Saturday, December 31, 2011

Iowa GOP Caucus Training (Dec. 7)

The Scott County Iowa Republican Party holds a caucus training for precinct leaders, caucus chairmen and secretaries for the January 3, 2012 Iowa Caucuses.

It was held at the Bettendorf Community Center in Bettendorf Iowa. Scott County Republican Party Chairwoman Judy Davidson leads the? meeting.

Source: http://www.c-span.org/Campaign2012/Iowa-GOP-Caucus-Training-Dec-7/10737426698-1/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

2011 Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl: BYU vs. University of Tulsa -- 12/30/11 at Gerald J. Ford Stadium

December 30

Read more information here.

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Source: http://www.pegasusnews.com/events/2011/dec/30/249823/

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Pippa Middleton "Undateable," According to Tabloid


NOTE: The answer to the question posed on the image below is not her dress.

For whatever reason, according to Life & Style, men just sprint away from Pippa Middleton, and the younger sister of Duchess Catherine wonders why!

After attending her seventh wedding of the year this month, the 28-year-old is starting to wonder if she'll ever be the one standing at the altar, sources say.

Pippa Middleton Tabloid Cover

"She's scared she'll never find someone who'll accept her life," a friend says.

"[Pippa Middleton] is happy for Kate and for her university friends who are getting hitched, but she's starting to wonder if she'll ever find her Prince Charming."

In November, after growing increasingly uncomfortable with her fame, longtime boyfriend Alex Loudon called it quits with Pippa for the second time this year.

Ever since the split, according to the friend, Pippa has been deeply worried that she has become undateble, now that she's the sister-in-law of Prince William.

"The men Pippa knows are all majorly turned off by the circus surrounding her," an insider reveals, with some publications dubbing it the "Pippa Problem."

Call us crazy, but we imagine there are plenty of guys who would love to have a Pippa problem on their hands. The issue is that she's quasi-famous? Deal.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/pippa-middleton-is-undateable-according-to-tabloid/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Kate Middleton Earrings Become Latest Must-Have


As she strolled to and from church services Sunday, Kate Middleton's Christmas fashion turned heads as expected - but not just for her magenta hat and coat.

Adding some holiday sparkle to her already fashionable display was a pair of stunning earrings just visible underneath the Duchess' (Jane Corbett designed) hat.

They are from Kiki McDonough, and were bought from the designer's store in London, England. Retail price: $3,000. A Christmas gift from Prince William, perhaps?

Kate Middleton Christmas EarringsKate Middleton's Earrings

The designer, who also made jewelry for Prince William's mother Diana, Princess of Wales, didn't want to comment at length but confirmed the pieces are hers - and that the stones consist of "green amethysts surrounded by diamonds on a diamond hoop."

It's not the first time Kate has worn McDonough's jewelry, either.

She has two other pairs of earrings from the store: pear shaped citrines hanging from an 18-carat gold hoops and white topaz studs surrounded by diamonds.

The 29-year-old Kate Middleton wore them both on her summer tour trip to Canada and America. All pieces are from the aptly-named "Grace collection."

She looks wonderful in them, no?

[Photo: Fame Pictures]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/kate-middleton-earrings-become-latest-must-have/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

That Was Fast! Hollywood's Shortest Marriages

Love at first sight, divorce after first fight? Check out celebs who called it quits not long after their trip down the aisle

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/shortest-celebrity-marriages/1-b-399152?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Ashortest-celebrity-marriages-399152

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Family Of Missing College Student Found Safe, Giving Reward To Police

The family of a 19-year-old college student who mysteriously disappeared a week ago says it will donate a $10,000 reward to police and charities.

Aisha Kahn disappeared while studying on the University of Kansas Edwards Campus in Overland Park. Dozens of law enforcement officers and hundreds of volunteers searched for her after she left a message for her sister saying she was being harassed by a drunken man.

Her sister and a cousin went to the campus and found Kahn?s phone, book bag and iPod on a picnic table, but she was gone.

Five days later police announced they had located Kahn and there was no abduction.

Family members posted a statement Friday on Facebook thanking the public for its support but asking for privacy as they try to heal.

Source: http://salinapost.com/2011/12/24/family-of-kansas-college-student-that-went-missing-giving-reward-to-police/

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Thumbs Up Canada: Merry Christmas

It's that time of the year again!

It's Christmas time! ?:)

I wish each and everyone a very Merry Christmas. I hope you are feeling loved and are with people that you care for and love - family, friends, partners, chosen families, etc. If you are spending it alone, I hope you are still able to find comfort and joy in being alone. Sometimes it's great to be alone!

Oh, by the way, I read this article on the DailyMail about elderly people spending Christmas time alone. Here's the link:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2078261/250-000-elderly-people-ll-spending-Christmas-alone.html

So, I will be in Mexico City for a couple of weeks. I will try to upload some pictures when I am there athough I really want to take the opportunity to spend it with people I love so I may not be able to post pictures until I am back. We'll see... Although I will be mostly with friends, I also want to spend some time with myself ?some alone time! :) A lot has happened to my life this year. I want to spend part of this holiday vacation to do some self-reflection and meditation.

Anyway, I wish each and everyone of us a 2012 full of happiness, success, love, and all things amazing and wonderful! :)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/dUXza/~3/gXnuse7m8sM/merry-christmas.html

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Mentally ill flood ER as states cut services (Reuters)

CHICAGO/NEW YORK (Reuters) ? On a recent shift at a Chicago emergency department, Dr. William Sullivan treated a newly homeless patient who was threatening to kill himself.

"He had been homeless for about two weeks. He hadn't showered or eaten a lot. He asked if we had a meal tray," said Sullivan, a physician at the University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago and a past president of the Illinois College of Emergency Physicians.

Sullivan said the man kept repeating that he wanted to kill himself. "It seemed almost as if he was interested in being admitted."

Across the country, doctors like Sullivan are facing a spike in psychiatric emergencies - attempted suicide, severe depression, psychosis - as states slash mental health services and the country's worst economic crisis since the Great Depression takes its toll.

This trend is taxing emergency rooms already overburdened by uninsured patients who wait until ailments become acute before seeking treatment.

"These are people without a previous psychiatric history who are coming in and telling us they've lost their jobs, they've lost sometimes their homes, they can't provide for their families, and they are becoming severely depressed," said Dr. Felicia Smith, director of the acute psychiatric service at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

Increased demand in mental health services

http://link.reuters.com/sud75s

State mental health budget cuts

http://link.reuters.com/tud75s

Visits to the hospital's psychiatric emergency department have climbed 20 percent in the past three years.

"We've seen actually more very serious suicide attempts in that population than we had in the past as well," she said.

Compounding the problem are patients with chronic mental illness who have been hurt by a squeeze on mental health services and find themselves with nowhere to go.

On top of that, doctors are seeing some cases where the patient's most critical need is a warm bed.

"The more I see these patients, the more I realize that if it's sleeting and raining outside, the emergency room is the only place they have," said Dr. R. Corey Waller, director of the Spectrum Health Medical Group Center for Integrative Medicine in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Government agencies such as the National Institutes of Mental Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration could not provide fresh data on use of psychiatric services in recent years.

But doctors from more than a dozen hospitals nationwide, mental health advocacy groups and state-funded agencies told Reuters they are all seeing a marked increase in psychiatric emergencies.

A WORSENING PROBLEM

The National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors (NASMHPD), an organization of state mental health directors, estimates that in the last three years states have cut $3.4 billion in mental health services, while an additional 400,000 people sought help at public mental health facilities.

In that same time frame, demand for community-based services climbed 56 percent, and demand for emergency room, state hospital and emergency psychiatric care climbed 18 percent, the organization said.

"This wasn't one round of cuts," says Ted Lutterman, director of research analysis at NASMHPD Research Institute. "It was three or four for many states, and multiple cuts during the year."

If the economy doesn't improve, next year could be worse because many community mental health agencies are cutting programs and using up reserve funds, says Linda Rosenberg, president of the National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare.

"It's been horrible," she said. "Those that need it the most - the unemployed, those with tremendous family stress - have no insurance."

In the emergency room, this increased demand has meant doctors and social workers are spending hours and sometimes days trying to arrange care for psychiatric patients languishing in the emergency department, taking up beds that could be used for traditional types of trauma.

More than 70 percent of emergency department administrators said they have kept patients waiting in the emergency department for 24 hours, according to a 2010 survey of 600 hospital emergency department administrators by the Schumacher Group, which manages emergency departments across the country.

Ten percent said they had "boarded" patients for a week or more.

And many hospitals are not prepared for the increased caseload of psychiatric patients, says Randall Hagar, director of government affairs for the California Psychiatric Association.

California cut $587 million in state-funded mental health services in the past two years, the most of any state, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, a patient advocacy group.

"They don't have secure holding rooms. They don't have quiet spaces. They don't have a lot of things you need to help calm down a person in an acute psychiatric crisis," Hagar said.

"Often you have a patient strapped to a gurney in a hallway outside of the emergency department where social workers are desperately trying to find an inpatient bed," he said.

FROM CITIES TO SMALL TOWNS

In North Carolina, the state has cut its inpatient psychiatric capacity by half since 2005, says Dr. Bret Nicks, an emergency physician at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem and a spokesman for the American College of Emergency Physicians.

Nicks points to a report from the Institute of Medicine released in 2006 that found U.S. emergency departments were already overtaxed and overcrowded.

"Now you are adding in patients who are unsafe to leave but yet have nowhere to go," he said. "I consider patients with acute psychiatric needs as really the forgotten patient population in the U.S. right now."

Dr. Stephen Anderson is an emergency department doctor at Auburn Regional Medical Center, a mid-size suburban hospital outside of Seattle.

"When the economy is hurt they are some of the first to drop off the healthcare rolls," he said of local residents in the largely blue-collar community.

Anderson, who heads the Washington Chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians, said the state has lost a third of its inpatient psychiatric beds in the past decade.

Lately he is seeing a marked escalation in patients with psychiatric problems turning up in the emergency department. In early December, a third of its beds were occupied with people in a psychiatric crisis who were not safe to return to the community.

The problem extends out to small towns.

Sullivan splits his time between the big emergency department at the University of Illinois Medical Center at Chicago and St. Margaret's Hospital, a tiny facility in Spring Valley, Illinois, about 100 miles southwest of the city.

On a recent shift, a young woman with schizophrenia arrived at the hospital. She had just lost her job and apartment and was living with relatives. She could not afford the medications that were keeping her illness in check.

The woman asked Sullivan to switch her prescriptions to drugs that could be found on the $4 discount list at Wal-Mart and other discount stores.

"I didn't feel comfortable doing that," Sullivan said, noting that emergency physicians are being asked to deliver specialized care that should be handled by a psychiatrist.

He found a healthcare facility about 25 miles away with a psychiatrist who could help, but even that presented a problem for the woman, who had no way of getting to the appointment.

"It's almost akin to having a cardiac patient come in and say, 'I need someone to adjust my defibrillator.' In the emergency department, we can do a lot, but there are some things we have to leave with the specialists," he said.

(Editing by Michele Gershberg and Eric Beech)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111224/hl_nm/us_usa_health_psychiatric

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Tutorial: how to create HTML5 applications on Windows Phone thanks to PhoneGap

Tutorial: how to create HTML5 applications on Windows Phone thanks to PhoneGap

12/24/2011

source: blogs.msdn

We will first see in this article what the added values of PhoneGap for HTML5 applications are. We?ll then discover how to create our very first project where we will retrieve the accelerometer?s values from our JavaScript code. At last, we will review a complete HTML5 gaming sample almost ported as-is to PhoneGap to use the accelerometer available on the Windows Phones.??

  1. Introduction
  2. PhoneGap: a framework filling the gap
  3. Let?s create our first PhoneGap project
  4. Getting the accelerometer?s values from JavaScript
  5. Review of a complete sample with the HTML5 Platformer game
    1. Forcing the landscape orientation
    2. Handling various resolutions
    3. Loading the levels with calls to the file system instead of using XHR
    4. Modification of the gameplay to use the accelerometer
    5. Screenshots of the result and FPS on some phones
    6. Complete Visual Studio Solution to download
  6. Conclusion

...Read more

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Windowsphonegeek/~3/_3puhxf74Yk/tutorial-how-to-create-html5-applications-on-windows-phone-thanks-to-phonegap

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Friday's sports briefs

Holloway, Evans make all-state team

ASHEVILLE ? Asheville High senior Tysean Holloway and Franklin senior Thomas Evans were named to the NCPreps.com 3-A all-state football team on Friday.

Holloway was named the Mountain Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Year after rushing for 1,405 yards and 24 touchdowns. Evans was named the Western North Carolina Athletic Conference Defensive Player of the Year after making 58 tackles and nine sacks.

Hayesville football coach steps down

HAYESVILLE ? Hayesville football coach Gary Miller has resigned.

Miller compiled a 11-23 record in three seasons with the Yellow Jackets, including a 4-7 mark last fall.

Hayesville lost 7-6 to Rosman in the first round of the NCHSAA 1-A playoffs and will enter the 2012 season with a six-game losing streak.

The Yellow Jackets have not had a winning season since 2007.

Hayesville now joins North Henderson as Western North Carolina high schools without a football coach.

North Henderson had hoped to have a new coach before Christmas, but Knights athletic director Jason Joyce said Friday that the Knights are still interviewing candidates.

Reds trade for Cubs reliever Marshall

CINCINNATI ? The Cincinnati Reds acquired left-handed reliever Sean Marshall from the Chicago Cubs on Friday for young lefty starter Travis Wood and two other players.

It was the second time in a week that the Reds gave up several prospects for pitching help.

They earlier sent four players to San Diego for starter Mat Latos.

Nets' Lopez breaks foot, out 6-8 weeks

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. ? With the prospect of a trade for Dwight Howard fading and the season opener less than a week away, New Jersey Nets coach Avery Johnson was getting a feel for his team.

That all changed Thursday when center Brook Lopez broke his right foot.

Lopez had surgery Friday. He was hurt on Wednesday and will be sidelined at least six weeks and probably more.

Source: http://www.citizen-times.com/article/20111224/SPORTS/312240029/1002/rss

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Oracle miss sparks Wall St fears of spending cuts (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Oracle Corp's dismal quarterly results sent shock waves across the technology sector as investors feared they may have overestimated the resilience of corporate tech spending in a deteriorating global economy.

The first earnings miss in a decade from Oracle, whose fiscal second quarter ended on November 30, drove its shares down more than 11 percent on Wednesday, destroying about $20 billion of market value. The shortfall from the No. 3 software maker also hit shares of many other technology companies, with VMware Inc, NetSuite Inc, and SAP among those suffering the biggest losses.

"Is this a preliminary example of what we could expect in January from Microsoft and other players? It raises an eyebrow that things may not be as hunky dory as we've been led to believe in terms of IT spending," said Daniel Morgan, a portfolio manager at Synovus Securities in Atlanta.

The troubles at Oracle follow ominous reports from big tech names including Hewlett-Packard Co, Intel Corp and Texas Instruments Inc.

The disconcerting news on Tuesday was not limited to Silicon Valley, with U.S. industrial conglomerate Emerson Electric Co reporting a drop in orders for equipment used in big data centers. Emerson shares fell 5.4 percent to $46.97.

"Overall, we have seen in the last 60 days ... a significant weakness in this whole electronics space," said Emerson Chief Executive David Farr. "I don't see that changing for the time being."

The fourth quarter is the crucial period of the year for many technology companies because corporations tend to spend most heavily on information technology during that time in what is known as a year-end "budget flush."

Oracle's disappointing results could signal that companies won't spend all the money that they still have budgeted for 2011 technology projects, said Howard Anderson, a lecturer at MIT's Sloan School of Business, who regularly talks to CEOs of top-tier corporations.

"Confidence is not there," he said. "We have a kind of rolling recession."

Oracle's quarter ended in November, but investors worried that the decline in business confidence could signal more troubles for peers whose quarters end in December. That includes arch rival SAP AG.

"The majority of deals in the fourth quarter are traditionally closed in the last two weeks of the quarter, so the delay of Oracle's deals is a negative cross read for SAP," said Silvia Quandt analyst Michael Busse.

SAP CEO Bill McDermott declined to comment on his business, saying the company was in a quiet period.

A slowing in tech spending would be troubling for the U.S. economy, which has had few bright spots in recent years.

"Since the technical end of the recession (in June 2009) we've been seeing double-digit growth in investment in technology. If Oracle is the canary in the coalmine, that would be something to worry about," said Michael Goodman, director of economic and public policy research at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth.

"There's a lot of concern about what the immediate future holds, so this may just be customers putting off investments they want to make until they feel like they have a better handle on what the future looks like," Goodman said.

MIXED SIGNALS

U.S. companies have been sending mixed signals about their spending plans for 2012. A survey released last week by the Business Roundtable found that 16 percent of CEOs of large U.S. companies planned to cut their capital spending over the next six months, up from 13 percent who had planned cuts in the third quarter.

But other data released on Wednesday by the Equipment Leasing and Finance Association showed U.S. businesses signed up for $6.2 billion in loans, leases and lines of credit to fund capital expenditures in November, a 38 percent increase from the month a year ago.

Oracle's stock fell $3.40 to $25.77, its lowest close since August, making it the biggest loser in the Standard & Poor's 500 index. It was the biggest one-day percentage drop in the stock since March 4, 2002, when Oracle last surprised investors with an earnings warning.

CEO and co-founder Larry Ellison, the company's biggest shareholder, lost more than $3.8 billion on Wednesday as the stock plunged, based on his holdings published in Oracle's annual proxy filing.

The declines accounted for about 16 points of the 27.6 point drop in the S&P 1500 Software index, which suffered a 4.5 percent drop in market cap to about $511 billion. The drop in Oracle shares represents 68 percent of the decline in total market cap for the index.

(Reporting by Sayantani Ghosh in Bangalore, Maria Sheahan, Christoph Steitz and Marilyn Gerlach in Frankfurt and Nicola Leske, David Gaffen, Ryan Vlastelica and Nick Zieminski in New York; Editing by Richard Chang)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111221/bs_nm/us_oracle

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Gas tubing fires linked to lightning spark concern (AP)

WESTERVILLE, Ohio ? Reports of lightning-related fires and gas leaks in at least a dozen states have sparked concerns about the use of flexible gas lines made of corrugated stainless steel tubing.

The same type of lightning strikes is suspected of causing fires in four homes in central Ohio over a stormy 12-hour period this summer. Genoa Township Fire Chief Gary Honeycutt said he believes lightning struck at or near the homes, and the electrical charge traveled along the plastic-coated metal tubing, known as CSST, before jumping to a less resistant pathway nearby such as a metal ventilation duct. It then punctured a hole the size of a pencil tip in the tubing and created a gas leak that could ignite, he said.

One of the fires charred the ceiling in the lowest level of Michael Wagner's dream home, a two-story property near a country club and golf course in an area where farmland has been turned into neatly manicured neighborhoods of newer homes.

"It had been burning the joists much like a blowtorch," said Wagner, whose family moved into the home a few weeks before the fire and has been displaced for months because of smoke damage. The home passed inspection without problems, they said, but they later learned lightning had struck it and created a gas leak in 2004.

Reports of such fires and gas leaks, ranging from such states as Florida, which has a high occurrence of lightning strikes, to those where strikes are less frequent, have led to lawsuits, studies and efforts to better track the incidents. Manufacturers defend CSST, which has become increasingly common in new homes since it was introduced domestically more than two decades ago, and fire officials and researchers are trying to determine whether to blame a faulty product, unsafe installation or something else.

Firefighters and gas providers point out that the fires seem to occur with an unusual combination of factors ? a newer building that has CSST, a lightning strike in just the right place, the puncture of the tubing and the spark to ignite the gas. Most of the Ohio fires were in the central part of the state, though it's possible there are others that haven't been linked to the tubing because the reports didn't include that detail.

"I'd say we've got a problem with that product, but it's very anecdotal evidence that we have," said state Fire Marshal Larry Flowers, who recently started collecting information about such fires around Ohio.

A class-action lawsuit filed in Arkansas against several manufacturers claimed the tubing posed an unreasonable risk of fire from lightning strikes, leading to a 2006 settlement that was worth up to about $29 million, according to a copy of the settlement agreement provided by an attorney not affiliated with the case. Lawyers involved in the case did not respond to messages for comment.

And an unresolved wrongful death lawsuit blames a CSST failure for a 2008 blaze that killed three children and their grandmother in rural Jefferson, S.D.

"For a homeowner or a business owner, really the problem with the product is it's very unpredictable when it's going to fail, and it's a very difficult product to make safe," said Mark Utke, a lawyer with the Cozen-O'Connor firm in Philadelphia, which is working on the South Dakota case and dozens more it connects to CSST.

Manufacturers say the flexible tubing was developed in Japan as an alternative to rigid gas piping that could break during an earthquake, and hundreds of millions of feet of tubing have been installed in U.S. homes and other buildings. It can cost significantly more than black metal pipe, with one recent estimate putting the cost at 65 cents for a foot of rigid pipe in Ohio and about a dollar more for standard CSST. But the tubing is easier to install and can bend around corners, appearing much like a garden hose affixed to ceiling joists.

Both types of lines meet existing product and code requirements, but manufacturers say that CSST is the safer option and that it's less likely to crack, leak or cause a gas explosion because it doesn't require as many joints to follow the shape of a building's interior.

"Of course we would like everything in the house to be safe from lightning, but that's not a requirement," said Bob Torbin, the director of codes and standards for Exton, Pa.-based Omega Flex Inc., one of the producers targeted in lawsuits. "And so we have to ask ourselves: Does this represent an unreasonable risk compared to other risks that you take when you occupy your home?" That's a measurement that's tough to quantify, he said.

In response to concerns, Omega Flex stopped offering its earlier CSST product this fall and instead is promoting tubing wrapped in a special covering intended to make it more resistant to lightning strike damage.

Some manufacturers and builders say there may be other contributing factors in the tubing fires, including whether gas lines are correctly grounded and bonded, meaning they're linked into a system that would direct energy from a lightning strike into the earth.

The president of the Ohio Home Builders Association said he has used the tubing and has no doubt that it's a safe product when installed properly.

"We have it in our home," said Bill Owens, who's also founder and president of Owens Construction in suburban Columbus. "A lot of it is just paying attention to the actual installation requirements and the code requirements associated with safe installation."

In Indiana, officials increased code requirements for bonding and grounding in new homes and expanded the required gap between gas tubing and other metal items to help decrease the risk of a problem. The research foundation affiliated with the National Fire Protection Association, which sets national codes that pertain to construction, is studying how to mitigate any lightning-related dangers of CSST and has sought information from various stakeholders in the discussion, including manufacturers and insurers.

"Now that it's out there, how do we make it safe?" said Mitchell Guthrie, an engineering consultant from Blanch, N.C., who has researched CSST and lightning protection and worked with a panel studying concerns.

Iowa Fire Marshal Ray Reynolds said people in the insurance industry have linked the tubing to more than 200 fires in his state over the past two years, and he doesn't believe proper grounding and bonding is the only solution. He said Iowa has seen some problems with properly bonded systems, and he decided to replace the tubing in his own home with the updated, extra-protected CSST.

Wagner, the Ohio homeowner displaced by a fire, said he decided to replace his flexible tubing with rigid lines to help his family feel safer.

The American Gas Association, which represents gas providers, doesn't think CSST is a defective product, but it has helped develop product standards and has supported the industry's effort to educate the public about concerns and to minimize any dangers.

"It's just a situation that could occur, just like lightning could penetrate a home and damage wiring," said Jim Ranfone, the AGA's managing director of codes and standards.

"It's not a panic situation, but it's one that I would sort of keep tabs on to make sure the system was properly bonded," he said.

___

Associated Press writer Doug Whiteman contributed to this report.

___

Kantele Franko can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/kantele10.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_bi_ge/us_gas_lines_lightning_fires

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Friday, December 23, 2011

White House condemns bombings in Iraq (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The White House is condemning the wave of deadly bombings in Iraq, and says such attempts to derail progress in the country will fail.

In a statement, press secretary Jay Carney says Iraqi security forces have shown they are up to the task of responding to the bombings. The attacks killed at least 69 people across Baghdad Thursday, just days after the withdrawal of American forces from Iraq.

Carney says the attacks, which bore the hallmarks of al-Qaida's Sunni insurgents, serve no agenda "other than murder and hatred."

He says Vice President Joe Biden called Iraqi President Jalal Talabani (jahl-LAHL' tahl-ah-BAH'-nee) to offer support for efforts to allow Iraqi blocks to work together, amid a governing crisis between Shiite and Sunni politicians and rising sectarian tensions.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_us_iraq

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Mark Richt Must Not Be Penalized for Being Hero Among NCAA Villains

The Georgia Bulldogs football program and head coach Mark Richt have been cited for secondary NCAA violations after it was learned that Richt paid some of his staff members out of pocket.

With all the true scandals that are occurring in college football right now, however, Richt should be applauded and not punished.

According to Chip Towers of the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Richt paid several coaches and staff members roughly $25,000 over the past few years. While the NCAA has rules against supplemental pay, I doubt that Richt was aware that what he was doing was in violation of the NCAA code of conduct.

Richt and the staff members he paid won't be disciplined further than letters of admonishment and further education on the rules that were violated, but I don't believe that this situation should even be considered a violation of the rules.

Out of the kindness of his own heart, Richt gave his hard-earned money to coaches and staffers that he believed weren't being fairly compensated by the school. This included payments to 10 staff members in 2009, when?the university?cut out bowl bonuses due to difficult financial conditions.

What are your feelings on Mark Richt's rule violations?

    What are your feelings on Mark Richt's rule violations?

  • He broke the rules. The NCAA doesn't allow supplemental payment, so he has to pay the consequences regardless of what they are.

  • He shouldn't be punished at all. There are far too many true rule violations occuring to worry about this.

Richt should be commended for such acts of kindness, especially when greed continues to run rampant throughout the NCAA. He clearly understands that he is blessed to be paid such a high salary, and because of that he was willing to help out the people that help him on a daily basis when it comes to preparing for games.

What Richt did may be a violation in name, but it doesn't compare in the slightest to what happened at Ohio State or Penn State. Ohio State was given a postseason ban for the 2012 season stemming from a situation in which Buckeye players traded memorabilia for tattoos.

Former Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel failed to report the incident when it came to his attention, and it ultimately cost him his job. He was also given a show-cause penalty that will force any college team that hires him to risk being disciplined significantly.

In that case, the NCAA made the right decision, just as it did with USC prior to this season, as the Trojans were ineligible for the postseason as well. Where things get ridiculous, however, is that what Richt did is considered an NCAA violation, but the entire Penn State situation is not.

Former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky allegedly sexually abused multiple young boys during and after his tenure at the school. At least one of those attacks is alleged to have taken place in a Penn State locker-room shower.

Many Penn State football staff members and administrators became aware of the alleged attack. This includes then-graduate assistant Mike McQueary who allegedly witnessed the assault, former Penn State head coach Joe Paterno who was alerted by McQueary, as well as officials Tim Curley and Gary Schultz.

Which school's violations were most egregious?

    Which school's violations were most egregious?

  • Georgia

  • Ohio State

  • USC

  • Penn State

None of them ever reported the incident to police, and Sandusky was allowed to continue on for several years before finally being arrested and charged a couple months ago. I realize that the NCAA doesn't deal with that type of criminal activity, but it's silly that it can punish Richt for being a good person while a corrupt institute like Penn State continues on unscathed.

If nothing else, I think the Richt situation calls for an NCAA rules revision. There are countless strange and useless rules that the NCAA forces schools to adhere by, and not allowing a head coach to essentially pay monetary gifts to his staff is one such rule.

Through the eyes of the NCAA, Richt will be viewed as a violator of the rules, just like Ohio State. At the same time, Penn State is apparently clean in comparison.

This is a further example of how backwards the NCAA truly is. Richt is no villain, rather he is something much rarer in college football, and that is a truly good-hearted person.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/992566-mark-richt-must-not-be-penalized-for-being-hero-among-ncaa-villians

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

GIS Degree A Safe Bet for Professionals in the Ever-Growing Oil Industry

The Keystone Pipeline Project has been a hotly debated topic in Washington and around the country. The pipeline would carry crude oil from northeastern Alberta, Canada to several locations in the U.S. by 2013. While the political and environmental aspects have been well covered, the use of GIS (Geographic Information Systems) technology has been minimally discussed.

The fact that GIS technology is used to build the 2,000-plus mile, $12 billion pipeline shows there is a great demand for college graduates with GIS degrees.

The federal regulatory requirements under the Clean Water Act mandate any new pipeline or right-of-way must be surveyed and mapped to evaluate potential adverse effects.

The total miles for U.S. pipelines increased from 131,000 in 2005 to 149,000 in 2009, making a GIS degree a safe bet for the ever-growing oil industry. (To learn the exact U.S. figures for total pipeline and rights-of-way miles, click here.)

The increased U.S. pipelines will mean the oil business needs a lot more GIS professionals.

"GIS provides an essential tool for managing a project of this scale and magnitude and GIS professionals are the right people that make this happen," says Devon Cancilla, Ph.D., dean, business and technology at American Sentinel University.

Dr. Cancilla notes American Sentinel's online GIS degree programs teach students how to interpret and visualize spatial data to uncover patterns, trends and relationships and will prepare students to enter and or move up in this rapidly growing field.

From identifying and locating natural resources and hazards to the identification of animal migratory routes and bringing this information together, Dr. Cancilla says GIS technology ensures that better decisions are being made.

How GIS Technology Will Impact the Keystone GIS Project
For the Keystone Pipeline Project, GIS technology was used to track the wetlands, rivers, streams, lakes, ponds and riparian areas. Since the Keystone Pipeline Project crosses three USACE districts, including the Omaha, Kansas City, and Tulsa districts, each district had different survey requirements.

According to a March 2007 report, the Keystone Pipeline Project began with a review of U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) topographic maps, National Wetland Inventory (NWI) maps, available soil surveys and 2005 aerial photographs pertaining to the proposed route. Remote sensors, analytics software and Esri's ArcGIS would be used to capture Keystone.

According to Esri's summer 2011 newsletter, TransCanada officials even used GIS technology to procure bids. They supplied hundreds of contractors with superior visual information so bids could be provided more quickly and without costly site travel.

GIS technology was also used to develop the third Environmental Impact Statement that the U.S. Department of State has issued on Keystone XL since the review process began in 2008.

Although no credit was given to GIS technology in the press conference, TransCanada publicly noted that the proposed route is the shortest and would disturb the least amount of land and water bodies resulting in reduced environmental impacts. The alternative routes were proven to have higher corrosion rates during pipeline transportation.

In fact, in almost every report or study published about Keystone, it's likely that the author used GIS technology to come to his or her conclusions. Other than walking every mile on the route, there's just no way they could come to the best conclusions without the technology.

But that should come as no surprise to anybody in the oil and gas business. Since the technology has been available, they have been using GIS. And they will continue to us GIS technology for a long time.

For those professionals who enjoy analyzing spatial data, now is a great time to work on an online GIS degree.

American Sentinel's degree programs teach students to utilize GIS technology and tools to interpret and visualize geospatial data to create solutions to real-world challenges Learn more about American Sentinel University's GIS degrees here.

Source: http://www.gpsdaily.com/reports/GIS_Degree_A_Safe_Bet_for_Professionals_in_the_Ever_Growing_Oil_Industry_999.html

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Book Review : Book Review: Time Travel and Warp Drives by Allen Everett and Thomas Roman and How to Build a Time Machine by Brian Clegg

Review by Alexandra Witze

By Allen Everett and Thomas Roman and How to Build a Time Machine

As any fan of Doctor Who or Marty McFly can attest, few areas of science excite quite as much public interest as time travel. Step into a police box or a DeLorean, flip a switch, and you?re off to change the world ? or perhaps save it.

Would-be time travelers now have two new relevant guides to the promise of time machines. Which you might prefer depends on just how much you want to understand the mathematics underlying a machine like the TARDIS.

Surprisingly, time travel is not that difficult in principle; nothing in the known laws of physics prohibits it. The problem is with today?s technology.

Take Ronald Mallett, the University of Connecticut physicist who has been trying to build a time machine to visit his father, who died when Mallett was 10 years old. Using a ring laser, he hopes to generate ?closed timelike curves? in which particles can return to the past. Mallett has realized that his machine could take him no further than the time when it was switched on ? making a visit with his late father impossible.

Everett and Roman are physicists who have probed the theoretical possibilities of time travel. Their expertise shines as they talk the reader through the underlying math of time travel, much like an introductory college course. These are writers who don?t shy away from introducing Lorentz transformations in the third chapter.

In contrast, Clegg?s book is more like chatting with fellow students after a professorial lecture. Its breezy summary glosses over some of the finer points of time travel, but allows an excellent entry point for readers less willing to slog through grim mathematical details.

Fascination with time travel is itself timeless; witness the recent excitement over neutrinos possibly moving faster than light. If true, this would also permit the particles to travel backward in time. If that happens, you?ll need a handy reference guide. ? Alexandra Witze

Everett and Roman: Univ. of Chicago, 268 p., 2011, $30; Clegg: St. Martin?s, 320 p., 2011, $25.99


Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/336973/title/Book_Review__Book_Review_Time_Travel_and_Warp_Drives_by_Allen_Everett_and_Thomas_Roman_and_How_to_Build_a_Time_Machine_by_Brian_Clegg_

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No. 1 Baylor women set to host second-ranked UConn (AP)

Brittney Griner has been looking forward to another shot against Connecticut. She'll get her chance on Sunday when top-ranked Baylor faces the No. 2 Huskies.

The two teams met early last season with the rankings reversed and UConn escaped with a one-point victory in Hartford, rallying from a late eight-point deficit. The 6-foot-8 phenom felt the loss was her fault.

"That last game with UConn has been on my mind for a long time," Griner said. "The one thing I think about the most is my free throws. It was just horrible that game. After that game, I hit almost every free throw I attempted."

Griner missed eight of 13 from the free throw line, including some key misses down the stretch that allowed UConn to rally for the 65-64 win.

She hasn't been missing much of anything this season, leading Baylor to victory after victory. Griner is averaging 22.8 points, 10.7 rebounds and 4.9 blocks in just 30 minutes a game this season for the Lady Bears (10-0). She's also shooting 73 percent from the foul line.

So far Baylor and Connecticut's games this season have been anything but competitive. The Lady Bears have won by an average of 34.5 points. Throw out wins over ranked Notre Dame and Tennessee and the margin jumps to nearly 40 a game.

"I know I'm definitely ready for a game like this. Our team is ready for a game like this," Griner said. "These are the kind of games basketball players live for, 1 vs. 2, big games. Nobody wants to blow out a team, that's not fun. You want hard competitive games when everybody puts it on the line. Those games I love playing."

There has been a definite buzz around Waco leading up to the game, which sold out weeks in advance for the first time in school history.

"It's great for women's basketball, great for Baylor," Lady Bears coach Kim Mulkey said. "The thing I will take away from it win or lose, now we've played Notre Dame, we've played Connecticut, we've got Big 12 coming up. ... Win or lose, where do we need to improve? It's a gauge, nothing more than a gauge right now. That is the way I will approach it after the game is over."

Connecticut (9-0) has run through its opposition this season winning by nearly 41.5 points a game, including a 30-point demolition of defending national champion Texas A&M in the Jimmy V Classic. Yet they are in a little different role, playing only their second road game of the season and for once may not be expected to win.

"It's weird," UConn center Stefanie Dolson said. "Everyone always says you don't focus on the ranking and the hype that everyone's talking about. Who's going to win? Who's the underdog? So for us we don't really focus on that. We're just going to kind of go out and play as hard as we can, compete as hard as we can. And whoever wins is the better team that night."

There haven't been many nights over the last few years that the Huskies haven't been the better team. It's the first time in four seasons that UConn will be playing a higher ranked opponent. UConn has only lost twice in the last three seasons ? falling at Stanford last December that ended their record 90-game winning streak. The Huskies then lost in the Final Four to Notre Dame.

"I don't think there has been a better team in the country of going on the road and playing against Top 5 teams in the country and done a better job than us in the last 10 years or so," UConn coach Geno Auriemma said. "That is the beauty of it. I am like a fan going down there Sunday night. I really want to see how we handle this."

Auriemma always expects greatness out of his players. He got to know Griner while she played for the U.S. national women's basketball team on a European tour this past Fall and came away impressed.

"There's nobody else in the world like her," Auriemma said. "I don't care who Australia has. I don't care who Russia has or anybody else has. Nobody has anybody like Brittney Griner ... There's things that she can do that no one else can do on any other team in the world."

Griner has a mutual respect for the Hall of Fame coach. She even spent a little time on the trip going to the town in Italy where he was born and meeting his family.

"I always viewed him as a great coach, he's done a lot for the UConn program and women's basketball," she said. "I view him as an opponent this game, but this past summer, he was my coach. You've got to turn it on. Like when you're playing in AAU, your best friend would be on another team, you're best friends, but both are trying to win, doing everything to win and at the end of the day you're still best friends. It's the competitive nature."

Sadly this might be the last time these two meet as opponents unless it's in the NCAA tournament. The budding rivalry will come to an end Sunday as the two teams aren't schedule to play against next season. UConn first beat Griner and Baylor when she was a freshman in the Final Four.

ESPN NBA analyst Jeff Van Gundy, who will be broadcasting the game, was disappointed to hear that they won't be playing anymore in the regular season.

""They should do a mini playoff series, three straight games," he said." Once you get past the top 10 or 15 teams, who's challenging these teams? The preseason is almost a joke, beating teams by 30 or 40. It's not good for the sport."

___

AP Basketball Writer Stephen Hawkins contributed from Waco, Texas.

___

Follow Doug Feinberg at http://twitter.com/dougfeinberg

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111217/ap_on_sp_co_ne/bkw_t25_connecticut_baylor_showdown

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

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5 indicted on murder charges in NYPD officer death (AP)

NEW YORK ? A man accused of gunning down a veteran New York Police Department officer during a botched home invasion and the suspect's four alleged accomplices have been indicted on murder charges, prosecutors said Friday.

The indictment naming Lamont Pride and the other men was announced as they stood side-by-side with grim expressions on their faces at a brief hearing in criminal court in Brooklyn that was packed with police officers. A judge scheduled the defendants, all being held without bail, to return to court next week to enter a plea.

Only one of the defense attorneys spoke about the case, claiming his client, Michael Valez, was duped into doing a jailhouse interview by a newspaper reporter and jail personnel who ignored a directive that Valez should not speak to anyone but his lawyer.

According to a front-page story published in the Daily News on Friday, Valez admitted he drove the robbery crew to the Brooklyn apartment of a drug dealer early Monday so the group could rob him. But he also claimed he felt he "had no choice" because on the way, Pride "pointed a gun at me and said, `Keep going.'"

Valez's attorney, Marvin Weinroth, complained to the judge that the story violated his client's rights and put unnecessary "heat" on an emotionally charged tragedy.

"The heat on this case is already white-hot," Weinroth said.

Prosecutors allege Valez waited outside the basement apartment as a would-be getaway driver when Pride and the others broke in and accosted the drug dealer. The robbery was interrupted by police officers responding to a report of burglary.

When Officer Peter Figoski arrived, he came face-to-face with an armed Pride, police said. The gunman shot Figoski once in the face and tried to run away, but the officer's partner chased him down and arrested him, police said.

Under state law, anyone who participated in a crime that results in a homicide can be charged with murder.

Figoski, 47, was a divorced father of four daughters. Thousands of police officers are expected for his funeral on Monday at St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church in Babylon, 30 miles east of New York City.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_re_us/us_officer_shot

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Penn St. coach says he saw, reported molestation (AP)

HARRISBURG, Pa. ? A judge says two Penn State officials can be tried on charges of lying to a grand jury in the university's child sex-abuse scandal.

District Judge William Wenner ruled Friday that prosecutors had probable cause to send the case against Tim Curley and Gary Schultz to trial.

Wenner heard testimony against Curley and Schultz on charges they lied to a grand jury and didn't properly report an allegation that former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky sodomized a boy in a locker room shower in 2002.

Their lawyers maintain the men are innocent, and contest testimony that they were told about the seriousness of the matter.

Sandusky says he's innocent of more than 50 counts of child sex-abuse involving 10 boys over a span of 12 years.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

A Penn State assistant football coach testified Friday that he believes he saw former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky molesting a boy on campus and that he fully conveyed what he had seen to two Penn State administrators.

Mike McQueary, speaking for the first time in public about the 2002 encounter in a Penn State locker room, said he believes that Sandusky was attacking the child with his hands around the boy's waist but said he wasn't 100 percent sure it was intercourse.

McQueary took the stand Friday morning in a Pennsylvania courtroom during a preliminary hearing for university officials Tim Curley and Gary Schultz, who are accused of lying to a grand jury about what McQueary told them.

District Judge William C. Wenner was hearing testimony Friday to help him decide whether prosecutors have enough evidence against the pair to send their cases to trial. The hearing was expected to last most of the day.

McQueary's story is central to the case against Curley and Schultz. They testified to the grand jury that McQueary never relayed the seriousness of what he saw. The officials, and Penn State coach Joe Paterno, have been criticized for never telling police about the 2002 allegation. Prosecutors say Sandusky continued to abuse boys for six more years.

The lawyers for Curley and Schultz say the men are innocent. Curley and Schultz told the grand jury that they remembered McQueary reporting only something inappropriate, like wrestling, but nothing as serious as rape.

Defense lawyers said a perjury charge should be based solely on a person's testimony under oath contradicting someone else's testimony. The defense said uncorroborated testimony from McQueary is not enough and sought to pick apart the ways he described the shower scene differently to different people.

The defense noted that McQueary admitted changing his description of the shower encounter when speaking with Paterno ? enough so that the coach didn't believe a crime had occurred.

McQueary, who was on the stand for about two hours Friday, said he had stopped by a campus football locker room to drop off a pair of sneakers in the spring of 2002 when he heard slapping sounds in a shower and happened upon Sandusky and the boy.

He said Sandusky was behind the boy he estimated to be 10 or 12 years old, with his hands wrapped around the boy's waist. He said the boy was facing a wall, with his hands on it.

McQueary, 37, said he has never described what he saw as anal rape or anal intercourse and couldn't see Sandusky's genitals, but that "it was very clear that it looked like there was intercourse going on."

In its report last month, the grand jury summarized McQueary's testimony as saying he "saw a naked boy ... with his hands up against the wall, being subjected to anal intercourse by a naked Sandusky."

Under cross examination by an attorney for Curley, McQueary reiterated that he had not seen Sandusky penetrating or fondling the boy but was nearly certain they were having intercourse because the two were standing so close and Sandusky's arms were wrapped around the youth.

He said he peeked into the shower three times ? the first via a mirror, the other two times directly. The last time he looked in, Sandusky and the boy had separated, he said. He said he didn't say anything, but "I know they saw me. They looked directly in my eye, both of them."

McQueary said the entire encounter ? from when he first entered the locker room to when he retreated to his office ? lasted about 45 seconds.

McQueary said he reported what he saw to Paterno but never went to police.

He said he did not give Paterno explicit details of what he believed he'd seen, saying he wouldn't have used terms like sodomy or anal intercourse out of respect for the longtime coach.

Paterno told the grand jury that McQueary reported seeing Sandusky doing something of a "sexual nature" with the youngster but that he didn't press for details.

"I didn't push Mike ... because he was very upset," Paterno said. "I knew Mike was upset, and I knew some kind of inappropriate action was being taken by Jerry Sandusky with a youngster."

McQueary said Paterno told him he'd "done the right thing" by reporting the encounter. The head coach appeared shocked and saddened and slumped back in his chair, McQueary said.

Paterno told McQueary he would talk to others about what he'd reported.

Nine or 10 days later, McQueary said he met with Curley and Schultz and told them he'd seen Sandusky and a boy, both naked, in the shower after hearing skin-on-skin slapping sounds.

"I told them that I saw Jerry in the showers with a young boy and that what I had seen was extremely sexual and over the lines and it was wrong," McQueary said. "I would have described that it was extremely sexual and I thought that some kind of intercourse was going on."

McQueary said he was left with the impression both men took his report seriously. When asked why he didn't go to police, he referenced Schultz's position as a vice president at the university who had overseen the campus police

"I thought I was talking to the head of the police, to be frank with you," he said. "In my mind it was like speaking to a (district attorney). It was someone who police reported to and would know what to do with it."

Curley told the grand jury that he couldn't recall his specific conversation with McQueary, but that McQueary never reported seeing anal intercourse or other sexual conduct. He said he recalled McQueary reporting wrestling or "horsing around."

Schultz said he remembered McQueary and Paterno describing what the younger coach saw only in a very general way.

"I had the impression it was inappropriate," Schultz told the grand jury. "I had the feeling it was some king of wrestling activity and maybe Jerry might have grabbed a young boys genitals."

Under cross-examination, McQueary said he considered what he saw a crime but didn't call police because "it was delicate in nature."

"I tried to use my best judgment," he said. "I was sure the act was over." He said he never tried to find the boy.

Paterno, Schultz and Curley didn't testify, but Judge Wenner read their grand jury testimony from January in weighing the case.

Sandusky says he is innocent of more than 50 charges stemming from what authorities say were sexual assaults over 12 years on 10 boys in his home, on Penn State property and elsewhere. The scandal has provoked strong criticism that Penn State officials didn't do enough to stop Sandusky, and prompted the departures of Paterno and the school's longtime president, Graham Spanier.

Curley, 57, Penn State's athletic director, was placed on leave by the university after his arrest. Schultz, 62, returned to retirement after spending about four decades at the school, most recently as senior vice president for business and finance, and treasurer.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_sp_ot/us_penn_state_abuse

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Stock futures signal higher open for equities (Reuters)

(Reuters) Stock index futures pointed to a higher open for equities on Wall Street on Friday, with futures for the S&P 500, for the Dow Jones and for the Nasdaq 100 rising 0.3 to 0.6 percent.

* The Labor Department will release at 1330 GMT the November Consumer Price Index. Economists expect a 0.1 percent rise, compared with a 0.1 percent drop in October.

* Fitch Ratings, the third-biggest of the major credit rating agencies, on Thursday downgraded Goldman Sachs (GS.N), Bank of America Corp (BAC.N) and five other large banks based in Europe and the United States, citing "increased challenges" in the financial markets.

* The Labor Department issues at 1330 GMT Real Earnings data for November. Economists predict real earnings to rise 0.1 percent, versus a 0.3 percent increase in October.

* U.S. lawmakers on Thursday reached a tentative deal to fund an array of government agencies through September 30 and avert shutting down many of Washington's operations starting this weekend.

* Deutsche Boerse (DB1Gn.DE) and NYSE Euronext (NYX.N) have stepped up their lobbying with an advertising campaign to pressure EU regulators and secure approval for their $9 billion merger.

* Research In Motion (RIMM.O) posted a sharp drop in profit on Thursday, offered a dismal outlook for BlackBerry shipments around Christmas and delayed the likely arrival of a make-or-break overhaul of its smartphones, sending its shares tumbling.

* Private equity firm Apollo Global Management (APO.N) said its affiliates would buy Belgian chemicals company Taminco for around 1.1 billion euros ($1.4 billion) from CVC Capital Partners.

* Shares in Adobe Systems (ADBE.O) were up 6.8 percent after the bell on Thursday as the company reported results.

* Cameron International Corp (CAM.N) said BP Plc (BP.L) had agreed to indemnify the company for current and future compensatory claims associated with the Deepwater Horizon incident.

* U.S. insurance broker Brown & Brown Inc (BRO.N) said it had agreed to buy Arrowhead General Insurance Agency Inc for $395 million in cash.

* Delta Petroleum Corp (DPTR.O) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection early on Friday, a month after the U.S. oil and gas producer warned about its liquidity issues.

* United Technologies Corp (UTX.N) said on Thursday it expected to increase profits by 6 to 10 percent in 2012, despite a slowing U.S. recovery and what it expects to be a prolonged slump in Europe.

* European stocks (.FTEU3) rose on Friday, extending the previous session's tentative rebound from a week-long drop, helped by better-than-feared U.S. macro data, but lingering concerns over the euro zone debt crisis kept gains in check.

* The yuan jumped to a record high on Friday against the dollar on suspected intervention orchestrated by the central bank, its most explicit action in three months to deter speculators from betting on a fall in the currency.

* U.S. stocks rose on Thursday, as signs of strength in the economy and higher-than-expected profit at FedEx outweighed more warnings about Europe.

* The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was up 45.33 points, or 0.38 percent, at 11,868.81. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) was up 3.93 points, or 0.32 percent, at 1,215.75. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) was up 1.70 points, or 0.07 percent, at 2,541.01.

(Reporting by Atul Prakash; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks

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MegaUpload Mega Sues Universal Over Mega Song Censorship [File Sharing]

Remember that support video for MegaUpload with all the A-List stars? It's been yanked from the Internet because according to Universal's DMCA request, New Zealand artist Meg Gin Wigmore didn't consent to involvement in the project. There were also rumors that Will.i.am issued his own DMCA for the video. Turns out it's all bullshit. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/bLA1f-SZp1A/megaupload-mega-sues-universal-over-mega-song-censorship

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