is seen as an important "swing state," one whether neither the party dominates. Past presidential elections have seen the race suddenly shift based on whether the state goes blue or red. Virginia is also the twelfth-most populated state in the U.S., bringing with it significant electoral college numbers.

Even worse, it's one of the 12 swing states where President Obama leads in head-to-head match-ups. In a recent Public Policy Poll, Obama led top GOP candidate Romney by 48 to 42 percent, and beat Gingrich at 50 to 42 percent.

Obama will need to get about half the 151 electoral votes provided by the twelve swing states (Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Virginia) if he wants to win the 2012 presidential election.

And if he has enough support to get Virginia, it's likely Barack Obama will be president again in 2012.

"If he wins Virginia, he's probably going to win the Electoral College," PPP said.

Both Mitt Romney and Ron Paul have qualified to run in the Virginia primary, and are already plotting out their state-focused campaign strategies.

The End of Rick Perry

For Rick Perry, Iowa's expected defeat and the loss of Virginia as a primary ground will be the end of his fitful presidential campaign.

A frontrunner in the Republican race, Perry's disastrous debate performances and PR goofs, including the infamous Texas ranch episode, have caused him to plummet to fourth place, getting in at around 6 percent of the GOP vote in recent polls and placing him behind Romney, Gingrich and Rep. Ron Paul.

After Perry's "oops" moment, one of the most excruciating moments of the Republican primary, he tried to restart his campaign with a Christmas ad spot, but only ended up amusing or infuriating more viewers.

"Something is wrong with our country when gays can serve openly in the military but our children can't openly celebrate Christmas," Perry said in the infamous ad.

The TV spot launched numerous viral parodies even as commentators made it the most disliked video on YouTube (over 700,000 users have given the video a thumbs-down).

And despite Perry's fundraising (he'd netted $17 million by October, second only to Romney), many of those funds come from corporations, not donors like those who helped propel Ron Paul's campaign in Iowa.

Perry's fundraising, meanwhile, has been on a steady decline ever since the candidates truly took the national stage.

His positions are less well known than his gaffes, and his Texas swagger doesn't do much in a health care debate. Most of his appearances have only solidified the general impression that, as New York Magazine put it last month, "he's not the sharpest tool in the shed."

Rick Perry has been losing the Republican primary race for months. But this blow in Virginia, even if it ends up being overturned, is just one more campaign gaffe. His presidential campaign is over less than six months after it truly began.

The End of Newt Gingrich?

Newt Gingrich, on the other hand, is used to bouncing back from losses, not plummeting from fast and easy gains.

Unlike Perry, his campaign was declared dead-on-arrival before being re-invigorated this fall, and Gingrich's political career, including when he was Speaker of the House, has often been as much about recovery and spin as it has been about riding the wave of success.

Gingrich, however, also had far more to lose: unlike Rick Perry, he was preparing for a Virginia primary as one of the top candidates for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination. That lead was based in part of his assured grasp of political nuances in the recent debates and the impression that his campaign was becoming a well-oiled machine.

Gingrich had planned to use Virginia as a way to continue wooing reluctant Romney supporters over to his side, building on his fought-for advantage. Despite leading in Iowa, he needed more than one state to secure his position as nominee apparent, and the Southern swing state looked to be it.

"It's a demonstration that Gingrich is outrunning Romney in states beyond Iowa," press secretary told WLWT on Wednesday.

Now, however, reports indicate that Gingrich's loss was due to a combination of invalid signatures and poor campaign organization.

With both hints of something murky in the phrase "invalid signatures" and the impression that Gingrich's campaign staff didn't even know their own numbers, his political rivals smelled blood in the water.

Eric Fehrnstrom, a senior adviser to Mitt Romney, told The New York Times that the mistake was "cringe-worthy."

"It's a gut-check moment for Republicans," Mr. Fehrnstrom said. "Winning campaigns have to be able to execute on the fundamentals. This is like watching a hitter in the World Series failing to lay down a bunt."

Gingrich's failure to realize or admit that he lacked enough signatures, meanwhile, has everyone from political analysts to potential voters on Twitter scratching their heads as to how a man who had been leading in Virginia managed to let the all-important state slip through his fingers.

"It's a disaster for him," said Larry J. Sabato, a political scientist at the University of Virginia. "[The lack of organization] suggests you're not a serious candidate."

The Question of Super Tuesday

Gingrich's failure to get on the Virginia primary ballot could also spell trouble for his chances on Super Tuesday, where ten states will join Virginia on March 6 and eleven, including swing states like Colorado, Florida and Michigan, will have cast primary votes.

Newt Gingrich supporters, news sources speculate, might see a vote for Gingrich as a waste if they don't feel he can win without Virginia. Why vote for a Super Tuesday candidate who you already know has been ousted from one of the states in play?

Yet Super Tuesday, following the Virginia primary ballot debacle, could also end up being Gingrich's electoral salvation.

Newt Gingrich is ahead in Iowa, but he remains behind in the polls in New Hampshire, a crucial state. If he can manage to rise in the New Hampshire polls, a comeback which perhaps only a political chameleon like Gingrich can pull off, than other wins on Super Tuesday could still make him the anti-Romney for which the GOP seems desperately to be searching.

The 2012 GOP primary race is not a winner-take-all, but a day-by-day scramble for castoff votes as candidates (reliably neutral Romney aside) continue to rise and fall in the political battle.

Newt Gingrich has an almost guaranteed win in Georgia, which he represented in Congress, and despite the painful loss of Virginia could still net Tennessee or Oklahoma, as well as garnering votes in pre-Super Tuesday states like Florida (where he's at the top) and South Carolina.

If the Republican presidential primaries have taught American viewers (and voters) anything, it's that candidates are never safe at the top. But if Newt Gingrich's political history has taught us anything, it's that the former Speaker is often most dangerous when he's down.

To report problems or to leave feedback about this article, e-mail:
To contact the editor, e-mail:

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/272577/20111225/gingrich-virginia-primary-ballot-perry-campaign-over.htm

christmas tree tax cmas cmas world series of poker joe walsh zsa zsa gabor heavy d dead

মঙ্গলবার, ২৭ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

More Schooling Might Raise IQ (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Dec. 26 (HealthDay News) -- Children who have more schooling may see their IQ improve, Norwegian researchers have found.

Although time spent in school has been linked with IQ, earlier studies did not rule out the possibility that people with higher IQs might simply be likelier to get more education than others, the researchers noted.

Now, however, "there is good evidence to support the notion that schooling does make you 'smarter' in some general relevant way as measured by IQ tests," said study author Taryn Galloway, a researcher at Statistics Norway in Oslo.

Findings from the large-scale study appear in this week's online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

IQ, or intelligence quotient, is a widely accepted measure of intelligence. The IQ score comes from several combined, standardized tests.

In 1955, Norway began extending compulsory middle school education by two years. Galloway and her colleague Christian Brinch, from the department of economics at the University of Oslo, analyzed how this additional schooling might affect IQ.

Using data on men born between 1950 and 1958, the researchers looked at the level of schooling by age 30. They also looked at IQ scores of the men when they were 19.

"The size of the effect was quite large," she said. Comparing IQ scores before and after the education reform, the average increased by 0.6 points, which correlated with an increase in IQ of 3.7 points for an addition year of schooling, Galloway said.

"We are only able to study men, because we use data on IQ from the Norwegian military's draft assessment, which basically all men undergo around the age of 19. Women are not included in the draft," she explained.

Education has lasting effects on cognitive skills, such as those broadly measured by IQ tests, Galloway said.

"Cognitive skills are, in turn, related to a large range of social and economic outcomes. A large part of the relevance of the study derives from the fact that there has been some controversy related to the question of whether education has an independent effect on IQ or whether people with higher IQs simply choose, or are better able, to attain higher levels of education," Galloway said.

By looking at a reform which increased mandatory schooling and prevented people from dropping out of school after the 7th grade, it is fairly certain that the effects seen are an effect of schooling on IQ, not vice versa, she explained.

"One subtle point of our findings is that we use IQ measures at roughly age 19, which is three to four years after the additional education generally was received. Thus, we are not simply picking up a short-lived effect that peters out shortly after people leave school," Galloway said.

The findings suggest that education as late as the middle teenage years may have a sizeable effect on IQ, but do not challenge the well-documented importance of early childhood experiences on cognitive development, according to the authors.

Robert Sternberg, a professor of psychology and provost at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, said that "these results -- that schooling has a substantial effect on IQ -- replicate those of other, perhaps not quite as well-controlled, studies."

"I am aware of no serious studies that show the opposite result," he added.

He said the results are also consistent with the huge literature on the so-called Flynn effect showing that IQs are modifiable across as well as within generations and have been rising since the beginning of the 20th century.

"The results of this study are problematical for the chorus of psychologists and educators still locked in century-old thinking that IQ is genetic, stable and non-modifiable," Sternberg said. "As, for these individuals, the belief in the stability of IQ is more a matter of religious faith than of scientific inference, I doubt they will be persuaded."

More information

For more about IQ, visit the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111227/hl_hsn/moreschoolingmightraiseiq

issue 2 ohio election results 2011 election results 2011 board of elections board of elections senate bill 5 senate bill 5

Putin crony appointed to top Kremlin staff post

?A former KGB colleague of Putin has been appointed chief of staff for the Kremlin, signaling continuing concern about the strength of the protest movement.

A close political ally and old KGB colleague of Vladimir Putin has been given the top Kremlin staff job, a move that some experts say is an effort by Mr. Putin to lock down the levers of supreme authority at a time when mass public protests threaten social instability.

Skip to next paragraph

Sergei Ivanov, a former KGB general who was defense minister for six years under Putin, was appointed chief of Kremlin staff Thursday by President Dmitry Medvedev, in a terse announcement published on Mr. Medvedev's official website.

Mr. Ivanov is considered to be one of the toughest, smartest and most experienced apparatchiks in Russian government, and his track record of loyalty to Putin is long and undisputed.

Experts say it's also significant that acting Kremlin chief of staff Vladislav Surkov, the architect of the Putin-era system of "managed democracy,"?was apparently passed over for the appointment.

Over 35,000 people have signed a Facebook pledge to attend a downtown Moscow rally on Saturday to protest against alleged vote rigging and political manipulation in the Dec. 4 Duma elections. Opposition leaders blame Surkov for orchestrating the fraud, as well as other restrictions in Russian politics that include refusing to register political parties and candidates that are too independent, channeling official resources and state media support behind the ruling United Russia party, and creating a network of pro-Kremlin pressure groups, such as the youth movement Nashi, to back Kremlin policies.

"It's important that Ivanov has been appointed at this time, because he is a strong and reliable figure who is 100 percent loyal to Putin," says Sergei Strokan, a columnist with the Moscow business newspaper Kommersant.

"It's a storm warning. It's clear that Russian authorities are rattled by how rapidly this protest movement is growing, and they are not sure how to respond. But they want a strong hand in that important and sensitive job. It shows that Putin is in charge, calling the shots and stacking the Kremlin with his own people," Mr. Strokan says.

"But it's equally important to note that Surkov was not appointed. He is a figure that is particularly irritating to the opposition, who blame him for all sorts of shenanigans. It's possible that Putin may be trying to take the pressure off ahead of more street rallies by sidelining Surkov. ? Basically, it illustrates that Russian authorities are trying to do something, but definitely want to hold on to all means of control."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/gqRb3hOiipA/Putin-crony-appointed-to-top-Kremlin-staff-post

nba news nba news florida gators erin brockovich the duchess the duchess hope solo

China arrests executives in insider trading crackdown (Reuters)

SHANGHAI (Reuters) ? China has arrested former executives at two brokerages on charges of insider trading, the securities watchdog said, as part of a crackdown on market malpractice that the new head of the agency has said will be one of his top priorities.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) detailed on its website four cases of market manipulation and insider trading that it has investigated, including two that led to the arrests of former executives at Southwest Securities Co Ltd (600369.SS) and Northeast Securities Co Ltd (000686.SZ).

The cases are the latest in an increasingly high-profile campaign by CSRC chief Guo Shuqing to stamp out rampant wrongdoing in the country's stock market, which has languished despite the country's nearly double-digit economic growth.

In one case, Qin Xuan, a Northeast Securities manager who advised on the restructuring of a Shenzhen-listed pharmaceutical firm, used the information he obtained in that process to trade the company's stock, and also leaked the information to a friend.

In another case, Ji Minbo, former vice president at Southwest Securities, gained 20 million yuan ($3.2 million) by using information that was not publicly disclosed to trade more than 40 stocks from 2009 to 2011, the CSRC said.

"No matter how concealed illegal practices are, inside traders will eventually be punished by law," the CSRC said in the statement that detailed Qin's case.

The other two cases on which the agency published details involved securities consultants using commentators, research reports and media to talk up stocks they own before selling the securities to make a profit.

China has been stepping up its crackdown against illegal trading activities and tightening supervision against fund managers, brokerages, consultants and executives of listed companies in a bid to build confidence in a stock market where illegal trading activities have been rampant.

In August, former stock analyst Wang Jianzhong was sentenced to seven years in prison and fined 125 million yuan, on top of having illicit earnings of the same amount confiscated, becoming China's first convicted stock market manipulator.

Guo, the former China Construction Bank chairman who became CSRC chief in late October, said in a speech in early December that the regulator would adamantly crack down on accounting fraud, insider trading and other illegal activities.

Earlier this month, the agency exposed the country's biggest-ever case of stock market manipulation that involved an investment company, Guangdong Zhonghengxin, orchestrating "pump-and-dump" schemes related to 552 stocks, out of which it made 426 million yuan.

The CSRC has also recently published rules that would require listed companies to keep records on anyone who may have access to price-sensitive information.

($1 = 6.3364 Chinese yuan)

(Reporting by Samuel Shen and Jason Subler; Editing by Kazunori Takada)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111226/bs_nm/us_china_stocks_scandal

lil kim martial law mike wallace mike wallace pope joan pope joan is jon bon jovi dead

Obama spends Christmas with family, military

President Barack Obama blended his roles as a father and commander-in-chief this Christmas, exchanging presents and singing carols with his family, then greeting U.S. service members stationed at a Marine base in Hawaii.

The president and his family woke up early Sunday to open gifts, the White House said, then had breakfast and sang Christmas carols at the multimillion-dollar house they rent in Kailua Beach, near Honolulu.

Obama made two trips on Christmas to nearby Marine Corps Base Hawaii, first to attend church services at the base chapel. The president dressed casually in dark khaki pants and a short-sleeve blue shirt, and his wife and daughters donned sundresses for Christmas services on a bright, breezy day on the island of Oahu.

After spending a few hours at their rental home, the president and Michelle Obama returned to the base to visit with several hundred service members and their families, as they have done in past years.

The Obamas posed for photos, signed autographs and stopped to chat with the military families gathered in the dining hall, where roast beef, salad and apple pie were on the Christmas Day menu.

Eight-month-old Cooper Wall Wagner, son of Capt. Greg Wagner, got up close and personal with the president, grabbing his face, then sticking his fingers in Obama's mouth.

An amused Obama said he thought the baby just liked his "big nose" ? a comment that drew laughter from several of the Marines.

Many of the service members stationed at Marine Corps Base Hawaii have deployed to Afghanistan, as well as Iraq, where the last American troops were withdrawn earlier this month.

Back in the Washington area, Vice President Joe Biden and wife Jill Biden spent Christmas visiting wounded service members and their families at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

Obama also called 10 service members stationed around the world ? two from each branch of the military ? on Christmas Eve. The White House said he thanked them for their service and the sacrifice of being away from their families at the holidays.

The Obamas were wrapping up their Christmas festivities with dinner at the rental home with friends and family. Among those joining the first family in Hawaii are the president's sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, who lives on Oahu, and several friends Obama has known since high school.

  1. Only on msnbc.com

    1. What's next for Russian protests?
    2. Christmas around the world in pictures
    3. Take a sleigh ride on the space station
    4. Comet takes its place as 'Star of Wonder'
    5. Attorney, accountant taken off Huguette Clark estate
    6. What kids around the world feed Santa
    7. After Katrina, a promise is kept

The president has kept a low profile since arriving in Hawaii on Friday evening to start a vacation delayed by the stalemate in Washington over extending payroll tax cuts. He has no public events planned, and his only outings are expected to be to the golf course or to take his daughters for shave ice, a Hawaiian snow cone.

The Obamas are expected to return to Washington shortly after New Year's Day.

___

Associated Press writer Jaymes Song in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, contributed to this report.

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45787395/ns/us_news/

nfl scores college football scores arkansas razorbacks arkansas football maggie daley black friday online deals black friday news

সোমবার, ২৬ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

Powerful Darfur rebel chief dead, Sudan says (Reuters)

KHARTOUM (Reuters) ? Sudan's armed forces have killed the leader of Darfur's most powerful rebel group, state media said on Sunday, dealing a severe blow to insurgents in the remote western region in their nearly decade-long war with Khartoum.

The Darfur conflict has rumbled on since mainly non-Arab insurgents took up arms in 2003, saying the central government had left them out of the political and economic power structure and was favoring local Arab tribes.

Khalil Ibrahim, head of the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), emerged as one of the most powerful rebel commanders. In 2008, his fighters drove across the arid western terrain and launched a shock attack on Khartoum, killing over 200 people.

Sudan's authorities have long hunted Ibrahim, who had taken refuge in neighboring Libya under Muammar Gaddafi until the leader's overthrow deprived him of his safe haven, and had refused to sign a Qatar-brokered peace deal.

Al-Sawarmi Khalid, Sudan's armed forces spokesman, said government forces killed Ibrahim early on Sunday morning as he tried to cross into South Sudan, which seceded in July under a 2005 peace deal that ended a separate, decades-long civil war.

"The armed forces clashed in a direct confrontation with Khalil Ibrahim's rebel forces, and were able to eliminate Khalil Ibrahim, who died with a group of commanders," Khalid told state television.

JEM officials did not answer phone calls for comment on Sunday, but Al Jazeera television quoted Ibrahim's brother as confirming the death, saying he died in an air raid on his military convoy.

The death of Ibrahim, often described as commanding and charismatic, could be a major blow to JEM, although tightly restricted access to Sudan's conflict zones has made it hard to gauge the actual strength and internal unity of insurgents.

"Khalil's death is an important symbolic victory for the Government of Sudan - JEM has long been the most formidable military opposition in Darfur," Aly Verjee, a researcher at the Rift Valley Institute think tank , said.

"I don't think JEM will disappear with Khalil's death, but there's a risk that JEM fractures without his leadership, as has happened with the SLM (Sudan Liberation Movement) and other rebel movements in Darfur."

FIGHTING GOES ON

The United Nations has said as many as 300,000 people may have died in Darfur, where Khartoum mobilized troops and mostly Arab militias to crush the uprising. Khartoum puts the death toll at 10,000.

While violence has died down since the mass killings reported in the early days of the conflict, law and order have collapsed and the area has been hit by attacks by bandits, militias, soldiers and tribal groups in recent years.

Some 2 million people have fled the fighting, the United Nations says.

Various Darfur rebel groups, including two factions of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), have fought on despite a huge United Nations-African Union peacekeeping operation set up in 2007.

Qatar brokered a peace deal which Sudan signed this year with the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM), an umbrella association of smaller groups.

But JEM and the other major rebels groups have refused to sign the document, dampening hopes the region will soon see lasting peace.

In November, Darfur's main insurgent groups said they had formed an alliance to topple President Omar al-Bashir with other rebels in two border states, where fighting broke out around the time of South Sudan's independence.

Islamist in its outlook, Ibrahim's group has cooperated in the past with the more secular SLA rebels, although their different ideologies and histories have led to tensions.

JEM has claimed military advances as recently as last week, saying on Saturday its fighters clashed with government militias in parts of the North Kordofan state and were planning to advance on the capital Khartoum.

The report could not be independently verified.

Ibrahim died during a clash in North Kordofan's Wad Banda area, where authorities have accused JEM of attacking civilians and looting in the region, Sudan's state news agency SUNA said. The rebel group denies the charges.

The International Criminal Court has charged Bashir with masterminding genocide and other crimes in the region, accusations Khartoum dismisses as political.

(Writing by Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/wl_nm/us_sudan_darfur

jim thome jim thome fun fun fun fest fun fun fun fest move your money alabama vs lsu alabama vs lsu

Keeping Kids Warm, Dry and Safe in Cold Weather (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Dec. 23 (HealthDay News) -- You winterize your house and car, and you need to do the same with your children, an expert suggests.

"Children are even more vulnerable than adults to cold-weather and winter-related injuries," Dr. Karen Judy, a pediatrician at Loyola University Health System and professor of pediatrics at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, said in a Loyola news release.

She offered tips to keep children comfortable and safe when they're outside in cold weather:

  • Dress kids in layers. If one layer gets wet, the child can remove it to keep moisture away from the skin.
  • Use fleece and wool garments instead of cotton clothes, which will not provide insulation if they get wet.
  • Warm boots and mittens are essential because extremities are most prone to frostbite. Make sure kids cover their ears and nose and wear a hat to prevent significant heat loss from the head.
  • Children should come inside often to limit their exposure to the cold, and they should change out of wet clothing immediately.

Children can also be at risk when traveling in the car during winter.

"We spend a lot of time in our cars in winter, and this can be dangerous if we are not prepared," Judy said.

"In cold weather, parents need to take additional precautions to keep kids safe while traveling even if it's just to the grocery store. Never leave kids in a car unattended and keep a winter survival kit in the car with blankets, extra socks and gloves, snacks, and a first-aid kit in case the car breaks down or you are stranded in your car," she advised.

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics offers more winter safety tips.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111224/hl_hsn/keepingkidswarmdryandsafeincoldweather

willow smith tom bradley tom bradley penn state riot penn state riot state college pa wilson ramos kidnapped

dconvenience: ??????GOLF WANG?Tumblr???w http://t.co/NEmCa6MO

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
??????GOLF WANG?Tumblr???w golfwang.tumblr.com/post/145197617? dconvenience

digital convenience

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/dconvenience/statuses/150366401486524416

willis mcgahee willis mcgahee 2013 ford escape stop online piracy act protect ip act spear of destiny rock hill sc