Saturday, December 31, 2011

Florida woman faces charges after crash

Thursday December 29, 2011

DORSET -- A Miami, Fla., woman is facing charges after police say she crashed her vehicle Tuesday on Dorset West Road.

State police said they cited Cornelia Lowerre, 24, with leaving the scene of a crash, gross and careless vehicle operation, and driving under the influence of alcohol. She is scheduled to appear in Bennington Superior Court Criminal Division on Jan. 17.

According to police the crash occurred around 6:30 p.m. Lowerre?s vehicle went off the road and hit a concrete barrier. A witness told police they saw Lowerre?s Jeep Cherokee was being driven too fast for the wet road conditions.

Police said Lowerre was located several hours after the crash was discovered and processed for DUI at the Manchester Police Station.

-- Keith Whitcomb Jr.

Source: http://www.benningtonbanner.com/ci_19643044?source=rss_viewed

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Pigeons match monkeys in abstract counting skills

They are not renowned for their brainpower, but pigeons may be as smart as monkeys when it comes to arithmeticMovie Camera.

Three pigeons were shown a computer screen displaying images with one, two or three shapes and trained to list the shapes in ascending order. To receive a reward of wheat, the birds learned to peck the images in the correct order.

Moreover, after they had learned this skill, the birds could perform the task with pairs of images containing anything from one to nine objects.

Two rhesus monkeys were the first non-human animals to perform this task in an experiment in 1998. The pigeons are the first non-primates to manage it.

"We show they can apply what they have learned with a small set of numbers ? from one to three ? to numbers they've not seen before," says lead researcher Damian Scarf of the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. "The learning and applying of abstract numerical rules is not unique to primates."

Bird brains

"Their performance was indistinguishable from that of the two rhesus monkeys," adds Scarf.

"The machinery required for numerical competence is present in the pigeon brain ? a brain much different in structure from our own," says Scarf.

"Evidence from non-mammalian vertebrates, such as birds, is particularly valuable for examining the evolutionary history of cognitive processes," says Rosa Rugani of the University of Trento in Italy, who in 2010 showed that chicks could count from left to right.

Journal reference: Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1213357

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Friday, December 30, 2011

US teen killed in Mexico heading to see girlfriend

An American teenager who was found dead on Christmas Eve in Mexico had gone to see his girlfriend the day he died and didn't tell relatives, perhaps fearing they wouldn't let him go, according to Mexican prosecutors' documents obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press.

The charred remains of 18-year-old Alexis Uriel Marron of Rolling Meadows, Illinois were found along with the bodies of two friends in the trunk of a burned-out car in the western state of Michoacan. The car belonged to one of the friends.

Two uncles identified Marron through crowns on his teeth and clothing that hadn't burned, the documents said.

The prosecutors' office said the car holding the remains of the three young men was found Saturday on the side of a rural road in Michoacan, a Mexican state that has been plagued in recent years by violence linked to Mexico's drug trafficking trade.

Prosecutors were looking into robbery as a possible motive because none of the three men's possessions were found in the car. But the area has also been the scene of bloody turf battles between drug gangs. The Knights Templar and Jalisco New Generation cartels are believed to be active in the area.

Marron was a U.S. citizen, according to the documents, but his family was from a town in the area called Quiringuicharo. The relatives said Marron, a suburban Chicago high school student, arrived in Mexico on Dec. 3 to celebrate the year-end holidays and was staying with an uncle.

He left the house on Dec. 23, wearing a blue checked shirt, with the intention of visiting his girlfriend, who lived in the neighboring state of Jalisco. Another uncle said he called Marron Friday afternoon to tell him to collect money his father had sent him from the U.S.

Marron replied that he was on the road, and the signal was bad, according to the documents.

When he hadn't returned later in the evening, the family began to worry.

"I thought that he had gone without telling us for fear that we wouldn't give him permission," Jose Avalos Reyes, one of the uncles, told prosecutors.

The cousin of one of the other victims said he called Marron's girlfriend. She told him she had been expecting him and his friends but they had never arrived.

Family members reported the disappearances to local authorities and the charred remains were discovered the next day. The uncles told prosecutors that Marron did not do drugs.

Word of the death spread quickly to the Chicago area, which has a large population of Mexicans and Mexican Americans with roots in Michoacan. Family members were shocked, calling him a good kid.

Friends set up two memorial Facebook pages, a YouTube picture tribute and held a memorial Tuesday evening. Dozens attended in the Chicago suburb of Mount Prospect. They carried candles, flowers and balloons. Some quietly prayed in Spanish.

He was remembered as an athlete, a positive person who was always smiling and loved spending time with family.

Marron's cousin, Daniela Zendejas, told reporters that she considered him to be a brother. "He loved his nieces. And he didn't have time to get to one of them, to see her grow," she told reporters. "And now he's gone."

Another memorial was planned for next week when students were scheduled to return after the holiday break to Rolling Meadows High School, where Marron was a student. They were urged to wear red, Marron's favorite color.

"Wear red to remember our friend ... RIP Alexis Marron," one of the Facebook tributes read. "We are also all meeting out by his locker in the morning, bring pictures if you'd like or post notes or anything you'd like on his locker. We will all come together in remembrance..."

The U.S. State Department said the agency was working with U.S. Embassy officials to get more information. Mexican Consulate officials in Chicago said they were aware of reports of Marron's death and were ready to help family if requested.

The other two victims were identified as Mexican men aged 21 and 24. All three were from, or had family in Quiringuicharo.

Earlier in December, two other bodies were found in a burned-out vehicle on the same stretch of road. The victims have been identified as two Mexico City residents, but there was no immediate information on the motive in those killings either.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/28/2564705/us-teen-killed-in-mexico-heading.html

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NM governor proposes $4 million for college prep

Posted at: 12/28/2011 6:35 PM
By: Heather Mills, KOB Eyewitness News 4

Governor Susana Martinez said she wants more students to graduate high school and go on to college.

Wednesday afternoon she announced a plan that would add more than $4 million to the education fund.

Governor Martinez plans to ask lawmakers for that money in the upcoming legislative session. Here's how it breaks down:

- About $700,000 would go toward AP programs across the state. It would also allow all 10th grade students to take the PSAT for free.

- A million would be used for students enrolled in dual credit programs, for books and instructional material. Those programs allow students to earn high school and college credit at the same time.

- The bulk of the funds would go toward short-cycle assessments.

"They're called short-cycle assessments. They're offered throughout the year and they give a teacher an indication of the progress students are making or the lack thereof," said Education Secretary Hanna Skandera.

"Daily this happens so the teacher is able to assess the progress from one day to the next, one week to the next, etc," Martinez added.

The goal is to individualize education and not let any children slip through the cracks. Governor Martinez said some school districts across New Mexico already do short-cycle assessments. That means any funds they previously put toward the tests could go elsewhere.

Skandera said $27 million is allocated toward education each year. The funds for this proposal would come from a small budget surplus for the upcoming year.

Source: http://www.kob.com/article/stories/s2431256.shtml?cat=504

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

The iPhone 4S Is Finally Cleared For Launch In Mainland China

iphone-4Here in the States we've been chatting it up with Siri on the iPhone 4S for months, but the folks over in mainland China — the biggest mobile market in the world, mind you — have yet to hear that 42 is the meaning of life. The 4S launched in Hong Kong just last month, and since then we've heard that it would show up on the mainland in December. People's Daily is now reporting that a phone with the model number A1431 has passed the final hurdle in its Chinese certification. That's the same model number that Apple used to get a network entry permit for the 4S from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology on December 6, so all signs point to iPhone.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/MO38aglTI1s/

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Automotive Restore Handbook would make repairing of an motor ...

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The basic car provider procedures, pointers for fix and comprehensive illustrated Automotive Wiring Diagrams are imperative and most important element of this Automotive Fix Manual.

Source: http://arturososa.com/?p=564

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

'Anonymous' hackers target US security think tank (AP)

LONDON ? The loose-knit hacking movement "Anonymous" claimed Sunday to have stolen thousands of credit card numbers and other personal information belonging to clients of U.S.-based security think tank Stratfor. One hacker said the goal was to pilfer funds from individuals' accounts to give away as Christmas donations, and some victims confirmed unauthorized transactions linked to their credit cards.

Anonymous boasted of stealing Stratfor's confidential client list, which includes entities ranging from Apple to the U.S. Air Force to the Miami Police Department, and mining it for more than 4,000 credit card numbers, passwords and home addresses.

"Not so private and secret anymore?" the group taunted in a message on Twitter, promising that the attack on Stratfor was just the beginning of a Christmas-inspired assault on a long list of targets.

Anonymous said the client list it posted was a small slice of the 200 gigabytes worth of plunder it stole from Stratfor and promised more leaks. It said it was able to get the credit details in part because Stratfor didn't bother encrypting them ? an easy-to-avoid blunder which, if true, would be a major embarrassment for any security-related company.

Austin, Texas-based Stratfor provides political, economic and military analysis to help clients reduce risk, according to a description on its YouTube page. It charges subscribers for its reports and analysis, delivered through the web, emails and videos.

Lt. Col. John Dorrian, public affairs officer for the Air Force, said that "for obvious reasons" the Air Force doesn't discuss specific vulnerabilities, threats or responses to them.

"The Air Force will continue to monitor the situation and, as always, take appropriate action as necessary to protect Air Force networks and information," he said in an email.

Miami Police Department spokesman Sgt. Freddie Cruz Jr. said that he could not confirm that the agency was a client of Stratfor, and he said he had not received any information about a security breach involving the police department.

It soon became clear that proprietary information about the companies and government agencies that subscribe to Stratfor's newsletters did not appear to be at any significant risk, and that the main threat was posed to individual employees.

Hours after publishing what it claimed was Stratfor's client list, Anonymous tweeted a link to encrypted files online with the names, addresses and account details.

"Not as many as you expected? Worry not, fellow pirates and robin hoods. These are just the "A"s," read a message posted online that encouraged readers to download a file of the hacked information.

It also linked to images online that it suggested were receipts for charitable donations made by the group manipulating the credit card data it stole.

"Thank you! Defense Intelligence Agency," read the text above one image that appeared to show a transaction summary indicating that an agency employee's information was used to donate $250 to a non-profit.

One receipt ? to the American Red Cross ? had Allen Barr's name on it.

Barr, of Austin, Texas, recently retired from the Texas Department of Banking and said he discovered last Friday that a total of $700 had been spent from his account. Barr, who has spent more than a decade dealing with cybercrime at banks, said five transactions were made in total.

"It was all charities, the Red Cross, CARE, Save the Children. So when the credit card company called my wife she wasn't sure whether I was just donating," said Barr, who wasn't aware until a reporter with the AP called that his information had been compromised when Stratfor's computers were hacked.

"It made me feel terrible. It made my wife feel terrible. We had to close the account."

Stratfor said in an email to members that it had suspended its servers and email after learning that its website had been hacked.

"We have reason to believe that the names of our corporate subscribers have been posted on other web sites," said the email, passed on to The Associated Press by subscribers. "We are diligently investigating the extent to which subscriber information may have been obtained."

The email, signed by Stratfor Chief Executive George Friedman, said the company is "working closely with law enforcement to identify who is behind the breach."

"Stratfor's relationship with its members and, in particular, the confidentiality of their subscriber information, are very important to Stratfor and me," Friedman wrote.

Repeated calls to Stratfor went unanswered Sunday and an answering machine thanked callers for contacting the "No. 1 source for global intelligence." Stratfor's website was down, with a banner saying "site is currently undergoing maintenance."

Wishing everyone a "Merry LulzXMas" ? a nod to its spinoff hacking group Lulz Security ? Anonymous also posted a link on Twitter to a site containing the email, phone number and credit number of a U.S. Homeland Security employee.

The employee, Cody Sultenfuss, said he had no warning before his details were posted.

"They took money I did not have," he told the AP in a series of emails, which did not specify the amount taken. "I think 'Why me?' I am not rich."

One member of the hacking group, who uses the handle AnonymousAbu on Twitter, claimed that more than 90,000 credit cards from law enforcement, the intelligence community and journalists ? "corporate/exec accounts of people like Fox" news ? had been hacked and used to "steal a million dollars" and make donations.

It was impossible to verify where credit card details were used. Fox News was not on the excerpted list of Stratfor members posted online, but other media organizations including MSNBC and Al-Jazeera English appeared in the file.

Anonymous warned it has "enough targets lined up to extend the fun fun fun of LulzXmas through the entire next week."

The group has previously claimed responsibility for attacks on companies such as Visa, MasterCard and PayPal, as well as others in the music industry and the Church of Scientology.

____________

Associated Press writers Jennifer Kway in Miami, Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston, Texas and Daniel Wagner in Washington, D.C. contributed to this report.

_____________

Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_hi_te/eu_hacker_christmas

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Decades later, a Cold War secret is revealed (AP)

DANBURY, Conn. ? For more than a decade they toiled in the strange, boxy-looking building on the hill above the municipal airport, the building with no windows (except in the cafeteria), the building filled with secrets.

They wore protective white jumpsuits, and had to walk through air-shower chambers before entering the sanitized "cleanroom" where the equipment was stored.

They spoke in code.

Few knew the true identity of "the customer" they met in a smoke-filled, wood-paneled conference room where the phone lines were scrambled. When they traveled, they sometimes used false names.

At one point in the 1970s there were more than 1,000 people in the Danbury area working on The Secret. And though they worked long hours under intense deadlines, sometimes missing family holidays and anniversaries, they could tell no one ? not even their wives and children ? what they did.

They were engineers, scientists, draftsmen and inventors ? "real cloak-and-dagger guys," says Fred Marra, 78, with a hearty laugh.

He is sitting in the food court at the Danbury Fair mall, where a group of retired co-workers from the former Perkin-Elmer Corp. gather for a weekly coffee. Gray-haired now and hard of hearing, they have been meeting here for 18 years. They while away a few hours nattering about golf and politics, ailments and grandchildren. But until recently, they were forbidden to speak about the greatest achievement of their professional lives.

"Ah, Hexagon," Ed Newton says, gleefully exhaling the word that stills feels almost treasonous to utter in public.

It was dubbed "Big Bird" and it was considered the most successful space spy satellite program of the Cold War era. From 1971 to 1986 a total of 20 satellites were launched, each containing 60 miles of film and sophisticated cameras that orbited the earth snapping vast, panoramic photographs of the Soviet Union, China and other potential foes. The film was shot back through the earth's atmosphere in buckets that parachuted over the Pacific Ocean, where C-130 Air Force planes snagged them with grappling hooks.

The scale, ambition and sheer ingenuity of Hexagon KH-9 was breathtaking. The fact that 19 out of 20 launches were successful (the final mission blew up because the booster rockets failed) is astonishing.

So too is the human tale of the 45-year-old secret that many took to their graves.

Hexagon was declassified in September. Finally Marra, Newton and others can tell the world what they worked on all those years at "the office."

"My name is Al Gayhart and I built spy satellites for a living," announced the 64-year-old retired engineer to the stunned bartender in his local tavern as soon as he learned of the declassification. He proudly repeats the line any chance he gets.

"It was intensely demanding, thrilling and the greatest experience of my life," says Gayhart, who was hired straight from college and was one of the youngest members of the Hexagon "brotherhood".

He describes the white-hot excitement as teams pored over hand-drawings and worked on endless technical problems, using "slide-rules and advanced degrees" (there were no computers), knowing they were part of such a complicated space project. The intensity would increase as launch deadlines loomed and on the days when "the customer" ? the CIA and later the Air Force ? came for briefings. On at least one occasion, former President George H.W. Bush, who was then CIA director, flew into Danbury for a tour of the plant.

Though other companies were part of the project ? Eastman Kodak made the film and Lockheed Corp. built the satellite ? the cameras and optics systems were all made at Perkin-Elmer, then the biggest employer in Danbury.

"There were many days we arrived in the dark and left in the dark," says retired engineer Paul Brickmeier, 70.

He recalls the very first briefing on Hexagon after Perkin-Elmer was awarded the top secret contract in 1966. Looking around the room at his 30 or so colleagues, Brickmeier thought, "How on Earth is this going to be possible?"

One thing that made it possible was a hiring frenzy that attracted the attention of top engineers from around the Northeast. Perkin-Elmer also commissioned a new 270,000-square-foot building for Hexagon ? the boxy one on the hill.

Waiting for clearance was a surreal experience as family members, neighbors and former employers were grilled by the FBI, and potential hires were questioned about everything from their gambling habits to their sexuality.

"They wanted to make sure we couldn't be bribed," Marra says.

Clearance could take up to a year. During that time, employees worked on relatively minor tasks in a building dubbed "the mushroom tank" ? so named because everyone was in the dark about what they had actually been hired for.

Joseph Prusak, 76, spent six months in the tank. When he was finally briefed on Hexagon, Prusak, who had worked as an engineer on earlier civil space projects, wondered if he had made the biggest mistake of his life.

"I thought they were crazy," he says. "They envisaged a satellite that was 60-foot long and 30,000 pounds and supplying film at speeds of 200 inches per second. The precision and complexity blew my mind."

Several years later, after numerous successful launches, he was shown what Hexagon was capable of ? an image of his own house in suburban Fairfield.

"This was light years before Google Earth," Prusak said. "And we could clearly see the pool in my backyard."

There had been earlier space spy satellites ? Corona and Gambit. But neither had the resolution or sophistication of Hexagon, which took close-range pictures of Soviet missiles, submarine pens and air bases, even entire battalions on war exercises.

According to the National Reconnaissance Office, a single Hexagon frame covered a ground distance of 370 nautical miles, about the distance from Washington to Cincinnati. Early Hexagons averaged 124 days in space, but as the satellites became more sophisticated, later missions lasted twice as long.

"At the height of the Cold War, our ability to receive this kind of technical intelligence was incredible," says space historian Dwayne Day. "We needed to know what they were doing and where they were doing it, and in particular if they were preparing to invade Western Europe. Hexagon created a tremendous amount of stability because it meant American decision makers were not operating in the dark."

Among other successes, Hexagon is credited with providing crucial information for the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks between the United States and the Soviet Union in the 1970s.

From the outset, secrecy was a huge concern, especially in Danbury, where the intense activity of a relatively small company that had just been awarded a massive contract (the amount was not declassified) made it obvious that something big was going on. Inside the plant, it was impossible to disguise the gigantic vacuum thermal chamber where cameras were tested in extreme conditions that simulated space. There was also a "shake, rattle and roll room" to simulate conditions during launch.

"The question became, how do you hide an elephant?" a National Reconnaissance Office report stated at the time. It decided on a simple response: "What elephant?" Employees were told to ignore any questions from the media, and never confirm the slightest detail about what they worked on.

But it was impossible to conceal the launches at Vandenberg Air Force base in California, and aviation magazines made several references to "Big Bird." In 1975, a "60 Minutes" television piece on space reconnaissance described an "Alice in Wonderland" world, where American and Soviet intelligence officials knew of each other's "eyes in the sky" ? and other nations did, too ? but no one confirmed the programs or spoke about them publicly.

For employees at Perkin-Elmer, the vow of secrecy was considered a mark of honor.

"We were like the guys who worked on the first atom bomb," said Oscar Berendsohn, 87, who helped design the optics system. "It was more than a sworn oath. We had been entrusted with the security of the country. What greater trust is there?"

Even wives ? who couldn't contact their husbands or know of their whereabouts when they were traveling ? for the most part accepted the secrecy. They knew the jobs were highly classified. They knew not to ask questions.

"We were born into the World War II generation," says Linda Bronico, whose husband, Al, told her only that he was building test consoles and cables. "We all knew the slogan `loose lips sink ships.'"

And Perkin-Elmer was considered a prized place to work, with good salaries and benefits, golf and softball leagues, lavish summer picnics (the company would hire an entire amusement park for employees and their families) and dazzling children's Christmas parties.

"We loved it," Marra says. "It was our life."

For Marra and his former co-workers, sharing that life and their long-held secret has unleashed a jumble of emotions, from pride to nostalgia to relief ? and in some cases, grief.

The city's mayor, Mark Boughton, only discovered that his father had worked on Hexagon when he was invited to speak at an October reunion ceremony on the grounds of the former plant. His father, Donald Boughton, also a former mayor, was too ill to attend and died a few days later.

Boughton said for years he and his siblings would pester his father ? a draftsman ? about what he did. Eventually they realized that the topic was off limits.

"Learning about Hexagon makes me view him completely differently," Boughton says. "He was more than just my Dad with the hair-trigger temper and passionate opinions about everything. He was a Cold War warrior doing something incredibly important for our nation."

For Betty Osterweis the ceremony was bittersweet, too. Not only did she learn about the mystery of her late husband's professional life. She also learned about his final moments.

"All these years," she said, "I had wondered what exactly had happened" on that terrible day in 1987 when she received a phone call saying her 53-year-old husband, Henry Osterweis, a contract negotiator, had suffered a heart attack on the job. At the reunion she met former co-workers who could offer some comfort that the end had been quick.

Standing in the grounds of her late husband's workplace, listening to the tributes, her son and daughter and grandchildren by her side, Osterweis was overwhelmed by the enormity of it all ? the sacrifice, the secrecy, the pride.

"To know that this was more than just a company selling widgets ... that he was negotiating contracts for our country's freedom and security," she said.

"What a secret. And what a legacy."

___

Helen O'Neill is a New York-based national writer for The Associated Press. She can be reached at features(at)ap.org.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_us/us_the_secret

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U.N. passes leaner 2012-2013 budget amid economic turmoil (Reuters)

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) ? The U.N. General Assembly on Saturday approved a 5 percent decrease in the United Nations' budget for 2012-2013 over the previous two-year period, only the second time in 50 years that the world body has slashed its spending.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon praised the 193-nation General Assembly for reducing costs at a time when governments around the world are cutting expenditures and implementing austerity measures in response to the global financial crisis.

"I am here to thank you for solidifying, with me, our compact to make the most of our resources ... to cut fat ... and to continue fulfilling every one of the critical global mandates entrusted to the United Nations," Ban said in the written text of a speech distributed by his press department.

The deal for a $5.15 billion budget, which compares with $5.41 billion spent in 2010-2011, came after marathon negotiations that ran all night from Friday into Saturday. A deal was not clinched until Saturday morning.

As in past years, the biennial budget negotiations were marked by a tussle between poor countries seeking to raise U.N. development spending and major developed countries - the biggest budget contributors - trying to rein the figures in as they struggle to reduce expenditures in their own national budgets.

U.S. Deputy Ambassador Joe Torsella, who focuses on U.N. management and reform at the U.S. mission, welcomed what he said was "a budget for a strengthened, more efficient, and more effective United Nations."

He said in a statement that the average increase in U.N. biennial budgets over the last two decades has been 5 percent. In 1998 the General Assembly cut the U.N. budget compared to the previous two years, the only other time it had done so in the past 50 years, Torsella said.

The so-called core U.N. budget voted through on Saturday does not include peacekeeping, currently running at over $7 billion a year and approved in separate negotiations, or the costs of several major U.N. agencies funded by voluntary contributions from member states.

Critics of the United Nations, especially in the United States, have long charged that it is a bloated and sometimes corrupt bureaucracy that wastes taxpayers' money.

Supporters of the world body say it is cheap at the price.

Torsella said the new budget would help create a "more effective United Nations that saves the American taxpayers millions of dollars and sets the United Nations on the path of real fiscal discipline and continued reform."

The United States, which pays 22 percent of the U.N. budget, is the biggest financial contributor to the United Nations.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

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

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Monday, December 26, 2011

MustafaMir: RT @DeirQaddis: #ChristmasIsCancelled I told Santa that Israel wants Peace. He died laughing. #XmasInPalestine

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#ChristmasIsCancelled I told Santa that Israel wants Peace. He died laughing. #XmasInPalestine DeirQaddis

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Source: http://twitter.com/MustafaMir/statuses/150629655576199168

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New Ford Taurus Clinton IL 61727


Ford Taurus SEL

Discerning drivers will appreciate the 2012 Ford Taurus. This 4 door, 5 passenger sedan offers the features and options for which you've been searching. It features an automatic transmission, front-wheel drive, and a 3.5 liter 6 cylinder engine. Top features include remote keyless entry, front and rear reading lights, variably intermittent wipers, a trip computer, an automatic dimming rear-view mirror, heated door mirrors, power windows, and cruise control. Ford also prioritized safety and security by including: dual front impact airbags with occupant sensing airbag, head curtain airbags, traction control, brake assist, ignition disabling, and 4 wheel disc brakes with ABS. Electronic stability control ensures solid grip atop the road surface, no matter how challenging the driving conditions. We offer competitive pricing, and the area's best shopping experience. Please don't hesitate to give us a call.

Source: http://www.anderson-ford.com/blog/video/2011/december/24/2012-Ford-Taurus-Clinton-IL-4e689d150a0d048d01eae775983f6ba9.htm?locale=en_US

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

No Joke: Pigeons Ace a Simple Math Test

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116291/No_Joke__Pigeons_Ace_a_Simple_Math_Test

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Nerf Guns Provide the Cutest Way to Pull Your Tooth [Video]

Videos of semi-terrified kids having their teeth yanked by others in crazy ways are a dime a dozen. That's why we love this fearless and adorable kid who yanks his own tooth with a Nerf bow. Nice technique, baller kid! [via Wimp] More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/JzXli85OHaA/nerf-guns-provide-the-cutest-way-to-pull-your-tooth

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

AG sues sham police charity (Offthekuff)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/177861980?client_source=feed&format=rss

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MikeBermanYNN: This just in: the Hurley's can coach. RT @ESPNU: Biggest #CBB upset of the year? Wagner College has knocked off #13 Pittsburgh 59-54.

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This just in: the Hurley's can coach. RT @ESPNU: Biggest #CBB upset of the year? Wagner College has knocked off #13 Pittsburgh 59-54. MikeBermanYNN

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Source: http://twitter.com/MikeBermanYNN/statuses/150414115897225218

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NEC outs pair of displays that tell you their carbon footprint, how economically awesome they are

So, what's so special about NEC's new 24-inch MultiSync LED backlit displays? Well, these nifty NECs have two ECO modes to help keep power consumption to a minimum, plus a feature that lets users to track the amount of carbon dioxide created by the electricity they use. It also lets you input how much you pay for all those electrons to track just how much the monitors contribute to your monthly utility bill. Otherwise, these are fairly unremarkable 250-nit, 1920 x 1200 panels with DisplayPort, HDMI, DVI-D, and USB 2.0 connections. The eco-friendly displays are available from NEC Japan, but the company's not saying how much they cost. One thing we do know is that they'll be upping the smug quotient in the land of the rising sun. See what that could lead to in the video after the break -- warning: may not appeal to those who hate funny things.

Continue reading NEC outs pair of displays that tell you their carbon footprint, how economically awesome they are

NEC outs pair of displays that tell you their carbon footprint, how economically awesome they are originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Dec 2011 13:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Akihabara News  |  sourceNEC (translated)  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/1qtwG_yTyZc/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Baghdad blasts kill 57 as Iraq tensions rise (Reuters)

BAGHDAD (Reuters) ? A rash of bombings hit Baghdad on Thursday, killing at least 57 people in the first big attack on Iraq's capital since a crisis between its Shi'ite Muslim-led government and Sunni rivals erupted days after the U.S. troop withdrawal.

The apparently coordinated bombings were the first sign of rising violence after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki moved to sideline two Sunni Muslim leaders, just a few years after sectarian bloodletting drove Iraq to the edge of civil war.

At least 18 people were killed when a suicide bomber driving an ambulance detonated the vehicle near a government office in the Karrada district, sending up a dust cloud and scattering car parts into a kindergarten, police and health officials said.

"We heard the sound of a car driving, then car brakes, then a huge explosion, all our windows and doors are blown out, black smoke filled our apartment," said Maysoun Kamal, who lives in a Karrada compound.

In total at least 57 people were killed and 179 were wounded in more than ten explosions in Baghdad, an Iraqi health ministry spokesman said.

Two roadside bombs struck the southwestern Amil district, killing at least seven people and wounding 21 others, while a car bomb blew up in a Shi'ite neighbourhood in Doura in the south, killing three people and wounding six, police said.

More bombs ripped into the central Alawi area, Shaab and Shula in the north, all mainly Shi'ite areas, and a roadside bomb killed one and wounded five near the Sunni neighbourhood of Adhamiya, police said.

Violence in Iraq has ebbed since the height of sectarian violence in 2006-2007, when suicide bombers and hit squads targeted Sunni and Shi'ite communities in attacks that killed thousands of people.

Iraq is still fighting a stubborn, lower-grade insurgency with Sunni Islamists tied to al Qaeda and Shi'ite militias, who U.S. officials say are backed by Iran, still staging daily attacks.

U.S. TROOPS OUT ONLY DAYS AGO

The last few thousand American troops pulled out of Iraq over the weekend, nearly nine years after the invasion that toppled Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein. Many Iraqis had said they feared a return to sectarian violence without a U.S. military buffer.

Just days after the withdrawal, Iraq's fragile power-sharing government is grappling with its worst turmoil since its formation a year ago. Shi'ite, Sunni and Kurdish blocs share out government posts in a unwieldy system that has been impaired by political infighting since it began.

Maliki this week sought the arrest of Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi on charges he organised assassinations and bombings, and he asked parliament to fire his Sunni deputy Saleh al-Mutlaq after he likened Maliki to Saddam.

The moves against the senior Sunni leaders are stirring sectarian tensions because Sunnis fear the prime minister wants to consolidate Shi'ite control.

Iraq's Sunni minority have felt marginalised since the rise of the Shi'ite majority in Iraq after the 2003 invasion. Many Sunnis feel they have been shunted aside in the power-sharing agreement that Washington touts as a young democracy.

Thursday's attacks represented the first major assault in Baghdad since November when three bombs exploded in a commercial district and another blast hit the city's western outskirts on Saturday, killing at least 13 people.

In October, bomb attacks on a busy commercial street in northeastern Baghdad killed at least 30, with scores wounded.

(Additional reporting by Aseel Kami; Writing by Patrick Markey and Rania El Gamal; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111222/wl_nm/us_iraq_violence

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Eden Wood, Toddlers & Tiaras Legend, Lands Own Reality Show


In a sign that the apocalypse really may take place in 2012, Toddlers & Tiaras standout Eden Wood has just inked a deal for her own reality show on the Logo network.

According to WetPaint, the gay-lesbian channel that brings us hits like RuPaul’s Drag Race and Bad Sex is set to film an as-yet-untitled reality series starring Eden, 6.

“The show will document Eden and her mother’s move from their Arkansas hometown to the Big Apple,” the website claims, citing a source close to the pint-size star.

“So far, the four main characters are Eden, her mom, her manager, and her agent. Right now, they’re set to start filming at the very beginning of 2012.” Characters.

When contacted about the Eden Wood reality show, a representative for Logo said the network does not comment on stories about shows possibly in development.

But it's totes on. Whoop dee doo. Don't everyone celebrate at once.

Should Toddlers & Tiaras be pulled off the air?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/eden-wood-toddlers-and-tiaras-legend-lands-own-reality-show/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Video: Cramer: Wait for next big dip to get into market



>>> the dow gained 337 points on tuesday. its best day of the month. what was behind the surge and will it last? jim cramer is the host of " mad money " on cnbc. he joins us here. jim , good morning.

>> good morning, carl .

>> a lot of explanations for what happened yesterday. there was some decent news out of europe , not bad news out of housing. what do you think happened?

>> i think housing is very important, it's been in the doldrums for such a long time, carl . the idea that we're starting to build more apartments, very strong. lots of jobs created by that kind of building. didn't hurt that europe was off the front page for a few minutes.

>> yeah, your paint has been lately that if you can take europe and make it a second-page story, the strength of the american economy is actually pretty good, relative to other economies.

>> the plumbing getting better, retail sales getting better, auto sales getting better. the stock market -- the dow jones average , best in the world. people forget that we're the only ones up.

>> so days like this, are there more to follow?

>> i think there could be. i think europe is working on a real solution that will make it so things get better which allows us to shine. carl , we are in better shape than almost any economy in the world.

>> let's drill down on housing real quick. best in about a year-and-a-half. people have been waiting for a bottom in housing for a very long time. is this it?

>> i think that 2012 could lead to one. the building that we have seen is apartment complexes, not single-family homes, but at least there's some demand. carl , there has been no demand, despite how low mortgage rates are. this could be a turn.

>> this month alone, monday was the lowest level for the dow for december. tuesday the highest. so are people safe jumping in, if it's going to be this volatile.

>> i think they should wait for the next big decline. they seem to give them to us all of the time. but go with safe stocks with good dividends. don't go for high-flyers. they may be finished for now.

>> 2012 . of do you see any of this crazy roller coaster action smoothing out at all?

>> no. i think that this is the new normal. that said, i keep pointing out that we are stronger than others. that's going to start bringing money to this country from overseas.

>> we should point out, though, you're still very discouraged about europe , the way they have handled their problems, and to a degree, that's going to hold our markets down somewhat, right?

>> every time we hear something negative, we will give up the gains. monday was bad, negative europe . tuesday, off the front page , we go up. it will be ying-yang for all of 2012 , too, until they offer substantive solutions to europe . they're not as smart as we thought.

>> it's still the most instructive i've heard you lately on stocks.

>> housing means a lot to this economy, because it puts people to work. we've got to put people to work, carl . and had is a sign that maybe it's happening.

>> jim , see you back at the office. as a reminder, you can catch jim on " mad money ," weeknights at 6:00 and 11:00 eastern time on

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45749369/

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Monday, December 19, 2011

"Who's Still Standing?" Israel puts mark on U.S. TV (omg!)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - NBC's new quiz show "Who's Still Standing?" has contestants dropping through the floor, and the burgeoning Israeli TV industry whooping with delight.

The fast-paced trivia game, which sends losers falling through trap doors, makes its U.S. debut in a week-long series of shows this coming Monday, December 19, as the first Israeli reality program to find its way to the United States.

Judging by the in-roads being made by Israeli producers and creators on television around the world, it won't be last.

Twenty years after Israeli television broke away from its one channel model of mostly news, and British or U.S. drama imports, young producers are making their mark internationally with original programming often made on shoestring budgets.

"It has been a quick learning process," Tel Aviv-based producer Lisa Shiloach-Uzrad told Reuters. "We started with simple game shows and buying international formats and adapting them. But in the last few years we have seen more and more original programming, scripted shows, reality shows or game shows."

"Who's Still Standing?" (or "Still Standing" as it is called in Israel), has been sold to 13 countries including Spain, Hungary and France since Shiloach-Uzrad created the show in 2010 with business partner Amit Stretiner.

The duo are also the creative team behind "The Frame", a reality show hybrid of "Big Brother" and "The Amazing Race" that has sold in 30 countries and is due to make its way to the CW network in the United States in 2012.

Elsewhere, cable channel Showtime's critically-acclaimed psychological thriller "Homeland" has its creative roots in Israel, and HBO is making a U.S. version of Israeli crime drama "The Naked Truth".

QUIZ, COMEDY AND TRAPDOORS

"Who's Still Standing?" will be hosted on NBC by Ben Bailey and features one main competitor and 10 challengers in a battle of wits for a $1 million jackpot. As soon as a contestant answers a question incorrectly, they disappear through trap door and are out of the competition.

Shiloach-Uzrad, co-partner of Israel's July August Productions, said she believed the show owed its success to a format that combines "a trivia show where the viewer is playing along and the comic effect of physical humor."

"The Frame" was developed specifically for international audiences. It features eight couples who live in small rooms around the clock for all to see, and gives them challenges. The audience votes off the least popular couple.

"You see lots of reality shows where you take people out of their natural environment and put them into a fantasy land. In this case we said, what can be more intense than being closed in with your partner for 6-8 weeks in a very small space?," Shiloach-Uzrad said.

The claustrophobic effect is both a product and a bonus from working with limited resources. HBO's therapy drama "In Treatment", adapted from another Israeli original, also found success by using a small number of actors sitting in one room.

"We have to work with low budgets. This means you really have to find smart and creative solutions to make things work," said Shiloach-Uzrad.

"With scripted shows, you have to lean on high quality writing and good acting and great characters because there is no money for Hollywood special effects or car chases to cover up for weak plots," she said.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_whos_still_standing_israel_puts_mark_u_tv195058801/43929980/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/whos-still-standing-israel-puts-mark-u-tv-195058801.html

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Rick Perry: Mitt Romney Is 'Part Of Wall Street'

CLEAR LAKE, Iowa -- Texas Gov. Rick Perry took a shot at former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's previous career in private equity, saying his rival in the Republican presidential primary is "part of Wall Street."

"With all due respect to my friends who are standing on the stage with me asking you for your support, they're either Washington insiders, they're in Congress today, or either part of or have been part of Wall Street," Perry said.

Perry made this comment while railing against government bailouts of Wall Street banks and the auto industry during a campaign stop in Iowa on Saturday.

"It's stunning that we as a government would be bailing out private-sector industries," Perry said. "If you're too big to fail you're too big, and I don't care if you're a company or a country."

"No more bailouts," he said. "You draw a straight line between Washington, D.C., and Wall Street. That's the problem that's going on in this country."

"There's not anybody in that crowd that has the will and the principle and the discipline to roll into Washington, D.C., and to clean up the corruption that's going on in that city, or in both of those cities," Perry said, speaking of Washington and New York.

Romney's career at Bain Capital, a private equity company headquartered in Boston, is often raised by the former governor as the type of private sector experience that makes him the most qualified candidate. Bain, while lacking a Wall Street address, can also be a political liability.

Jim Rickards, a former general counsel for Long Term Capital Management -- which was bailed out in 1998 by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York -- told HuffPost that there is something of a "symbiotic relationship" between Wall Street and private equity firms.

"Wall Street raises the money for private equity," Rickards said. "When you're a private equity firm, how do you get the money to buy a company? If you're Bain Capital, those guys only put out 10 percent, maybe less. How do they get the rest of the money from target companies? They get it from Wall Street."

The Huffington Post asked Perry after his speech whether he was specifically saying that Romney was a "part of Wall Street."

"Yeah," he said.

When it was pointed out that Romney did not work on Wall Street, Perry defended his remark.

"I don't think you have to actually have an address on Wall Street to be a part of Wall Street. I don't think anybody gets confused that Bain Capital is part of that whole Wall Street structure. I don't think that's lost on anybody," Perry said.

HuffPost asked Perry if he thought Bain had created anything of value, since one of the most common complaints about Wall Street -- ones shared by the recent Occupy movement, the Tea Party and many other Americans unaffiliated with either movement -- has been that much of its work has been to use leverage to create money out of money while producing little or nothing of ultimate social value.

"Oh yeah, that's not the point. That's not the point," Perry said. "The point is, Wall Street, and the corruption that's gone on there is -- there are a lot of really fine, good people on Wall Street that really have done nothing wrong. But there is a clear connection between Washington, D.C., Fannie, Freddie, Wall Streeters... And that's what's got to be cleaned up."

It's not clear exactly what Perry's specific point was in connecting Washington, the government mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and Wall Street, and a Perry campaign spokesman did not respond to a request for clarification.

It's the second time this week that Romney's career at Bain has come under criticism from a primary opponent. On Monday, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) said Romney -- whose net worth is estimated to be around $200 million -- should give back the money he made from his time working for Bain.

Responding to Romney's criticism of his work for Freddie Mac, Gingrich said he would listen to Romney "if he would like to give back all the money he?s earned from bankrupting companies and laying off employees over his years at Bain."

Private equity restructurings of the companies they take over do, in fact, result sometimes in the loss of jobs, and such a criticism is sure to be one of the Democrats' main attacks on Romney if he becomes the Republican nominee.

Gingrich was pilloried by conservative intellectuals for demonizing free market capitalism, and retreated later this week, apologizing for his comment.

"I responded in a way that made no sense," Gingrich said.

It's unclear whether Perry's remark about Romney's career -- and condemnation of Wall Street -- will also be criticized by leading conservatives.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/17/rick-perry-mitt-romney-bain-capital-wall-street_n_1155732.html

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Early rally fades; stock market down for the week (AP)

An early rally faded on the stock market Friday, leaving indexes down about 3 percent for the week as worries resurfaced about a breakup of the euro.

BlackBerry maker Research in Motion plunged after slashing its forecast for holiday sales. The IPO of online game maker Zynga Inc. didn't live up to its lofty expectations. The stock lost 5 percent on its first day of trading

The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 2 points. It was up as many as 99 points in the morning after the Italian government won a confidence vote on austerity measures. That gain evaporated around midday after Fitch warned that it might downgrade the debt of Italy, Spain and four other countries that use the euro. After markets closed, Moody's downgraded Belgium's debt two notches and said more cuts were possible.

Materials and industrial companies rose, signaling that traders expect the U.S. economic recovery to remain on track. Utilities, health care and consumer staples companies lagged the market as traders sold stocks that are considered to be safer when the economy is weak.

The Dow Jones industrial average broke a three-day slump Thursday on news that claims for unemployment benefits plunged last week and measures of manufacturing in the Northeast improved dramatically. The Dow lost 360 points over the first three days of the week as investors questioned whether Europe's agreement to closer coordinate fiscal policy would be enough to save the euro from a catastrophic breakup.

Phil Orlando, chief equity market strategist at Federated Investors, said investors are holding back until they get a "firmer resolution" to Europe's debt morass and more progress in Washington on reforming entitlements, balancing the budget and getting the country growing again. "Right, now we don't have anything to offer them," he said.

Some analysts believe nervousness about Europe this fall and winter pushed stock prices too far. Investment adviser Uri Landesman, president of Platinum Partners, expects stocks to rise into next year because of the growing likelihood that economic news and European headlines will remain positive.

"The odds are, the news is going to be better than the market is discounting," Landesman said. He said the market is near the low end of its recent trading range, and a dose of positive news could set off a mini-rally. Any market moves next week could be sharp as trading volume thins out before the Christmas holiday, Landesman said.

The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 2.42 points at 11,866.93.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 3.91, or 0.3 percent, to 1,219.66. The Nasdaq composite index rose 14.32, or 0.6 percent, to 2,555.33 The Dow is down 2.6 percent for the week; the S&P 2.8 percent. The Nasdaq lost 3.5 percent.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note plunged to 1.85 percent from 1.93 percent earlier Friday after the government said consumer prices were unchanged last month, suggesting that inflation remains low. Low inflation makes bonds more attractive because it doesn't diminish the buying power of the fixed return a bond provides over time.

Seven of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index rose, with the only declines showing up in health care, consumer staples, and utilities. The biggest gains were in energy, materials and industrial companies. U.S. factories in some regions have had higher shipments and orders month, according to two surveys released Thursday. Materials companies are benefiting from soaring commodity prices.

Research In Motion Ltd. plummeted 11 percent after the company said late Thursday that new phones seen as critical to its future will be delayed until late next year. RIM also is taking a big loss on unsold tablet computers and predicted that its BlackBerry sales will fall sharply during the holiday sales season.

Zynga, which makes "Farmville" and other popular games, fell 5 percent to $9.50 in its first day of trading on the Nasdaq. The initial public offering was priced late Thursday at $10 per share, raising $1 billion. That means the San Francisco company can boast the biggest Internet IPO since Google Inc. first offered shares in 2004.

Among the other companies making big moves:

? New York-area cable TV provider Cablevision Systems Corp. plunged 9 percent following the sudden departure of its chief operating officer, Tom Rutledge.

? Adobe Systems Inc. jumped 6.6 percent after the software maker reported earnings and revenues that were far better than what analysts had expected. Analyst Walter Pritchard at Citigroup said the quarter was a "blow-out when most expected weakness."

___

AP Business Writer Joshua Freed contributed to this story.

Follow Daniel Wagner at http://www.twitter.com/wagnerreports.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_bi_st_ma_re/us_wall_street

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