Monday, January 30, 2012

Bulletins Live ? The automotive industry is rebounding from a bleak ...

Saturday, January 28, 2012

BERWYN, Pa., Jan 25, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) ?
In 2009, sales and profits in the automotive industry were generally ?as
bleak as a burned forest,? according to the latest Sector Focus
commentary from Turner Investments. But the investment firm believes
better days may be ahead for automotive companies now running leaner,
more competitive businesses that are meeting pent-up consumer demands
for higher quality products.

Turner Investments, based in Berwyn, Pennsylvania, publishes Sector
Focus commentaries monthly as part of the continuing efforts of its
five teams of security analysts to monitor market sectors for its
growth-stock portfolios.

Titled Back from the brink: what?s driving a resurging automotive
industry, the piece was written by the five analysts who cover the
consumer sectors: Chris Baggini, senior portfolio manager/global
security analyst; Bill McVail, senior portfolio manager/global security
analyst; Halie O?Shea, portfolio manager/global security analyst; Jason
Schrotberger, senior portfolio manager/global security analyst; and Eric
Turner, global security analyst.

In the U.S., for instance, sales of new cars and light trucks are up
sharply since 2009, when they reached their lowest point since the Nixon
Administration. Sales climbed to 11.8 million units in 2010 and 12.8
million last year. The auto manufacturers predict sales will hit 13.5
million this year.

As sales increase, Turner?s consumer analysts believe the prospects
appear especially strong for seven companies: vehicle manufacturers
Honda Motor and Hyundai Motor; auto dealers Asbury Automotive Group and
Sonic Automotive; and automotive-parts makers BorgWarner, Harman
International Industries, and Tenneco.

To read this January 2012 Sector Focus in its entirety, click on
this link to the Turner Investments Web site:
http://www.turnerinvestments.com/SectorFocus .
Or call 484.329.2407 for a free copy of the piece.

?

The views expressed represent the opinions of Turner Investments and are
not intended as a forecast, a guarantee of future results, investment
recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. There can be
no guarantee that Turner will select and hold any particular security
for its client portfolios. Past performance is no guarantee of future
results.

Turner Investments, founded in 1990, is an investment firm based in
Berwyn, Pennsylvania. As of December 31, 2011, we managed more than $13
billion in stocks in separately managed accounts and mutual funds for
institutions and individuals.

As of December 31, 2011, Turner held in client accounts 398,740 shares
of Asbury Automotive Group, 378,579 shares of BorgWarner, 9,800 shares
of Honda Motor, 6,240 shares of Hyundai Motor, 1.2 million of Sonic
Automotive, and 672,840 shares of Tenneco. Turner held no shares of
Harman International Industries.

SOURCE: Turner Investments

Turner Investments
Abbi Anderson, 484-329-2407
aanderson@turnerinvestments.com

Copyright Business Wire 2012

Source: http://www.bulletinslive.com/?p=2071

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Saturday, January 28, 2012

UnleashPhones: WhatsApp for Windows Phone updated to v1.6 - http://t.co/6QUiWwq5

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Sony Xperia S boasts 'dirt-repellent' coating and 'fast charging'

Android Central

As launch day approaches, more technical details of Sony's new Xperia S are starting to trickle out. We learned all the key specifications at CES (where we also got some hands-on time with the device), but now two interesting new features of the Sony flagship phone have come to light, according to Swiss tech site PocketPC.ch.

Firstly, the site reports that a Sony Ericsson product manager told them the Xperia S has a "dirt-repellent", "UV-active nano-coating". We're not even going to pretend to know what that means, but if it protects the device from scrapes and daily wear-and-tear, we're all in favor. For what it's worth, the presence of an "anti-stain shell" has already been confirmed on the official Sony Ericsson Facebook page.

The product manager also reportedly spilled a few details on the new battery tech employed by the Xperia S. The phone is said to use improved lithium-polymer technology that's capable of recharging in half the time taken by earlier models, with ten minutes of charging time apparently being enough to power the device for a whole hour.

The Xperia S is due to launch in Europe from the second week of March. Its American counterpart, the AT&T Xperia Ion, will land stateside during the second quarter.

Source: PocketPC.ch; via: XperiaBlog



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/WGhw299ss3g/story01.htm

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Friday, January 27, 2012

Notion in Motion: Wireless Sensors Monitor Brain-Waves on the Fly

eeg, brain, interface, game"TIP OF THE ICEBERG": NeuroSky, Inc.'s brain-computer interface shown here just scratches the surface of what is possible thanks to advances in mobile electroencephalographic (EEG) brain-wave detection technology, says University of California, San Diego's Scott Makeig. Image: Courtesy of Neurosky, Inc.

A fighter pilot heads back to base after a long mission, feeling spent. A warning light flashes on the control panel. Has she noticed? If so, is she focused enough to fix the problem?

Thanks to current advances in electroencephalographic (EEG) brain-wave detection technology, military commanders may not have to guess the answers to these questions much longer. They could soon be monitoring her mental state via helmet sensors, looking for signs she is concentrating on her flying and reacting to the warning light.

This is possible because of two key advances made EEG technology wireless and mobile, says Scott Makeig, director of the University of California, San Diego's Swartz Center for Computational Neuroscience (SCCN) in La Jolla, Calif. EEG used to require users to sit motionless, weighted down by heavy wires. Movement interfered with the signals, so that even an eyebrow twitch could garble the brain impulses.

Modern technology lightened the load and wirelessly linked the sensors and the computers that collect the data. In addition, Makeig and others developed better algorithms?in particular, independent component analysis. By reading signals from several electrodes, they can infer where, within the skull, a particular impulse originated. This is akin to listening to a single speaker's voice in a crowded room. In so doing, they are also able to filter out movements?not just eyebrow twitches, but also the muscle flexing needed to walk, talk or fly a plane.

EEG's most public face may be two Star Wars?inspired toys, Mattel's Mindflex and Uncle Milton's Force Trainer. Introduced in 2009, they let wannabe Jedi knights practice telekinesis while wearing an EEG headset. But these toys are just the "tip of the iceberg," says Makeig, whose work includes mental concentration monitoring. "Did you push the red button and then say, 'Oops!' to yourself? It would be useful in many situations?including military?for the system to be aware of that."

That kind of "mental gas gauge" is just one of many projects Makeig is running at the SCCN, which is part of U.C. San Diego's Institute for Neural Computation (INC). He also combines mobile EEG with motion-capture technology, suiting volunteers in EEG caps and LED-speckled spandex suits so he can follow their movements with cameras in a converted basement classroom. For the first time, researchers like Makeig can examine the thoughts that lead to movement, in both healthy people and participants with conditions such as autism. Makeig calls the system Mobile Brain/Body Imaging, or MoBI. It allows him to study actions "at the speed of thought itself," he says.

EEG does not directly read thoughts. Instead, it picks up on the electrical fields generated by nerves, which communicate via electricity. The EEG sensors?from the one on the Star Wars games to the 256 in Makeig's MoBI?are like microphones listening to those microvolt-strength neural signals, says Tansy Brook, head of communications for NeuroSky Brain?Computer Interface Technology in San Jose, Calif., makers of the chip in the Star Wars toys and many other research, educational and entertainment products.

For one project, Makeig is collaborating with neuroscientists Marissa Westerfield and Jean Thompson, U.C. San Diego researchers studying movement behavior in teenagers with autism. They put the teens, wearing the EEG sensors and LEDs, in Makeig's special classroom. Then, they project a spaceship on the walls. The kids have to chase the spaceship as it darts from one point to another. Although the results are not yet in, Westerfield suspects that people with autism, compared with those who are non-autistic, will take longer to process where the spaceship has gone and readjust their movements toward it. "If we had a better idea of the underlying deficits?then we could possibly design better interventions," such as targeted physical therapy for the movement problems autistic people have, Westerfield says.

Neuroscientists and psychologists have been using EEG to eavesdrop on brain waves since 1926, and doctors employ it to study sleep patterns and observe epileptic seizures. During most of that time, subjects had to sit in an electrically shielded booth, "like a big refrigerator," says John Foxe, a neuroscientist at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City. He calls Makeig's MoBI "technical wizardry" that will enable scientists "to watch the brain and how it works in much more realistic settings."

Wireless EEG has already had an impact on gaming. San Francisco?based Emotiv has since 2009 sold its EPOC EEG headset, which uses electrical signals to determine a player's emotional state?excitement, frustration and boredom each create a different pattern. Gamers using Emotiv's technology can also create mental "spells" to lift or push virtual objects, says Geoff Mackellar, CEO of Emotiv?s research unit based in Sydney, Australia. The EPOC is also regularly used in research labs and may have medical applications in the future, Mackellar adds.

Wireless EEG technology provides signals as clear as the wired version, Makeig says, and at about 3.5 kilograms his machinery is "luggable." (Emotiv's and NeuroSky's headsets, which use fewer electrodes, are lighter.) "Of course, we're not starting with ballet dancers doing The Rite of Spring," he admits, but the team has succeeded with joggers on a treadmill. One challenge they would still like to overcome is to remove the sticky, conductive gel that goes under each electrode. It can certainly be done?Emotiv's electrodes use only saltwater and NeuroSky's are dry.

Tzyy-Ping Jung, associate director of the SCCN, predicts the group will make a dry, 64-electrode system within a couple of years. He and Makeig envision the headset will help paralyzed people interact with the world, warn migraine sufferers of an impending headache, and adjust computerized learning to match a student's personal pace, among other potential applications.

"It's certainly something that everyone can have at home," Emotiv's Mackellar says.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=60da3ae60f492ca5c90e0ebaa19105e9

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Tom Hooper Ends Engagement To Pregnant Fiance Tara Subkoff

Tom Hooper Ends Engagement To Pregnant Fiance Tara Subkoff

Oscar-winning director Tom Hooper is a single guy again after breaking off his engagement to fashion designer Tara Subkoff. Hooper, 39, ended their relationship last [...]

Tom Hooper Ends Engagement To Pregnant Fiance Tara Subkoff Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News


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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Simon Cowell to launch DJ talent show (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? TV personality and music producer Simon Cowell is launching a new talent competition to find the world's best DJs.

Already known to television audiences in Britain and the United States as the acerbic judge on hit talent shows like "American Idol", "The X Factor" and "Britain's Got Talent", the 52-year-old is looking to expand his empire.

"DJ's are the new rock stars, it feels like the right time to make this show," he said in a statement.

The new format will be co-produced by SYCO, Cowell's joint venture with Sony Music, and Overbrook Entertainment, a U.S. entertainment company founded by Hollywood star Will Smith.

Sony Pictures Television will also be a partner in the venture, which has been in development for more than a year. Smith's wife Jada Pinkett Smith has been involved for Overbrook.

The three parties said they would announce their broadcast partners in Britain and the United States soon.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; editing by Patricia Reaney)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120125/people_nm/us_simoncowell_dj

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France tempers talk of quick Afghanistan pullout (AP)

PARIS ? France's troops won't be pulled hastily from Afghanistan, says foreign minister Alain Juppe, adding that talk of a retreat by the end of 2012 isn't "well thought out and examined."

Speaking Tuesday during a question and answer session in parliament, Juppe said "when I hear talk of an immediate pullout, or even by the end of 2012, I'm not sure that's well thought out and examined."

Last week Francois Hollande ? the Socialist front-runner in next spring's presidential election ? pledged to bring France's roughly 4,000 troops home from Afghanistan by the end of the year.

That followed President Nicolas Sarkozy's comment that if security for troops is not restored, "then the question of an early withdrawal of the French army would arise."

Current plans are for French troops to return home by 2014, when NATO is due to wind up its combat mission in Afghanistan.

In Afghanistan Tuesday, President Hamid Karzai declared an emergency in the mountainous Badakhshan province in the northeast.

He promised a relief fund of $160,000 after heavy snow and avalanches killed at least 46 people in the last week. Avalanches are an annual problem in the mountainous country.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120124/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan

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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Katy Perry unfollows Russell Brand on Twitter

Katy Perry is cutting Russell Brand out of her life in more ways than one.

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The 27-year-old "Firework" singer has unfollowed her soon-to-be ex-husband on Twitter. As of Friday, Perry is still one of the 78 people Brand subscribes to via the social networking site.PHOTOS: Katy's crazy cleavage

It's not surprising, given that Perry is only communicating with Brand, 36, via phone or email. "She's limiting those interactions," a source tells the new issue of Us Weekly (out now). "He's being so atrocious that she feels like she never really knew him."

VIDEO: Why did Katy and Russell call it quits?

Perry has been keeping Brand off her mind by focusing on her career: she performed in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Thursday, and she recently shot an Adidas ad in Santa Barbara, Calif.

"She doesn't want to look battered and have people for sorry for her," a Perry source tells Us. "She's very strong and confident."PHOTOS: Katy and Russell's zany romance

For much more on the couple's nasty split -- including Brand's plans for a tell-all book documenting his 14-month marriage to Perry -- pick up the new issue of Us Weekly, out now!

Copyright 2012 Us Weekly

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/46095129/ns/today-entertainment/

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Video: Christie on MTP: S.C. results ?disappointing?

A Second Take on Meeting the Press: From an up-close look at Rachel Maddow's sneakers to an in-depth look at Jon Krakauer's latest book ? it's all fair game in our "Meet the Press: Take Two" web extra. Log on Sundays to see David Gregory's post-show conversations with leading newsmakers, authors and roundtable guests. Videos are available on-demand by 12 p.m. ET on Sundays.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032608/vp/46090592#46090592

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China reports second bird flu death in a month (AP)

BEIJING ? China on Sunday reported its second bird flu fatality in a month following deaths last week in Vietnam and Cambodia.

The patient died Sunday in Guizhou province in the southwest after being hospitalized on Jan. 6, the health ministry said in a brief statement. It said the flu was highly pathogenic but gave no indication whether it was confirmed to be the H5N1 strain.

Mainland officials told Hong Kong authorities the patient was a 39-year-old man who reported having no contact with poultry, government-run Hong Kong broadcaster RTHK said. It gave no other details of his identity.

The health ministry statement said 71 people who had contact with the patient showed no unusual symptoms.

China suffered its first bird flu fatality in 18 months when a bus driver in Shenzhen, a city that borders Hong Kong, died Dec. 31.

Last week, Vietnam reported its first bird flu fatality in nearly two years ? an 18-year-old man who worked on a duck farm.

In Cambodia, a 2-year-old boy died last week after reportedly having contact with sick poultry in his village, according to the World Health Organization.

Indonesia also has reported one bird flu death this year.

WHO says that as of Friday, there have been 343 human deaths from 582 confirmed bird flu cases worldwide since 2003. Some 27 of those deaths were in China and 60 in Vietnam.

___

Online:

Chinese Ministry of Health: http://www.moh.gov.cn

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120122/ap_on_he_me/as_china_bird_flu

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Monday, January 23, 2012

Heaven help us. |ooc&su|

In 2018, the United States and North Korea exchanged nuclear bombs. Two to each country. The two in the U.S took out most of Los Angles, and a good part of Sacramento. And then for a whole year or so, it seemed as if Californians were the only ones who really suffered...but in 2019, the entire nation was subject to nuclear fallout. The past year, the radiation from the bombs had hung in the air and was pushed along by wind currents, and eventually, it came down to earth. Everyone was subject to a bit of it at first. Some more than others, of course. But almost as soon as the first person went to the hospital for minor effects of it, the nation panicked and everyone took all measures possible to prevent from it. Unfortunately, it wasn't enough for some people.

During that time of radiation babies, were born, naturally. For the women with little radiation, births went just as births are expected to, with mother and child going on perfectly healthy. But those with more radiation weren't faced with such happy endings. In those cases, it wasn't uncommon for mother or child to die. In fact, in most cases neither made it. But there were quite a few occurrences also where the baby made it...although they all suffered from radiation poisoning passed down through their mother.

In eight of those cases in which the babies survived, the radiation didn't effect them in the harmful way it would be expected to. It actually altered them in such a way that gave them special abilities...superpowers, if you will. Of course no one knew this until the children were around three, and started to exhibit these powers. When a man named Gary Batts caught word of this, he adopted, or in some cases even kidnapped, these special children. After he had acquired all of them, he made it his mission to train them. To teach them how to use and control their powers, and not let having them corrupt them. They were all home schooled, and rarely saw life outside of the house...but since it was what they knew, they all seemed to be content with their situation. Well, all accept for the one child that disappeared when they were all around the age of ten.

---

The year is now 2036. All of the children are either seventeen or eighteen years old now. They've mastered their powers, and have been allowed to experience the outside world for the last two years...they'd even been offered the chance to move out. But none of them did. Not even after Mr. Batts passed away. That particular event actually left them lost, not knowing what to do with themselves.

As if coming from a comic book, they've decided that they must become a team of protectors for the dirty New Jersey city riddled with crime. Because they think it's probably what Mr. Batts would want from them. A couple of them have taken up jobs in order to privide for the essentials, but the rest of them usually stay at home. They'll occasionally go out and act as regular citizens...but only a couple times a week or so. They prefer to stay in the comfort of their own home most of the time. But whenever there's word of some kind of crime to be taken care of, they're all in the action.

Also not unlike a comic book, they have their own nemesis who is trying to destroy them. Due to this person also having powers, it can only be assumed that they are the run away member of their little family. And they have obviously chosen to use their powers for 'evil'. What their overall plan is is unknown. They just seem bent on killing their 'siblings'...maybe, just maybe, it could be to leave them the only one with powers. Maybe it's that they want to be the one to actually protect the city instead of harming it.. But again, that information is not known to anyone just yet.

So for now, they just fight.

The children
+TheOneAndOnly+
+TheOneAndOnly+
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight (now their nemesis)

There is a lot to read, I'm sorry =\ Please don't be put off by that...or if it seems confusing. Because I will explain anything that needs explaining if you just ask =)
Also, I want an equal gender count. 4 boys and 4 girls. I may or may not ask people to double, depending on how much interest this gets.
Anyway, that's about it out of me for now I suppose =p

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/sFLMYCdTa8g/viewtopic.php

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Boehner: Republicans may link pipeline to tax bill (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said on Sunday that Republicans may use an upcoming payroll tax cut bill to force President Barack Obama to approve the controversial Keystone XL oil pipeline.

"The Keystone pipeline is a prime example of a shovel-ready project that's been through every approval process here in Washington. Every option is on the table," Boehner said on Fox News Sunday.

"We're going to do everything we can to make sure this Keystone pipeline project is approved," he said.

Asked specifically about linking the project's approval to the payroll tax cut, Boehner replied: "We may. We may."

TransCanada Corp.'s $7 billion proposed pipeline to pump crude oil 1,661 miles from Canada to Texas has become a top priority for Republicans in Congress, who are promoting the project as a vital source of jobs during economic hard times.

Renewed efforts to force a decision on Keystone, which is strongly opposed by environmentalists, could result in another showdown with the White House if the pipeline is inserted in the payroll tax bill once again.

Obama rebuffed Republicans last week when his administration turned down TransCanada's application. The White Houses said a 60-day fast-track approval schedule, imposed by Congress, was too short to give adequate attention to potential environmental impacts.

The administration left open the door, however, saying it would consider new requests to build the pipeline.

Republican leaders have been signaling they want to get the tax issue off the agenda quickly, following a public relations disaster last month when they were viewed as standing in the way a temporary tax cut extension that ultimately was enacted.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee will hold a hearing on Wednesday about Keystone. Members had asked Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to testify, but Kerri-Ann Jones, the State Department official in charge of the Keystone permit, will appear instead.

(Reporting by Bill Trott and Richard Cowan; Editing by Philip Barbara)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120122/pl_nm/us_usa_congress_boehner

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

Scientists Call for 60-Day Suspension of Mutant Flu Research

Image: MEDICAL RF.COM/SPL

Reprinted from Nature magazine

As controversy rages around the scientists who created mutant strains of the H5N1 avian influenza virus, leading flu researchers have called for a 60-day voluntary pause on such work. The call comes in a statement jointly published today in Nature (R. A. M. Fouchier et al. Nature 481, 443; 2012) and Science.

On 20 December, the United States government ? acting on advice from the US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB) ? asked both journals to publish only the main conclusions of two flu studies, but not to reveal details "that could enable replication of the experiments by those who would seek to do harm" (see 'Call to censor flu studies draws fire'). The journals and the authors have agreed to this redaction, on the condition that a mechanism is established to disseminate the information to legitimate flu researchers on a need-to-know basis.

The US government, the World Health Organization (WHO) and other bodies are now frantically trying to put together this mechanism, along with a framework for international oversight of such research. The signatories of today's statement, including the key authors behind the controversial research, say that the pause is intended to allow time for this discussion. "We realize that organizations and governments around the world need time to find the best solutions for opportunities and challenges that stem from the work," they write.

The scientists add that they intend to organize an international forum to debate the risks and benefits of the research. "We recognize that we and the rest of the scientific community need to clearly explain the benefits of this important research and the measures taken to minimize its possible risks," they write.

"Scientists need to have their voices heard in this debate," says Yoshihiro Kawaoka of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, lead investigator on the paper submitted to Nature and a signatory of today's statement. "We hope that by having a calm and reasoned discussion of the facts, scientists and biosecurity experts can reach a better understanding and find ways to enable the research to go forward while minimizing risks."

Bioterrorism is just one potential risk of such research. More worrying to some researchers is that if a mutant virus were to accidentally escape from the lab, it could cause a H5N1 pandemic. The authors of the statement say that they hope to "assure" the public that the viruses are in safe hands in secure containment facilities. Such research is currently classed as requiring biosafety level 3 (BSL-3) enhanced containment facilities, but many scientists argue that it should be done only in BSL-4 labs, which have the highest biosafety rating (see 'Fears grow over lab-bred flu').

"I am very much in favour of having a pause," says Anthony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID). He concedes that the length of the pause is not long, but that researchers were concerned about having an open-ended moratorium. "60 days as a start I think is reasonable, and after 60 days we will re-evaluate it," he says.

"The pause is welcome in the sense that hopefully it will relieve some of the immediate urgency in terms of trying to chart a course forward," agrees Michael Osterholm, who heads the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy in Minneapolis, and is a member of the NSABB.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=c086fd900ed4fbcf1913a131edb8ac99

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Newt Gingrich, Filled With More Excrement Than Your Average Politician (OliverWillisLikeKryptoniteToStupid)

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

HelloGiggles ? Hello Giggles Pets of the Week!

Confession time, Gigglers: I really love when animals do human things. I even started a Tumblr called ?Animals Doing Human Things?. No, that?s not meant to be self promotion ? it?s just me trying to prove to you how much I love when animals act like people (especially classy business people).

Which is why my favorite female dog CEO pet of the week has to be Aubie. That dog looks better in those?pearls?than I do in mine! But this week?s whole gallery is pretty much full of the cutest pets I?ve ever seen.

Want to try and make next week?s gallery even cuter with the inclusion of your pet? E-mail us your pictures and be sure to include your pet?s name. Until next week, fellow animal lovers!

Morgan is an NYU student who wishes she could graduate and be a grown-up producer and/or blogger already. She also loves all things Disney and hot pink, which she realizes may contradict her desire to be an adult. You can follow her on Twitter @Morgan_L_Nelson or Tumblr at mln2118.tumblr.com.
See more posts from Morgan

Source: http://hellogiggles.com/hello-giggles-pets-of-the-week-3?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=hello-giggles-pets-of-the-week-3

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Acer Iconia A200 now available at Best Buy for $349

A200

As if deciding on an Android tablet wasn't hard enough now yet another one is available to make things harder. The Acer Iconia A200 is now available from Best Buy, both online and in stores, for $349. The A200 is a Honeycomb-based tablet, but all signs point to a mid-Febuary ICS update -- and there's a giant sticker on the box saying that an upgrade is coming. So, will this be your next tablet? Be sure to stay tuned as we review this bad boy!

Source: Best Buy; thanks to everyone who sent this in!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/cFwtOgpNjgo/story01.htm

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Video: NYC mayor names Jan. 13 TODAY Show Day

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44641671/vp/45984499#45984499

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Video: Judge stops more prisoners from being released



>>> there is more to report on the big story out of mississippi where a nationally prominent governor sometimes mentioned as a potential presidential candidate issued dozens of pardons to convicted criminals, including murderers on his last days in office. late last night, haley barbour , the former governor offered an explanation of sorts, but with outrage going over this unprecedented action a judge has said not so fast. our report from nbc's mark potter .

>> reporter: the anger in mississippi over governor barbour 's decision to grant those pardons and early releases will not go away.

>> i just can't understand what was going through haley barbour 's mind.

>> reporter: mary's brother was killed 20 years ago by joseph osmond sentenced to life in prison . after working as a truth's at the governor's mansion, he's just been pardoned and free.

>> as if nothing happened. as if my brother does not matter. as if these victims do not matter.

>> reporter: of the more than 200 convicts granted pardons, there were 21 murderers, eight sex offenders and more than 50 others convicted of armed robbery , assault, kidnapping and other vinyl crimes. in a written statement issued last night, barbour 's office pointed out approximately 90% of those who received clemency were no longer in custody and a majority had been out for years. the statement said pardons would allow the offenders to find gainful employment or acquire professional licensees, as well as hunt and vote. district attorney michael guest says a big problem with pardons is they free convicts, allow them to buy guns and clear their records.

>> i believe that the public has a right to know whom they're hiring, whom they are associating with, whom they are entrusting their children. with

>> reporter: at the state capitol , democrats are drafting legislation that would require the governor to consult with police and families before pardoning violent criminals.

>> these victims need to be heard. their families need to be heard.

>> reporter: a judge halted the release of any more prisoners until barbour 's pardons can be reviewed. mark potter , jackson, mississippi .

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45978602/

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Brutal winter leaves Alaska pining for fuel

Living in Alaska's outer reaches is challenging enough, given the isolation and weather extremes, but at least three remote communities also have experienced weather-related late deliveries of fuel so crucial to their survival during an especially bitter winter.

The iced-in town of Nome and the northwest Inupiat Eskimo villages of Noatak and Kobuk faced fuel shortages that illustrate the vulnerability of relying solely on deliveries by sea or air, potentially subjecting communities to the mercy of the elements. The villages, which just received their fuel, are especially vulnerable, unable to afford more additional storage tanks for gasoline and heating oil, which can run as high as $10 a gallon.

Compounding a problem with no easy answers, temperatures dipping as low as minus 60 over the past few weeks means air deliveries are delayed at the same time people are consuming more fuel more quickly. Some people in both villages also use wood-burning stoves for supplemental heat, but diesel is the critical commodity.

"It's been pretty tough," Noatak resident Robbie Kirk said of life in the community of 500, which finally received a fuel delivery on Tuesday, three days after the village store ran out of heating oil. "We usually have a nice reserve of fuel. Now we're just playing catch-up."

Nome missed its pre-winter delivery of fuel by barge when a huge storm swept western Alaska. In a high-profile journey, a Coast Guard icebreaker has cut a path in thick sea ice for a Russian tanker delivering 1.3 million gallons of fuel to the community of 3,500.

Without a fuel delivery, Nome would likely run out of certain petroleum products before the end of winter and a barge delivery becomes possible in late spring.

Until recently, the situation was much more dire for the smaller communities of Noatak and Kobuk, located farther north above the Arctic Circle, where relentless extreme cold prevented fuel deliveries by plane until this week, residents say.

Before the new supply of fuel arrived in Noatak, the village store borrowed some heating oil from the village water and sewer plant, said store manager Connie Walton. But filling the store's two 23,000-gallon tanks has diverted any potential crisis.

"We're good for another month and a half," Walton said.

Residents in Kobuk also were highly relieved by an air shipment of heating oil that arrived Wednesday in the village of 150 people about 175 miles to the east. It's been too cold for people to use their snowmobiles much, so gasoline isn't as much of a concern, said City Clerk Sophia Ward. Running low on the diesel used to warm homes was another matter.

"I'm glad that it came in today," Ward said Wednesday. "It'll keep our elders warm."

In Noatak, residents once had fuel shipped by barge on the Noatak River, but that has long been impossible since the river shifted and became shallow there.

Two years ago, residents began tapping into another source of fuel, thanks to the Red Dog zinc mine 40 miles to the northeast. The mine in 2009 began a program to sell gasoline and diesel to Noatak and another close neighbor, the village of Kivalina. The fuel is sold at cost, said mine spokesman Wayne Hall.

"This is strictly for what we can do to help out our closest community members," he said. "Energy and heating costs are one of the biggest costs to families in this region."

The program lets individuals buy fuel on Saturdays every three weeks at a staging area about 23 miles from the village. This winter, they can buy gas in 55-gallon drums calculated at $4.89 a gallon. Villagers also bring their own drums to fill with diesel fuel at $4.35 a gallon.

The latest Red Dog fuel day for Noatak took place on the day the village store ran out of diesel. So villagers formed a convoy of about 30 snowmobiles and freight sleds, and headed out in weather marked by temperatures of 47 below and, for the first 10 miles, dense fog, said Kirk, who regularly takes advantage of the sales.

"It basically cuts my heating fuel in half," he said. "It's pretty critical for me."

The state also helps lower the soaring cost of electricity in Alaska's rural areas, spending almost $32 million in fiscal year 2011 through its Power Cost Equalization program, which subsidizes residential electric rates and the power bills of community buildings. Power in most villages is diesel-generated.

Running low on fuel is an occasional challenge faced by rural communities in Alaska, and sometimes the weather plays a significant role in air deliveries, said Rob Everts, owner of Everts Air Cargo, whose planes deliver fuel to both Noatak and Kobuk. But there can be other factors as well, such as waiting until the last minute to place orders, he said, stressing that he was speaking generally and not pointing fingers at any particular community.

"Weather is not always bad," he said. "It's about planning in some cases, anticipating what's coming in the dead of winter."

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45998455/ns/weather/

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Afghan minorities cautiously support peace talks (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan ? Prominent Afghan opposition leaders say they support possible U.S.-brokered peace negotiations with Taliban militants but want to be part of any talks.

Members of a coalition representing Afghanistan's ethnic minorities spoke Friday as they returned from a conference in Berlin. Most fought in the Northern Alliance against the 1990s Taliban government.

The Taliban recently expressed interest in negotiations with the U.S., but it is so far unclear what other Afghan factions might be involved. The Taliban persist in referring to President Hamid Karzai's government as a puppet.

Prominent Tajik minority leader Ahmad Zia Masood says he supports talks but warns of giving up freedoms gained in the decade since the Taliban were ousted.

Ethnic Hazara leader Mohammad Muhaqiq says minority leaders should participate in any future negotiations.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120113/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan

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Friday, January 13, 2012

?Big-boy football? expected for national championship

NEW ORLEANS ? Les Miles squeezed out a smile, clenched his left hand nervously and extended his right hand toward Nick Saban.

The coaches got in an awkward grasp, forced a bit of small talk, and then posed for the cameras behind the crystal trophy that only one of them can hoist toward the Superdome roof come tonight.

This was the last of their pregame obligations ? one final chance for Miles to deflect a query about whether top-ranked LSU is the favorite to make it to the BCS title next year, one more opportunity for Saban to show he?s got a life beyond his stranglehold on the storied program at No. 2 Alabama (turns out he does, if watching the Weather Channel qualifies).

Now, let?s get down to business.

LSU vs. Alabama, Part II. The BCS championship.

This time, it?s for all the marbles.

Really.

The teams already met two months ago in Tuscaloosa, a so-called Game of the Century that was more of a Brawl in the Backyard, a brutal slugfest that sent both teams scurrying for the training room the next day and left fans around the country feeling a bit cheated by an old-fashioned defensive struggle in a college game now dominated by point-a-minute offenses.

Neither team made it to the end zone in that first meeting, even with the benefit of extra time. LSU won a battle of field goals, claiming a 9-6 overtime victory and stealing away the top spot in the rankings from the Crimson Tide.
?
Everyone expects more scoring in the rematch, but there?s no way it?s turning into one of those back-and-forth shootouts we?ve seen so many times this bowl season.

?I?d expect it to be big-boy football,? Miles said Sunday during his time on podium.

LSU (13-0) has already put up a body of work that clearly establishes it as the nation?s best team. In addition to that Nov. 5 win at Alabama, the Tigers have victories over two other major bowl champions, Rose Bowl winner Oregon and Orange Bowl champ West Virginia. In all, they?ve knocked off eight teams that were ranked in The Associated Press Top 25, with only three of those games in Baton Rouge.

?The only team I?ve told them not to schedule is the Green Bay Packers,? Miles quipped.

Maybe it?s only appropriate for the Tigers to find one more daunting challenge standing in the way of a championship season ? a great team they?ve already beaten.

?When we take the field, we?ll be an emotional, fired-up football team,? Miles vowed.

Alabama (11-1) didn?t even make the championship game of the Southeastern Conference, but the Crimson Tide managed to sneak back into the national title race when Oklahoma State lost late in the season. In the strangest of twists, Saban?s team will be the one celebrating its second national title in three years with a mere split of the season series with LSU.

Perhaps sensing just how fortuitous Alabama was to get a do-over, Saban wants his players to seize the moment.

?I would like for them to focus on the opportunity, not the pressure part,? he said, ?so that they really are zeroed into the mental practice and the things that when they go out there and play, they?re going to be confident in doing their job the way they need to do it to have success.?

That sort of robotic talk is typical of Saban, who spits out championship teams with assembly line precision, devoid of any flair. While Miles? disjointed grammar and goofy antics make it difficult to take him seriously at times, there are no such issues with Saban. He?s all business, mixed in with a healthy dose of fear and autocracy.

?He?s not like that all the time. He does have a personality,? junior Robert Lester said. ?But he?s hard on us because he wants us to get the job done. On the field, he demands what he wants. By doing so, the guys go out there and try to do it perfect to please him. It works. You can tell, because we?re playing in the national championship game again. When you come here, you?ve got to buy into the program. That?s part of it. We?ve bought in and had success.?

Saban did break character a few times Sunday.

When someone?s cellphone went off in the back of the room with a loud song, the coach interjected, ?Is that a little Al Green? Turn it up, man.? He drew laughs when telling how he grilled anyone who wanted to go out on a date with his daughter. ?None of them ever really answered me,? he said, managing a slight smile. ?They were so intimidated so I never got much good information.?

Saban even revealed the morning routine he has with his wife.

?We get up at 6:15 every day and watch the Weather Channel for about 30 minutes before we start our day,? Saban said. ?I get most of my marching orders in that 30-minute segment of what we should do or how I should do it or why it?s important to do it that way, what I need to talk to the team about. I get coached up very well in that 30-minute segment of the Weather Channel.?

He might want to see if there?s a Kicking Channel.

Alabama likely would have won the first meeting with LSU if not for the dismal performance by its two kickers. Cade Foster botched three field-goal attempts, including a 52-yarder after the Tide went the wrong way with its overtime possession.

Jeremy Shelley also missed.

Given these are two defenses that take it personally when someone gets close to the goal line, Foster and Shelley are likely to be called on again in the championship game. But the Alabama offense hopes to make it a little easier on them this time. Foster?s other misses were from 44 and 50 yards.

Shelley failed to convert on a 49-yarder, far beyond his normal range.

?We?ve got to get them closer. We?ve got to get them kicking extra points. We can?t be going for three points every time,? Alabama lineman William Vlachos said. ?Obviously, it?s not the kickers? fault when we?re throwing them out there for 50-yarders every time. That?s on the offense, that?s on the defense, that?s on everyone else but the kickers. As a team, we?re not putting the blame on them, that?s for sure.?

No one doubts the Alabama defense, which wouldn?t look that out of place in the NFL with 260-pound linebackers Dont?a Hightower and Courtney Upshaw. The Crimson Tide led the nation in every major category, allowing a minuscule 8.8 points a game.

LSU, with not one but two All-American cornerbacks in Tyrann ?Honey Badger? Mathieu and Morris Claiborne, isn?t far behind. The Tigers have allowed the second-fewest points (10.5) and are no lower than sixth in the other three major rankings.

While those who prefer high-scoring games might be flipping around the dial Monday night, these teams aren?t apologizing to anyone. In fact, they give rave reviews to LSU-Alabama I.

?I thought it was beautiful,? Crimson Tide defensive coordinator Kirby Smart said. ?That was grown men out there battling. It was the most physical game since I?ve been at Alabama. It was brutal ? the pounding, all the big hits.?

That game also marked a turning point for LSU quarterback Jordan Jefferson. He began the senior year of his checkered college career with a four-game suspension, punished for his involvement in a bar fight, but took over when Jarrett Lee threw a pair of interceptions against the Tide. Jefferson guided the Tigers to their biggest victory and started the final four games.

Another win over the Tide, he said, ?will make my legacy at LSU that much sweeter.?

Miles veered away from a question about whether one more victory would stamp LSU as one of the best teams in college football history. Jefferson had no such qualms.

?If we do win this game, I think we will go down as the greatest team,? he said.
?

Source: http://www.rrstar.com/sports/x1707728300/-Big-boy-football-expected-for-national-championship

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Mark Harmon Says He's Ready To Tangle With Jamie Lee Curtis On 'NCIS' (omg!)

Mark Harmon, Jamie Lee Curtis -- Getty Images

Jamie Lee Curtis is gearing up to shake things up both romantically and professionally for Mark Harmon's Leroy Jethro Gibbs on "NCIS" later this season.

"We haven't touched on his personal life in awhile and we're about to introduce a woman that's going to get people going," show boss Gary Glasberg told AccessHollywood.com on Wednesday at the Television Critics Association Winter Session 2012, when asked about future plans for the popular character. "Just look for Jamie Lee Curtis."

PLAY IT NOW: Access Hollywood Live: Cote De Pablo On ?NCIS? Success & Her Passionate Screen Kiss Surprise

So far, the actress has signed on for two episodes, and it appears that there will be a some sort of spark between Curtis' unnamed character and Harmon's Gibbs.

"We're prepping that episode right now. She's coming into our world from a very unique government perspective and she will spar with him in ways that people aren't used to," Glasberg told Access.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Mark Harmon & The Stars Of ?NCIS?

The show boss noted it is a case that brings the two characters together, and unlike some of the other women that have come across Gibbs' path - like Lauren Holly's Jenny Shepard - the two won't have a history.

"It's gonna be fun," Glasberg smiled. "She's really excited about that."

When asked about Curtis coming to the "NCIS" fold as a romantic interest by Access , Harmon turned to his boss.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: Getting Better With Age: Stars Over 50!

"A love interest? Is that what I am now with Curtis?" Harmon asked Glasberg.

"There's a spark," Glasberg chimed in.

VIEW THE PHOTOS: The Lovely Ladies Of Primetime Television

Harmon, whose Gibbs' character has led the "NCIS" team for (most of) nine seasons on CBS, said he hasn't shot any scenes with Curtis yet, but he is looking forward to reuniting with his former "Freaky Friday" co-star.

"Jamie's great and I think we're all glad that she's coming to play with us in our little sandbox for a while and she's fortunate to have [Glasberg] creating the character she's playing," he said. "But I look forward to it, absolutely."

Before that happens, "NCIS" has another road to travel when the show celebrates its 200th episode.

Set to air on February 7 on CBS, the special episode will take a look at what could have happened if different decisions were made by the characters over the years.

Glasberg said Holly isn't coming back for the episode, but he smiled and said to watch when a reporter asked if Sasha Alexander (who played Kate) would return for the special.

He also said the 200th episode will feature many eye-catching moments.

"There's very much an 'It's A Wonderful Life' quality to this story," Glasberg said in response to another reporter's question. "People should watch this episode multiple times because there's so much crossing and appearances that happen, that I highly recommend the DVR to be turned on."

The show boss told Access that no one from "JAG," the show which spawned "NCIS," would appear.

"That, I can tell you, isn't happening, but a lot of people that go way back in the history of 'NCIS' [are in the episode]," Glasberg said. "I'm not going to give you names, but there are heroes as well as villains."

Nine seasons in, "NCIS" has battled to the top of the television ratings, and it show no signs of stopping - even threating to take out "Gunsmoke's" record for most years on the air for a dramatic television show (a record shared by "Law & Order").

"We're certainly going to give it a try," Glasberg said during the TCA panel when asked about taking over the record of 20 years.

"I like the idea of riding a horse if we're gonna do that," Harmon chimed in.

"We'll all ride that horse with you," Michael Weatherly (Tony DiNozzo) added.

Copyright 2012 by NBC Universal, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_mark_harmon_says_hes_ready_tangle_jamie_lee025417078/44156119/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/mark-harmon-says-hes-ready-tangle-jamie-lee-025417078.html

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Woman's quest could mean Medal of Honor for dad

Elsie Shemin-Roth flips through a book documenting the heroic acts of her father, William Shemin, during World War I, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012, at her home in Labadie, Mo. Thanks to the tireless effort of his daughter and nearly four decades after his death, Shemin may finally be awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions, but never received, many believe because he was Jewish. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)?

Elsie Shemin-Roth flips through a book documenting the heroic acts of her father, William Shemin, during World War I, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012, at her home in Labadie, Mo. Thanks to the tireless effort of his daughter and nearly four decades after his death, Shemin may finally be awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions, but never received, many believe because he was Jewish. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)?

Elsie Shemin-Roth flips through a book documenting the heroic acts of her father, William Shemin, during World War I, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012, at her home in Labadie, Mo. Thanks to the tireless effort of his daughter and nearly four decades after his death, Shemin may finally be awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions, but never received, many believe because he was Jewish. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)?

Elsie Shemin-Roth holds a photo father, William Shemin, taken during World War I, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012, at her home in Labadie, Mo. Thanks to the tireless effort of his daughter and nearly four decades after his death, Shemin may finally be awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions, but never received, many believe because he was Jewish. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)?

LABADIE, Mo. (AP) ? It was bravery at the highest level: William Shemin defied German machine gun fire to sprint across a World War I battlefield and pull wounded comrades to safety. And he did so no fewer than three times.

Then, with the platoon's senior soldiers wounded or killed, the 19-year-old American took over command of his unit and led it to safety, even after a bullet pierced his helmet and lodged behind an ear.

Yet Shemin never earned the nation's highest military citation, the Medal of Honor ? a result, many suspected, of the fact that he was Jewish at a time when discrimination ran rampant throughout the U.S. military.

Now, nearly four decades after his death, Shemin may finally get that medal, thanks to the tireless efforts of his daughter, whose long quest to see her father decorated also opens the door for other overlooked Jewish veterans of the Great War.

"A wrong has been made right here," said Shemin's daughter, 82-year-old Elsie Shemin-Roth of Labadie, Mo., a small town about 40 miles southwest of St. Louis.

Last month, President Barack Obama signed the National Defense Authorization Act, which contains a tiny provision known as the William Shemin Jewish World War I Veterans Act. It provides for a Pentagon review of Jewish soldiers and sailors who may have been overlooked for the Medal of Honor simply because of their faith.

Shemin's daughter was the driving force behind the measure, an effort that began a decade ago when she read news accounts of a similar law that provided for review of Jews possibly denied recognition in World War II. She was horrified there was no similar mechanism for World War I veterans.

So she began gathering military records, photos, commendations and firsthand accounts of her father's heroism. Eventually, she enlisted the help of her congressman and support from both U.S. senators from Missouri.

Retired Army Col. Erwin Burtnick of Baltimore, who is active in the Jewish War Veterans of the U.S.A., helped get the bill passed. He also reviewed Shemin's war record and will present the case on his behalf to the Pentagon.

"I believe, based upon the criteria of World War I, the level of heroism exhibited by Sgt. Shemin will rise to the Medal of Honor," Burtnick said.

At the time, the enlistment age was 21, but Shemin lied about his age and got in at 18. A tall, strapping athlete who played semi-pro baseball at age 15 and later played college football at Syracuse, Shemin was sent off to France. On a hot day in August 1918, he and his platoon were doing battle near a river in Burgundy.

One of his superiors, Capt. Rubert Purdon, later wrote in support of a Medal of Honor: "With the most utter disregard for his own safety, (Shemin) sprang from his position in his platoon trench, dashed out across the open in full sight of the Germans, who opened and maintained a furious burst of machine gun and rifle fire."

Shemin didn't stop there. Casualties were heavy. Many senior platoon leaders had been killed or badly hurt, so the young sergeant led the group out of harm's way over the next three days.

Along the way, a German bullet hit him in the head, went through the steel helmet and lodged behind his left ear. Shemin eventually collapsed and was hospitalized for three months. The wound left him deaf in that ear.

His heroics did not go unnoticed: Shemin was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation's second-highest military honor.

He eventually left the military, got a degree from Syracuse and started a greenhouse-and-nursery business in the Bronx, where he raised three children.

Shemin was satisfied with the medal he got, his daughter recalled, and only occasionally wondered if he was passed over for the Medal of Honor because of anti-Semitism.

"My father told me there was a lot of discrimination, but he didn't dwell on it," she said.

But once, when another soldier paid a visit, Shemin's daughter was struck by something the man told her.

"He witnessed my father's actions," said Shemin-Roth, who was then 12. "He told me, 'Your father never got the medal he deserved because he was a Jew.' I thought to myself how terrible that was."

Shemin was 78 when he died in 1973. His sense of determination clearly rubbed off on his daughter. Her first husband died when she was just 43 and a mother of five. She went to college and became a nurse.

Since then, she's done volunteer work in war-torn areas around the world. Back in Labadie, she heads a nonprofit animal-rescue group, and her property on a rural hilltop is home to dozens of rescued animals, from cats and dogs to donkeys, geese and fish.

The new law may have arrived too late to recognize many Jewish heroes from World War I. They're all gone now ? the last surviving American World War I veteran died last year. Even many of their children have died or are well into their 80s and 90s, Burtnick said, making it less likely that surviving relatives will have enough documentation to prove worthiness for the Medal of Honor.

So far, Burtnick said, the only veteran whose case will be presented for review is William Shemin.

A decision could come by spring. If the Pentagon approves, the president would present the medal on Shemin's behalf to his daughter in a White House ceremony. Just the thought chokes her up.

"I try so hard to think of what my father would think of this," she said. "He was such a humble man. All I can see in my head is this big handsome man sitting down, tears in his eyes."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-01-10-Jewish%20Veterans/id-bfaebf579114494ba8ad89bfe1b8af93

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High Stakes

Under some circumstances, they can motivate people to vote. Before New York City?s 2005 mayoral election, Fordham University professor Costas Panagopoulos decided to take his curiosity about the effectiveness of signs to the streets. In the only known randomized academic experiment on the subject, Panagopoulos matched 14 pairs of Manhattan voting locations with similar turnout levels in previous elections. In each pair, he randomly designated one location as a control and the other as an experimental treatment: a small group of volunteers were dispatched to a nearby intersection, where they stood for 11 hours on election eve with white 2-foot -by-3-foot signs with ?VOTE TOMORROW? written in blue. Once the polls had closed, Panagopoulos checked the numbers of votes cast in each of the 28 districts, and found that the ones visited by his sign-wavers had 37 percent turnout, nearly four points higher than those that didn?t.? Panagopoulos attributed that boost to the value of a quick reminder and speculated that seeing one?s neighbors publicly promoting the cause might instill a sense of social pressure to vote. That?s why Panagopoulos designed his experiment to measure if signs could change behavior on the boulevard, rather than just inspiring an already convivial small-town Main Street. ?Detecting environmental effects in New York City, the epitome of urban anomie, would produce more convincing evidence,? Panagopoulos wrote.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=0a92a7c2cab846902e713537223cc9d6

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

One man?s Baseball Hall of Fame ballot

Years from now ? shoot, one year from now ? we?ll look back at this 2012 Baseball Hall of Fame election and regard it as the calm before the storm.

Because next year, we?ll welcome Barry Bonds, Roger

Clemens, Mike

Piazza, Curt Schilling and Sammy Sosa to the Cooperstown conversation. Good Lord. As Bill Murray

said in ?Ghostbusters?: ?Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together ... mass hysteria!?

Having written that, every ballot generates a great amount of chatter on the yakosphere, and we?re sure to have some fierce debates today, when we learn whether anyone received the required 75 percent of the Baseball Writers Association of America voting.

(For what it?s worth, my bet is that only Barry Larkin makes the cut.)

I?ll list and explain my ballot alphabetically:

1) Jeff Bagwell. One of the dominant hitters of his time. Did he use illegal performance-enhancing drugs? First of all, there?s no tangible evidence. Second of all, I don?t care.

Until 2004, there were no collectively bargained rules covering steroids and such. My job as a voter is to recognize the laws that existed, not enforce retroactive, selective jurisprudence.

2) Larkin. He and Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith were the NL?s top shortstops of the 1980s and 1990s, with Larkin?s package featuring more offense and less defense than The Wizard of Oz?s.

3) Edgar Martinez. The Mariners? ultra-respected slugger was such a magnificent hitter that he should overcome his lack of defensive contributions.

4) Mark McGwire. His home runs (583) and on-base percentage (.394) qualify him, outside of his extracurricular activities. As for his confessed illegal PED usage, as with Bagwell, it?s not relevant. It isn?t my responsibility to ?protect? the ?clean? players from what occurred.

5) Rafael Palmeiro. Palmeiro differs from McGwire because he failed a test for illegal PEDs. In 2005, he made a decision with potential consequences, consequences that his union negotiated.

For my evaluative purposes, this transgression is damaging but not disqualifying. I have room for him on my ballot this year. I didn?t last year, and I might not next year.

6) Tim Raines. His sharing of an era with Rickey Henderson, perhaps baseball?s all-time best leadoff hitter, has unfairly diminished the Raines love. He followed a dominant start to his career with a productive second half, putting him over the top.

7) Alan Trammell. The Tigers shortstop doesn?t get the same support as contemporaries Cal Ripken Jr. and Robin Yount because he didn?t reach the magical 3,000-hit mark. But Trammell enjoyed enough highs in his run to merit inclusion.

8) Larry Walker. Undoubtedly, spending so much time at hitter-friendly Coors Field helped inflate the outfielder?s numbers. Yet even when you normalize his numbers to account for the ballpark?s help, Walker still looks excellent.

Source: http://www.postandcourier.com/news/2012/jan/09/one-mans-baseball-hall-fame-ballot/

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