Saturday, December 31, 2011

AAA Texas to offer free tipsy tow service

December 30, 2011

AAA Texas? Emergency Roadside Service will provide a free tow and ride home beginning at 6 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, through 6 a.m. on Sunday, Jan. 1, 2012. The number to call is 1-800-222-4357. Callers simply tell the AAA Texas operators, ?I need a Tipsy Tow,? to receive the free tow and ride home.

If you?re a driver who has too much to drink, or you?re a party host, restaurant or bar owner who?s concerned about a guest that?s overindulged and you want to make sure that person gets home safely, AAA Texas is offering members and non-members alike our Tipsy Tow program to make sure everyone who needs a ride home gets home safely.
Motorists who believe they have had too much to drink can call AAA Texas? Emergency Roadside Service and be provided a free tow and ride home beginning at 6 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, through 6 a.m. on Sunday, Jan. 1, 2012. The number to call is 1-800-222-4357. Callers simply tell the AAA Texas operators, ?I need a Tipsy Tow,? to receive the free tow and ride home.?AAA Texas will dispatch an Emergency Roadside Service truck to the location and take the driver and vehicle 10 miles free of charge.?Any mileage beyond 10 miles will be the responsibility of the motorist. The passenger and driver should agree in advance what the excess mileage charges will be and the method of payment, prior to providing the tow.
?AAA Texas is pleased to offer Tipsy Tow to Texas motorists during this time of the year. Law enforcement, individual motorists, party hosts and others are taking responsibility to make sure intoxicated drivers don?t get behind the wheel.?AAA?s Emergency Roadside Service team will be a critical part of this important effort to save lives and get motorists home safely,? said Linda K. von Quintus, AAA Vice President of Government & Community Affairs.
Many motorists who have had too much to drink have said one of the reasons why they don?t call a taxi is because they have to come back the next day and get the car. Tipsy Tow takes care of that. You do not have to be a AAA member to use this free service, however reservations are not accepted.
There are some situations where a Tipsy Tow does not qualify:
? The motorist requests a tow to another drinking establishment, repair facility or other location besides their place of residence.? A tow to a hotel would be acceptable if the person is a guest there.
? If a member or non-member requests a Tipsy Tow and then, that vehicle is inoperable or the individual asks to start the car, change a tire, deliver gasoline or seeks ?taxi? service, transporting two or more people with the vehicle, they will be charged the tow truck operator?s standard rate.
People who are convicted of driving under the influence could lose many of the important things in their lives, such as family, job, dignity and money.?A Driving While Intoxicated (DWI) or Driving Under the Influence (DUI) conviction can be a financial wrecking ball.?Law enforcement agencies say it can cost a person between $13,000 to $24,000 in fines, legal fees, higher insurance rates, lost wages, substance abuse programs or court required alcohol treatment.??
AAA Texas advises that motorists can keep themselves and others safe and can avoid DWI/DUI arrests by keeping these safety tips in mind:
? At social events, designate non-drinking drivers who can get everyone home safely.
? Call a friend or family member for a ride home if you have been drinking.
? Keep a cab company telephone number in your wallet so you can call for a ride home.
??As a party host, offer a variety of non-alcoholic drink alternatives and provide a gift to guests who volunteer to be designated drivers.
? Take the car keys away from friends and relatives who have had too much to drink.????????????????????????????????
? If you?re driving and see a motorist driving in an erratic manner, try to stay behind their vehicle, leaving plenty of distance to be safe. Call 9-1-1 and give police a description of the vehicle and license plate if you can safely see it.????????????????
As North America?s largest motoring and leisure travel organization, AAA provides more than 51 million members with travel, insurance, financial and automotive-related services. Since its founding in 1902, the not-for-profit, fully tax-paying AAA has been a leader and advocate for the safety and security of all travelers. AAA Texas can be visited on the Internet at AAA.com.

Source: http://www.sweetwaterreporter.com/content/aaa-texas-offer-free-tipsy-tow-service

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Incoming Marlborough mayor begins staffing

Mayor-elect Arthur Vigeant has announced his executive aide and executive secretary for the mayor?s office.

Michael Berry is Vigeant?s executive aide and Patricia ?Trish? Bernard is his executive secretary. Vigeant also decided to keep Donald Rider as the city solicitor.

Berry, of Walpole, has a blend of municipal and state government experience combined with private sector work with state trade associations, according to Vigeant?s office.

?We cast a wide net to attract the most qualified candidates for this important position,? Vigeant said. ?A number of outstanding people were interviewed. In the end, I?m confident that Mike?s experience and background is best suited to accomplishing the goals we have set.?

Berry has served on the Walpole School Committee and is currently the vice chairman of the town?s Board of Selectmen. He is a graduate of Merrimack College and earned a master?s degree in public administration from Bridgewater State University in 2009.

?The city of Marlborough has a lot to offer,? Berry said. ?I feel fortunate to have the opportunity to play a small role in ensuring that the city remains a great place to work, do business and raise a family. I?m ready to hit the ground running and work collaboratively with the mayor, City Council and School Committee to get things done.?

Bernard brings more than 20 years of experience in senior administrative positions in consulting, marketing, publishing and meeting planning industries, according to Vigeant?s office. Most recently she managed the offices of Pathway Advisors, a turnaround management consulting firm in Natick. She holds an associate of science degree from Aquinas Junior College and lives in Westborough with her husband and two sons.

?I look forward to working with Mayor-elect Vigeant and supporting him and his endeavors with new growth opportunities for the city of Marlborough,? Bernard said. ?I love a busy work environment, and my research into Mayor-elect Vigeant has shown that he is an experienced, hardworking elected official who has represented the folks of Marlborough with dedication and a true love for the city. I have no doubt that he will bring the same work ethic into his new role as mayor, and I am very excited to be a part of his administrative staff.?

Krista Holmi served as outgoing Mayor Nancy Stevens? executive aide and Katherine LaRose was her executive secretary.

For the city solicitor position, Vigeant said he talked with a lot of people, who felt that Rider would be the best person for him.

?I?m looking forward to a good working relationship with him,? Vigeant said. ?He?s very thorough.?

Vigeant will be inaugurated as mayor on Monday.

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Source: http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/news/x1895999916/Incoming-Marlborough-mayor-begins-staffing

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Targeted therapy extends progression-free survival of patients with advanced ovarian cancer

"This approach can be looked upon as a third major component of treatment for ovarian cancer and related malignancies," says Robert A. Burger, MD, lead investigator on the GOG study and director of the Women's Cancer Center at Fox Chase Cancer Center. "We've had the combination of surgical management and cytotoxic chemotherapy for many years, but we haven't really seen anything else in terms of a fundamental class of treatment. This represents a new way for us to control the disease."

The placebo-controlled study, which was sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, enrolled 1,873 patients with previously untreated advanced disease from 336 sites, primarily in the United States, but also in Canada, South Korea, and Japan. The patients either had stage III ovarian cancer that could not be entirely removed with surgery, or stage IV disease, and were randomly assigned to one of three groups. For patients who received bevacizumab with chemotherapy followed by bevacizumab for up to an additional 10 months, the median time until their cancer progressed was 14.1 months, compared to 10.3 months for patients in the control group, who received chemotherapy with a placebo and then continued with a placebo. The net effect was a 28% reduction in the risk of disease of ovarian cancer progression over time. Patients who received bevacizumab only with chemotherapy, but not afterward, had a median progression-free survival of 11.2 months.

The National Cancer Institute estimates that nearly 22,000 women were diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2011, and more than 15,000 died of the disease. For patients diagnosed before the cancer has spread, the five-year relative survival rate is about 93 percent (relative survival measures survival of cancer only, independent of other causes of death). But ovarian cancer is insidious?early symptoms, like bloating, abdominal pain, and trouble eating, are typical of many illnesses and easily dismissed as non-threatening. Women often do not learn they have the disease until it's already spread. In 62 percent of new cases, the patient's cancer has metastasized to distant sites, and the five-year survival rate is just under 27 percent.

Bevacizumab is already FDA-approved for use against some types of colon, lung, kidney and brain cancers; its accelerated approval for metastatic breast cancer was recently revoked by the FDA. The drug acts by binding with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a protein produced by certain cancers that helps initiate the growth of new blood vessels that feed the tumor. The process of growing new blood vessels is called angiogenesis, and bevacizumab is an angiogenesis inhibitor.

"Bevacizumab blocks the growth factor VEGF, which is important in the process of ovarian cancer progression," says Burger, "and we've seen that this drug is also active in patients with recurrent disease."

Angiogenesis happens at the interface between the host and the disease, which makes it an appealing target for treatment, says Burger, who also led the Phase II GOG study on using bevacizumab in women with recurrent ovarian cancer. He says different ovarian cancers may appear identical under the microscope but differ biologically, which means they'll respond differently to treatment.

In the NEJM paper, Burger and his co-authors point out that another ovarian cancer trial conducted primarily in Europe called ICON7 demonstrated positive results in using becavizumab in combination with chemotherapy and then continued for up to 7 months.

Provided by Fox Chase Cancer Center (news : web)

Source: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2011-12-therapy-progression-free-survival-patients-advanced.html

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Website says Sinead O'Connor's marriage is over

FILE- In this Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011 file photo, singer Sinead O'Conner attends a special screening of "Albert Nobbs", hosted by the Cinema Society and Giorgio Armani at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. A statement on Sinead O'Connor's website says her brief marriage to therapist Barry Herridge has ended amicably. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, FILE)

FILE- In this Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011 file photo, singer Sinead O'Conner attends a special screening of "Albert Nobbs", hosted by the Cinema Society and Giorgio Armani at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. A statement on Sinead O'Connor's website says her brief marriage to therapist Barry Herridge has ended amicably. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, FILE)

LONDON (AP) ? A statement on Sinead O'Connor's website says her brief marriage to therapist Barry Herridge has ended amicably.

The statement on sineadoconnor.com says "the marriage was 16 days. We lived together for 7 days only.. Until Xmas eve."

The statement says "from the moment myself and my husband got together ... there was intense pressure placed upon him by certain people in his life, not to be involved with me."

She adds: "As my good friend said 'well, at least you got married in Vegas in a pink Cadillac! Can't get more Rock n Roll than that.'"

Roman Szendrey, who maintains the site, told The Associated Press by phone Wednesday the report is accurate and was personally posted by O'Connor.

______

Online: http://www.sineadoconnor.com/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-28-EU-People-Sinead-O'Connor/id-35d23eefb8c84039ba7ac93ae51500f7

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

$526.49 - 25,000BTU Window Air Conditioner with Energy Star

Note: Order placed before 12:30PM Pacific Standard Time will normally be processed in the same day. Orders over $250 must be shipped to the confirmed billing address of the credit card or the Paypal or Google Checkout. Otherwise, will be subject to order verification or delay.

Delivery: Due to the size and weight of this item, the method of delivery will be standard ground shipping at flat rate of $115 (Continental United States only) For delivery to Hawaii, Alaska or via air shipping, please contact our customer service for the shipping charges.

Source: http://www.brilliantstore.com/window-air-conditioners-spt-wa-2511s.html

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Film to be made about London Gay Men's Chorus

Lgmc MEW

An all-gay singing group from London will be the subject of a film about self-empowerment, PinkPaper.com can report.

London Gay Men?s Chorus ? which is Europe's largest homosexual choir?with over 230 members ? has been selected for the Untold Stories scheme.

The initiative is part of the Media Trust, matching small charities with top film-makers to highlight their positive effects.

The film will chart the process of forming the choir and instilling members with confidence ? both vocally and in terms of their sexuality.

Simon Sharp, the choir?s musical director, told London24 : ?Our education and community engagement projects don?t get the headline focus a performance does.

?This educational branch will be at the centre of the Untold Stories film.?

He added: ?We hope to communicate the idea of singing and being happy with your sexuality. We hope a group of people enjoying being together and singing together will deliver the message that it?s OK to be gay.

?The schools we are working with are very supportive. They want to have this as part of their profile too.?

Currently, the chorus are creating a LGBT youth choir from schools in Camden who will perform at the LGMS's 21st birthday concert at London's Royal Festival Hall.

The film will be broadcast on Media Trust?s national television channel, Community Channel, and will be presented by Jon Snow.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/PinkPaperNews/~3/agHO7e3rbrE/Film-to-be-made-about-London-Gay-Mens-Chorus.aspx

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

JXD releases S7100, 7-inch Android-powered gaming tablet, rocks Mario Kart 64, and more

JXD have just released something you might want for next Christmas, the JXD S7100. The S7100 is a 7-inch, Android-powered gaming tablet that is aimed at the old-school arcade gamers. The device features some impressive specifications, too.

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The S7100 sports a D-pad, face buttons, an 800x480 capacitive touchscreen, an ARM Cortex A9 CPU, Mali 400 GPU, 512MB of RAM, 16GB of internal storage, a 0.3-megapixel front-facing camera, 2.0-megapixel rear-facing camera, and HDMI out. The unit is capable of playing touchscreen games and classic ROMs such as Metal Slug, Mario Kart 64, Angry Birds, Plants Vs. Zombies, and Fruit Ninja HD.

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The device also sports the actual PlayStation button icons on its own buttons, and the marketing website for the S7100 sports icons from Apple, Google, Microsoft and others. Well, you'd think this puppy might be expensive, right? Wrong. It's just $140.

Further Reading: Read and find more Mobile Devices, Tablets & Phones news at our Mobile Devices, Tablets & Phones news index page.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TweaktownNewsRss/~3/ehyhMT0AIVo/index.html

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A new theory emerges for where some fish became 4-limbed creatures

A new theory emerges for where some fish became 4-limbed creatures [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jim Barlow
jebarlow@uoregon.edu
541-346-3481
University of Oregon

University of Oregon scientist finds evidence that the transition occurred in humid, wooded floodplains

EUGENE, Ore. -- A small fish crawling on stumpy limbs from a shrinking desert pond is an icon of can-do spirit, emblematic of a leading theory for the evolutionary transition between fish and amphibians. This theorized image of such a drastic adaptation to changing environmental conditions, however, may, itself, be evolving into a new picture.

University of Oregon scientist Gregory J. Retallack, professor of geological sciences, says that his discoveries at numerous sites in Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania suggests that "such a plucky hypothetical ancestor of ours probably could not have survived the overwhelming odds of perishing in a trek to another shrinking pond."

This scenario comes from the late Devonian, about 390 million years ago to roughly 360 million years ago. Paleontologist Alfred Romer, who died in 1973 after serving on the faculties at the University of Chicago and Harvard University, saw this time as a period of struggle and escape -- and important in fish-tetrapod transition -- to ensure survival.

Reporting in the May 2011 issue of the Journal of Geology, Retallack, who also is co-director of paleontological collections at the UO's Museum of Natural and Cultural History, argues for a very different explanation. He examined numerous buried soils in rocks yielding footprints and bones of early transitional fossils between fish and amphibians of Devonian and Carboniferous geological age. What he found raises a major challenge to Romer's theory.

"These transitional fossils were not associated with drying ponds or deserts, but consistently were found with humid woodland soils," he said. "Remains of drying ponds and desert soils also are known and are littered with fossil fish, but none of our distant ancestors. Judging from where their fossils were found, transitional forms between fish and amphibians lived in wooded floodplains. Our distant ancestors were not so much foolhardy, as opportunistic, taking advantage of floodplains and lakes choked with roots and logs for the first time in geological history."

Limbs proved handy for negotiating woody obstacles, and flexible necks allowed for feeding in shallow water, Retallack said. By this new woodland hypothesis, the limbs and necks, which distinguish salamanders from fish, did not arise from reckless adventure in deserts, but rather were nurtured by a newly evolved habitat of humid, wooded floodplains.

The findings, he said, dampen both the desert hypothesis of Romer and a newer inter-tidal theory put forth by Grzegorz Niedbwiedzki and colleagues at the University of Warsaw. In 2010, they published their discovery of eight-foot-long, 395-million-year-old tetrapods in ancient lagoonal mud in southeastern Poland, where Retallack also has been studying fossil soils with Polish colleague Marek Narkeiwicz.

"Ancient soils and sediments at sites for transitional fossils around the world are critical for understanding when and under what conditions fish first walked," Retallack said. "The Darwin fish of chrome adorning many car trunks represents a particular time and place in the long evolutionary history of life on earth."

###

UO Academic Support Funds supported Retallack's research.

About the University of Oregon

The University of Oregon is among the 108 institutions chosen from 4,633 U.S. universities for top-tier designation of "Very High Research Activity" in the 2010 Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. The UO also is one of two Pacific Northwest members of the Association of American Universities.

Source: Gregory J. Retallack, professor, Department of Geological Sciences, 541-346-4558, gregr@uoregon.edu

Links:

Retallack: http://pages.uoregon.edu/dogsci/doku.php?id=directory/faculty/greg/about

Department of Geological Sciences: http://pages.uoregon.edu/dogsci/doku.php



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

?


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


A new theory emerges for where some fish became 4-limbed creatures [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jim Barlow
jebarlow@uoregon.edu
541-346-3481
University of Oregon

University of Oregon scientist finds evidence that the transition occurred in humid, wooded floodplains

EUGENE, Ore. -- A small fish crawling on stumpy limbs from a shrinking desert pond is an icon of can-do spirit, emblematic of a leading theory for the evolutionary transition between fish and amphibians. This theorized image of such a drastic adaptation to changing environmental conditions, however, may, itself, be evolving into a new picture.

University of Oregon scientist Gregory J. Retallack, professor of geological sciences, says that his discoveries at numerous sites in Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania suggests that "such a plucky hypothetical ancestor of ours probably could not have survived the overwhelming odds of perishing in a trek to another shrinking pond."

This scenario comes from the late Devonian, about 390 million years ago to roughly 360 million years ago. Paleontologist Alfred Romer, who died in 1973 after serving on the faculties at the University of Chicago and Harvard University, saw this time as a period of struggle and escape -- and important in fish-tetrapod transition -- to ensure survival.

Reporting in the May 2011 issue of the Journal of Geology, Retallack, who also is co-director of paleontological collections at the UO's Museum of Natural and Cultural History, argues for a very different explanation. He examined numerous buried soils in rocks yielding footprints and bones of early transitional fossils between fish and amphibians of Devonian and Carboniferous geological age. What he found raises a major challenge to Romer's theory.

"These transitional fossils were not associated with drying ponds or deserts, but consistently were found with humid woodland soils," he said. "Remains of drying ponds and desert soils also are known and are littered with fossil fish, but none of our distant ancestors. Judging from where their fossils were found, transitional forms between fish and amphibians lived in wooded floodplains. Our distant ancestors were not so much foolhardy, as opportunistic, taking advantage of floodplains and lakes choked with roots and logs for the first time in geological history."

Limbs proved handy for negotiating woody obstacles, and flexible necks allowed for feeding in shallow water, Retallack said. By this new woodland hypothesis, the limbs and necks, which distinguish salamanders from fish, did not arise from reckless adventure in deserts, but rather were nurtured by a newly evolved habitat of humid, wooded floodplains.

The findings, he said, dampen both the desert hypothesis of Romer and a newer inter-tidal theory put forth by Grzegorz Niedbwiedzki and colleagues at the University of Warsaw. In 2010, they published their discovery of eight-foot-long, 395-million-year-old tetrapods in ancient lagoonal mud in southeastern Poland, where Retallack also has been studying fossil soils with Polish colleague Marek Narkeiwicz.

"Ancient soils and sediments at sites for transitional fossils around the world are critical for understanding when and under what conditions fish first walked," Retallack said. "The Darwin fish of chrome adorning many car trunks represents a particular time and place in the long evolutionary history of life on earth."

###

UO Academic Support Funds supported Retallack's research.

About the University of Oregon

The University of Oregon is among the 108 institutions chosen from 4,633 U.S. universities for top-tier designation of "Very High Research Activity" in the 2010 Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. The UO also is one of two Pacific Northwest members of the Association of American Universities.

Source: Gregory J. Retallack, professor, Department of Geological Sciences, 541-346-4558, gregr@uoregon.edu

Links:

Retallack: http://pages.uoregon.edu/dogsci/doku.php?id=directory/faculty/greg/about

Department of Geological Sciences: http://pages.uoregon.edu/dogsci/doku.php



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

?


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


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/uoo-ant122711.php

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Conn. house where 5 died in fire is torn down (AP)

STAMFORD, Conn. ? A house severely damaged in a Christmas morning fire that killed three children and two grandparents, one of whom worked as Santa Claus at Saks Fifth Avenue, has been torn down.

The building department determined that the $1.7 million house was unsafe and ordered it razed, Stamford fire chief Antonio Conte said.

The home's owner, advertising executive Madonna Badger, and her male acquaintance escaped from the fire. But Badger's three daughters ? a 10-year-old and 7-year-old twins ? and her parents, who were visiting for the holiday, died, police said.

Neighbors said they awoke to the sound of screaming shortly before 5 a.m. Sunday and rushed outside to help, but could do nothing as flames devoured the large, turreted home.

Police said the male acquaintance who escaped the blaze with Badger was a contractor working on the home. He was also hospitalized but his condition was not released.

Interviews with them will be finished Monday, Conte said. He had no details on the investigation.

A spokeswoman for Saks Fifth Avenue confirmed in a statement that Badger's father, Lomer Johnson, had worked as a Santa this year at its flagship store in Manhattan.

"Mr. Johnson was Saks Fifth Avenue's beloved Santa, and we are heartbroken about this terrible tragedy," spokeswoman Julia Bently said.

Badger, an ad executive in the fashion industry, is the founder of New York City-based Badger & Winters Group. A supervisor at Stamford Hospital said she was treated and discharged by Sunday evening. Her whereabouts Monday was unknown.

Property records show Badger bought the five-bedroom, waterfront home for $1.7 million last year. The house was situated in Shippan Point, a wealthy neighborhood that juts into Long Island Sound.

The lot where the house once stood was covered with charred debris and cordoned off by police with tape on Monday. Passers-by left bouquets, stuffed animals and candles nearby.

Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a former mayor of Stamford, offered his condolences to Badger and her family in a statement and said her loss "defies explanation."

The fire was Stamford's deadliest since a 1987 blaze that also killed five people, Conte said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_us/us_fire_five_dead

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Video: Payroll Tax Cut: It's a Deal

Insight on the payroll tax cut deal, holiday shopping and more, with the Squawk on the Street team.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45776420/

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Cowell backs Amaro to win 'The X Factor' (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? "The X Factor" judges didn't want to stop listening to Melanie Amaro.

The powerful 19-year-old vocalist from Sunrise, Fla., wowed the Fox talent competition's panel with her soaring rendition of Beyonce's "Listen" during Wednesday's final performance round, prompting head judge Simon Cowell to declare that Amaro should win the show's grand prize: a $5 million recording contract and a starring role in a Pepsi commercial.

"That wasn't a $5 million performance," declared judge L.A. Reid. "That was a $50 million performance."

The panel also poured praise on the other two finalists: soulful 30-year-old single father Josh Krajcik of Wooster, Ohio, and 28-year-old singer-rapper Chris Rene of Santa Cruz, Calif. Krajcik accompanied himself on guitar for his final performance of "At Last," while Rene delivered his original tune "Young Homie" with a group of dancers and singers.

"You make everyone fall in love with you," judge Paula Abdul told Rene.

Before the final showdown, each singer awkwardly dueted with established artists. Krajcik was joined by Alanis Morissette on "Uninvited," Rene teamed up with Avril Lavigne for "Complicated," and Amaro partnered with R. Kelly on "I Believe I Can Fly," which marked the first time that the R&B star performed his motivational anthem with another singer.

The winner, which will be decided by viewer votes, will be announced on Thursday's show.

The contest thus far hasn't achieved the same success as "American Idol," which Cowell left last year to import "X Factor" from the U.K. to the U.S. Last Wednesday's performance episode drew 10.79 million viewers, less than half of the average "Idol" audience.

Unlike "Idol," the competition is open to solo singers and groups and has a lower minimum age of 12 and no upper age limit. The judges also serve as mentors: Cowell represented female vocalists, including Amaro; Reid headed male singers, including Rene; Nicole Scherzinger was in charge of over-30 singers, including Krajcik; and Abdul helmed the groups.

___

Fox is owned by News Corp.

___

AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang.

___

Online:

http://www.thexfactorusa.com/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_en_tv/us_tv_x_factor

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Friday, December 23, 2011

WAAYTV: RT @HSV911: Strong to severe storms on Thursday, 12/22. Main threat is heavy rain up to 1", isolated wind gusts. Tornado threat very, ve ...

Twitter / Huntsville 911: Strong to severe storms on ... Loader Strong to severe storms on Thursday, 12/22. Main threat is heavy rain up to 1", isolated wind gusts. Tornado threat very, very low.

Source: http://twitter.com/WAAYTV/statuses/149603054604390400

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Philippines sends coffins as toll nears 1,000 dead (AP)

ILIGAN, Philippines ? The government shipped more than 400 coffins to two flood-stricken cities in the southern Philippines on Tuesday as the death toll neared 1,000 and President Benigno Aquino III declared a state of national calamity.

The latest count listed 957 dead and 49 missing and is expected to climb further as additional bodies are recovered from the sea and mud in Iligan and Cagayan de Oro cities.

A handful of morgues are overwhelmed and running out of coffins and formaldehyde for embalming. Aid workers appealed for bottled water, blankets, tents and clothes for many of 45,000 in crowded evacuation centers.

Navy sailors in Manila loaded a ship with 437 white wooden coffins to help local authorities handle the staggering number of dead. Also on the way were containers with thousands of water bottles.

Most of the dead were women and children who drowned Friday night when flash floods triggered by a tropical storm gushed into homes while people were asleep.

Dozens of grieving relatives of at least 38 victims wept openly during funeral rites at the Iligan city cemetery. Many wore masks to try to block the stench of decomposing bodies.

"We have to give the dead a decent burial," Mayor Lawrence Cruz said. He said authorities were using part of the cemetery's passageway to build tombs.

A Briton was the first foreigner reported dead in the flooding, according to the British Embassy in Manila. It didn't provide details.

Aquino, on a visit to Cagayan de Oro on Tuesday, said the declaration of a national calamity will help local authorities gain quick access to recovery funds and keep prices of basic goods stable.

"Our national government will do its best to prevent a repeat of this tragedy," Aquino told residents who came to greet him.

He said there would be an assessment of why so many people died, if there was ample warning that a storm would sweep through the area, and why people living along riverbanks and close to the coast had not been moved to safety.

"I do not accept that everything had been done. I know that we can do more. We must determine what really happened," Aquino said. "Must this end in tragedy? We knew that (storm) was coming. There should have been efforts to avoid the destruction."

The U.N. food agency flew in 3 tons of high-protein biscuits together with water tanks, blankets, tarpaulins and tents for some 75,000 people. Shortage of water was still a major problem in the two cities.

In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed concern, U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said.

"The United Nations and its partners stand ready to support the government in responding to this disaster," the deputy spokesman added.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_re_as/as_philippines_storm

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

2011: Tech???s Biggest Winners and Losers (Mashable)

Time is a funny thing. One minute I?m standing in a crowded room fondling HP?s new 10.1-inch TouchPad tablet, the next, I?m writing its obituary, and a moment later I?m marking the rebirth of its OS as an open source platform. That?s not really how it happened. This course of events took much of 2011. But it?s a quirk of life that time, especially as you get older, goes by faster and faster, and a company?s fortunes can change in the blink of an eye -- even if that blink took 12 months.

As 2011 draws to a close it???s the perfect time for me to decompress the year, to pull it apart like an accordion, stretching it wide so I can see the events, big and small, that gave 2011 its character. Those on the top edge of those accordion folds are the year???s winners, while the others living in the channels are its losers.

[More from Mashable: BioWare Founders Talk Good and Evil in Star Wars: The Old Republic]

That?s a simple way of looking at it. The other possibility is that some companies and industry players like Netflix sit along the top edge because you couldn?t ignore the meltdown -- it was just too loud, too unbelievable. Either way, what follows is a look at the highs and lows. The victors and?the other guys.


Winner: Amazon


[More from Mashable: Stephen Baldwin to Brother Alec: When Are You Coming Back to Twitter? [VIDEO]]

It?s true, the Amazon Kindle Fire is a flawed, 1.0 product that may have been rushed out to market. On the other hand, it costs just $199, is incredibly effective for content consumption and is selling like hot cakes. Some analysts believe it will sell 4 million units by the end of this holiday season.


Loser: Brick-and-Mortar Retailers


It?s getting tougher and tougher for old-school retailers to get consumers into their stores. This year Amazon managed to make the situation worse by offering consumers a special discount just for using Amazon?s mobile shopping tool while in other people?s stores. I?ve done my share of price comparisons on my smartphone while in my local Best Buy. Invariably, I find cheaper prices elsewhere. Yet, Amazon?s move has garnered it this year?s ?Grinch Award.?

Winner: Apple


No doubt 2011 will be remembered as one of Apple?s most difficult years. Yet, even as it grapples with the difficult loss of its founder and leader, Steve Jobs, the company has been knocking it out of the park on almost every other level. The Apple iPad tablet may be the prime example of the company?s success in 2011. While not a reimagining of the first blockbuster tablet, the iPad 2 turned out to be a near pitch-perfect follow-up and helped drive sales of the iPad to over 40 million units. No one else in the tablet space has even come close (though the Kindle Fire shows potential).

Though some may criticize Apple for the iPhone 5 no-show, I?d say Apple did what it always does -- let the hype mill drive up near insane-levels of interest for its new phone. The iPhone 4S is a comparatively minor upgrade to the iPhone 4, but that didn?t seem to matter as Siri sucked up virtually all tech coverage for weeks and Apple may be heading to a stellar iPhone 4S sales quarter.


Loser: Us


I finally finished the 600-plus-page tome that is Walter Isaacson?s Steve Job?s Biography. Jobs was, in some ways, a very odd and inscrutable man. However, I've also come to the realization that losing Steve Jobs robbed us of one of the truly singular minds in the tech industry. Apple marches on, but Jobs will never be replicated.

Winner: IBM


When it sold its desktop and laptop business to Lenovo nearly a decade ago, IBM dropped out of the consumer tech business. Yet here it is on my list, and all because it conducted perhaps the best tech stunt of all time: Watson versus Jeopardy. The nation was transfixed as IBM?s powerfully smart supercomputer traded wits with former Jeopardy champ Ken Jennings. It was oddly exciting, but also no contest as Watson won handily. As a result, for the first time in ages, consumers were talking about IBM again and what Watson could mean for the world. Well done, IBM.


Loser: HP


The well-chronicled HP TouchPad debacle was a stunner, to be sure. As I said, I was at the launch event, a bright sunny day along the shore of San Francisco Bay, so full of promise. I have never seen such an abrupt about-face. The product rollout was in February. The TouchPad arrived in stores in mid-summer and was dead on arrival by August. Things only got weirder when HP conducted a rare hot-tech fire sale. Consumers and gadget freaks scooped up those $99 TouchPads faster than you could say ?WebOS.? Still, the temporary reprieve only served to confuse most in the industry, and it was clear that HP had bigger problems than just a failed tablet launch.

Winner: Meg Whitman


Meg Whitman lost her bid for California Governor, but that was so 2010. In 2011, the former eBay chief reentered the tech industry, taking over for misguided HP CEO Leo Apotheker (see above) and doing a number of things right:

  1. Making it clear that HP is not abandoning the PC business.
  2. Saving WebOS from oblivion by making it an open source platform, and
  3. Promising tablets in 2013. You?ll pardon me if I take that last with a grain of salt.

Winner: Egypt


The Arab Spring gained momentum in Egypt and was, in part, propelled forward by an almost unprecedented use of social networks for disseminating information and gathering support. As the Egyptian government fought back, it actually blocked Twitter -- a clear sign that the use of the micro blogging service during the uprising had it worried.

Eventually, other tech companies stepped in to help the Egyptian people get around these technological roadblocks. That compulsion to use social networks to drive social change ultimately helped spark other revolutionary acts throughout that part of the world, and some still play out today. Still, Egypt was the first to emerge with a new government and direction.


Loser: ICANN


Two big changes occurred in the World of Internet Domains: First ICANN decided to open up the world of TLDs (Top level Domains, which are the suffixes at the end of web site URLs) to a much, much wider variety of names. Second it finally made .XXX domains available for registration. ICANN?s effort to simultaneously broaden the web and control some of its darkest corners, may have some unintended consequences. Too many TLDs could mean that brand names need to start worrying again about someone buying www.[SOMETHING].McDonalds or www.[SOMETHING].BestBuy. On the XXX front, all the wrong people are racing to buy porn domains, simply to protect themselves. ICANN may have seriously misfired in 2011.

Winner: Android


2011 was the year Android officially became the dominant smart phone platform. While Apple enjoys continued success and sales with its iPhone and iOS platform, it gets just a few major launches (iPad, iPhone, iPod) each year. For Google and Android, almost every day is launch day. Countless manufacturers and carriers are constantly rolling out new Android handsets. Sure, they?re not all in alignment like iOS phones. There are phones running Android 2.2, 2.3, and even a few running 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich).

None of this bothers consumers, who are eagerly buying handsets like the Samsung Galaxy II, the Verizon Thunderbolt, EVO 4G and others. That strength is further illustrated by the Android Market?s rapid growth -- it reached 10 billion downloads in record time, a milestone Apple?s App store celebrated at the start of this year.


Loser: Most Android Tablet Manufacturers


Sorry, but the number of Android Tablets sold this year simply isn?t that impressive. Plus, the Galaxy Tabs, Motorola Xooms and Toshiba Thrives (perhaps the wrong name to go with) of the world have been embarrassed by the easy success of the Amazon Kindle Fire and, to a lesser extent, by Barnes and Noble?s Nook Tablet, both of which run on Android 2.3 (That?s right -- nether runs the more tablet-friendly Honeycomb, A.K.A. Android 3.0).

Loser: RIM


Research in Motion (RIM) has had a tough year. Its proprietary OS-running PlayBook had all the earmarks of a breakout success, until RIM badly bungled the rollout (sorry, no email for you). The company continues to back the product, but no one seems to care or notice that the Kindle Fire is virtually the same hardware, but with a better ecosystem.

A massive service outage and RIM?s late public response compounded the company?s woes. All the while it has continued to roll out nifty new handsets that, at least, BlackBerry devotees care about. Yet, just when RIM was getting back on track, it misstepped again. Most recently, a couple of its exec got booted from an airplane for drunkenness and then it had to give up its own unified OS name ?BBX? because another company already owned it. Nothing that?s happened to RIM is truly ruinous, and I think the company can get back on track in 2012 -- at least I hope it can.


Winner: Verizon


Millions of Verizon customers finally got their wish early this year when Apple and Verizon announced the first CDMA iPhone. The phone itself was almost exactly like the AT&T iPhone but with a few crucial differences, including a reconfigured Antenna Bar (less attenuation) and personal hotspots (tethering to an iPhone!). This was the beginning of a trend in the U.S. for Apple as it eventually spread the iPhone love to Sprint.


Loser: Netflix


Netflix CEO Reed Hastings will likely want to forget 2011, a year that started with such promise as he took the stage at CES 2011, saying how he planned on being CEO for the next decade or more. Even as late as June of this year, Hastings was still feeling good, talking casually about how the DVD business would eventually go away and sharing, perhaps too candidly, the hurdles Netflix faced as it tried to resign major studios to its unbelievably successful streaming business. Even when Netflix announced over the summer that it planned to essentially double fees by asking customers to pay $8 for the baseline DVD delivery service and another $8 for streaming access, no one sounded the alarm bells.

However, when the day of the big change arrived, customer reaction was decidedly negative. Every attempt Netflix made to clean up the mess only served to make it worse (Quickster, anyone?). Things have finally quieted down, but it?s unlikely Netflix or Reed Hastings will ever be the same.


Winner: Google


Google is a winner this year for many reasons (see the Android surge above), but it's Google?s successful launch of a new social network, Google+, which deserves special mention.

No, it?s not a huge success yet. The platform may have roughly 40 million users, but it?s still too full of industry insiders, and most average Facebook users have likely never heard of it. However, I?m sure they will. Google+ is a well-thought-out, highly extensible platform. It?s also one that increasingly ties into everything else Google is doing, like YouTube, Gmail, contacts and more. Google?s grand vision is coming into focus, and Google+ may be at the center of it. It deserves high praise for launching it this year.


Loser: Zune HD Player


This misbegotten, yet elegant piece of hardware never stood a chance -- not because the Apple iPod was so powerful, but because Microsoft never married its excellent Zune HD hardware to a brilliant ecosystem or a halfway-decent marketing campaign.

Microsoft learned from this and is showing signs of building something under the Metro interface design and Zune Marketplace that could comprise an ecosystem. Plus, I like what I?m seeing in their marketing campaigns. Better yet, the Zune lives, sort of, in all Windows Phones.


Winner: Microsoft


Microsoft is ?winning? on many fronts in 2011. Though I do not yet understand how a Metro interface and standard Windows interface can live on one system, I love that Microsoft has finally adopted a universal design language for its consumer products. Metro on Windows 8, Windows Phone and Xbox is a very Apple-like move, and a smart one for the 21st century.

Microsoft also did stellar Windows 7 and Microsoft Office 10 business in 2011. These products are the company?s bread and butter and strong numbers for them every single quarter are a necessity -- and a reality. Kinect was a breakout hit, and the company has held its own on the browser front (this year?s biggest loser in that department is likely Firefox), and Bing, though still second, has gained a bit of ground on Google search.


Winner: The Cloud


Apple, Amazon, Microsoft and Google are all in the cloud and competing for your ?available wherever you are? business. Apple, in particular may have done more than any other company in 2011 to help the cloud. Its introduction of iCloud was not revolutionary, but helped refocus consumers and the industry on the cloud?s possibilities. Microsoft, which gets little credit for being among the first to market the cloud to consumers (see above) could benefit from this new understanding. What?s more, the cloud is a core part of the latest tablet darling: Amazon?s Kindle Fire.


Loser: AT&T


It lost its iPhone monopoly and is this close to losing its bid to swallow T-Mobile and become a new communications near-monopoly.

Winner: Facebook


800 million users and counting, Facebook is, officially, an unstoppable force in our universe. 2011 marked some of the social network?s most sweeping changes, not the least of which is Timeline, a reimagining of the Facebook Profile.

Facebook has had its share of troubles this year, nearly all of which revolve around privacy and have resulted in the company adding layers of management. Still, with its numbers growing and average users all but living their lives on Facebook, 2011 has been the social network?s biggest year. With an expected IPO, though, 2012 could possibly surpass it.


Loser: Nintendo


Nintendo has sold millions of its Nintendo 3DS 3D and augmented reality gaming devices. That?s the good news. The bad news is that number pales in the comparison to the nearly 150 million previous DS portable gaming devices (by one estimate) Nintendo has sold to date. The company is working hard this holiday season to drive up sales (Nintendo reps at every GameStop!), but it looks like another portable gaming device is eating Nintendo?s lunch: The iPhone (and iPod touch).

Winner: Twitter


It woke up from its seeming slumber with a boat-load of year-end updates that radically altered our Twitter experience. Everyone?s homepage changed, TweetDeck (the journalist?s favorite Twitter tool) is brand new and brands now have a place to call home on the microblog network. We may well remember 2011 as the year Twitter grew up.


Loser: Twitter Cowards


Yet, even as Twitter matured, some of its busiest and most admired Tweeters stepped back from the service, unable to handle the audiences they helped build. Two and a Half Men star Ashton Kutcher (known as @APlusK on Twitter) made an unfortunate error on the service and was so shamed by it that he handed control of his account over to staff.

More recently, 30 Rock star Alec Baldwin walked away from nearly a million followers when his own airplane meltdown led to a number of caustic tweets and, perhaps, a less than positive response. Baldwin and Kutcher proved they have Twitter feet of clay, apparently forgetting that Twitter is an open forum where people can share their opinions, good, bad, ugly and, sometimes, en masse. Yes, it can be overwhelming at times, but these things have a way of working themselves out. Walking away should never be an option.


Loser: Cisco and Flip


As 2010 was drawing to a close, Cisco was gearing up for a more aggressive move into the consumer space. However, 2011 marked a number of reversals for the company, including shuttering the once popular Flip pocket camcorder brand (a business cannibalized by the rapid growth of high-res smartphone video cameras) and an almost complete lack of interest in its consumer video telepresence product: UMI. Eventually, the company would back away from consumer tech and lay off thousands of workers.

Winner: The Internet


Sure, the Internet business bubble burst in 2000, but the Word Wide Web has seen nothing but growth in the decade since. World Internet usage as reported by InternetWorldStats.com sat at just over 360 million in Dec. 2000. Today, Internet usage all but dominates many of our lives (78% of North Americans are online), though not the majority of its global population. A little more than one-third (2 billion) of the world?s population use the Internet. The world population recently surpassed 7 billion, which means there are still billions of people out there who are not online. The good news is that Internet usage growth rates in emerging nations are accelerating. Africa, which has just 11% online penetration, has seen 2,527% online usage growth since 2000.


Loser: Sony


Sony?s most recent earnings statement did not paint a pretty picture for the consumer electronics giant. It saw declines due to foreign exchange rates and, more importantly, declining LCD TV sales. Yet no event was more emblematic of Sony?s troubles than the prolonged Sony PlayStation network outage and subsequent fallout.

Sony took way too long to tell its 70 million users exactly what was going on and, worse, may have been trying to hide the fact that it shut down the PSN to cut off a network intrusion. It may take Sony until well into 2012 to rebuild trust with its customers.


These are just a handful of the stories that mattered in 2011. We didn?t even talk about Groupon, one of the rare companies that managed to both win and lose in the same year with a strong IPO that has lost a ton of stream in a very short period of time.

What about you? Surely you have your own list of 2011 winners and losers and I bet you disagree with at least half my picks. Let me know your side of the story in comments.

Images courtesy of Wikimedia and Flickr, Asim Bharwani

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/linux/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111220/tc_mashable/2011_techs_biggest_winners_and_losers

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

'SNL' boss makes merry with annual holiday show (AP)

NEW YORK ? It's a holly, jolly Christmas for "Saturday Night Live" chief Lorne Michaels as he marks another holiday edition of the show he created 36 years ago, and as he welcomes back "SNL" alum Jimmy Fallon as guest host for this special yuletide bash.

Boasting singer Michael Buble as its musical guest, the program airs, of course, Saturday on NBC at 11:30 p.m. EST.

But on Thursday night, as Michaels welcomed a reporter to his Rockefeller Center office ? overlooking Studio 8H, from where "SNL" originates ? the clock was ticking: little more than two days until show time.

In the studio, a sketch was being blocked for the cameras: Denver Broncos quarterback (and famously devout Christian) Tim Tebow confronts Jesus in the locker room.

"It's been rewritten since last night when we read it," Michaels said. "We read 40-some-odd sketches yesterday, and narrowed them down to the pieces over there" ? he pointed to a board with a tentative rundown ? "and that's about 15 minutes (too) long. By the time `(Weekend) Update' gets done, the show will be maybe 25 minutes long, which is what we'll go into dress rehearsal with."

Dress rehearsal takes place in front of a live audience on Saturday evening, after which, according to the audience's response, the show is rearranged, cut and otherwise revamped during a crash session to whip it into shape to perform a couple hours later for the world.

For Michaels, dress brings pain every week.

"Things you were certain would work, don't," he sighed. "Things that were really bright flatten and fall apart."

So does this mean that, even after all these years of executive-producing "SNL," Michaels, the old hand at 67, is still caught by surprise at how an audience reacts?

"Every week," he nodded. "I think it's why I'm still here. It's not a thing you ever master."

Or do you?

"Lorne has done this for 36 years, and he knows what will work," Fallon had insisted during an interview earlier in the week. "He's a pro. He's a Beatle."

Fallon was an "SNL" cast member for six seasons before leaving in 2004. Then, in 2009, he was tapped by Michaels, who also executive-produces NBC's "Late Night," to fill its hosting job when Conan O'Brien graduated to "The Tonight Show."

Now, for the first time, Fallon has been invited back by Michaels to his old haunts at "SNL" to serve as host.

"There will be holiday-themed sketches for different religions," said Fallon, who said he arrived with "about 300 ideas" on Monday. "I'm working on some impressions that I haven't done before. I've got some surprises: Some old friends might be coming back for a cameo or two. And then I want to see if can dust off my `Update' suit."

Fallon was asked if any of the special demands of "SNL" had been hard to face again.

"Staying up late," he instantly replied. "I don't do that anymore. I have a 9-to-5 job now with `Late Night.' I got to work on keeping my energy up, so I'm ready to go on Saturday. Which I will be."

Once he steps onstage at the top of the show, "it's going to be an adrenaline rush," he predicted. It will also be an emotional rush to be back, in a proud guest-host role on the show he has loved all his life.

"I just hope I don't break down and cry," he said. "My mom and dad are going to be there. I got to make sure I don't make eye contact with them. I'd be a mess, a blubbering mess."

"I was down in Jimmy's dressing room a half-hour ago," Michaels said Thursday night, relaxing for a moment on a sofa in his office. "We were going over the monologue, and I could see he looked anxious about it. He's putting so much pressure on himself for this to be the greatest show of all time!

"I found myself saying, `You know, it's Thursday. It's NOT Friday. That means there's the rest of tonight and all day tomorrow for that missing piece to be written.'"

It's the step-by-step, day-by-day "SNL" process, a week-long evolution that's hard to keep in mind when you're in the middle of the stampede for Saturday.

"For a returning cast member or past host, the very last memory of having done the show is the party," Michaels said, "and, before that, how the show felt on the air, and the goodnights when it's ending.

"But you don't remember that on Monday there was nothing: `Really?! THOSE are the ideas?!' And then came the writing, and choosing which pieces, and the rewrites. It's rare that you're excited about the show on Tuesday, or even Thursday. But the process is all about it getting better.

"By the time Jimmy leaves here tomorrow night at 1 or 2 in the morning," Michaels said, "we'll know kind of what's looking good."

It's that process that keeps Michaels challenged, and fired up, and still very much in love with the job he said he has no thoughts of ever leaving.

"There's no other way to do it," he declared, and smiled resolutely as Saturday night loomed. "If there was, I would have figured it out. Trust me."

___

Online:

http://www.nbc.com

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_en_tv/us_ap_on_tv_lorne_michaels

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Gingrich 2.0: Ex-speaker offers new Newt for 2012 (AP)

WASHINGTON ? In mid-1970 an unusual job application landed in the stack of resumes at West Georgia College.

A young man finishing up his Ph.D. and looking for his first teaching job ditched the standard resume-and-cover-letter approach and instead wrote about his travels abroad, what it meant to grow up as the son of an Army colonel, the 100-plus books he'd read in the past year.

"We were all very impressed," recalls Mel Steely, one of the history professors who culled applications.

Thus did Newt Gingrich become Professor Gingrich. It was Step 1 in a carefully laid plan that would propel the 27-year-old father of two from Carrollton to Congress within eight years, on an audacious quest, as he saw it, to save Western civilization.

Flash forward four decades and here is Gingrich, once again the unconventional candidate, more impressed than ever with the value of his own thinking, making yet another unusual job application, this time for president.

Risen improbably from the ranks of GOP presidential discards, Gingrich is holding forth in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and beyond, lobbing rhetorical grenades that delight Republican voters hungry for someone with more moxie than Mitt Romney.

Barack Obama? "A radical who's incompetent."

Romney? He's fine, says Gingrich ? if all you're looking for is a manager.

And what of Gingrich himself? The former House speaker who resigned from Congress in a cloud of ethics problems and GOP discontent with his bombastic antics now casts himself as an older, wiser Newt: A 68-year-old grandfather who's settled down with wife No. 3, embraced God through Catholicism, discovered a passion for golf and the Green Bay Packers, and gained new perspectives on how to run a government by working on the outside for the past decade.

"I believe that I am a much more disciplined, much more mature person than I was 12 years ago," he says in an Associated Press interview.

Perhaps, but he has been here before.

Listen to the Newt Gingrich of 1985: "That was the old me ? abrasive and confrontational. You'll see a change now."

___

Gingrich was a popular assistant professor, but never bothered to seek tenure at West Georgia College. He'd selected the academic outpost in large part because he needed to run for Congress from somewhere, and the voting trends in Carrollton looked promising. Soon he was spreading out census data next to the stacks of blueberry pancakes on Steely's kitchen table, and plotting an end to the Southern Democrats' centurylong stranglehold on the 6th Congressional District.

It took three tries, but Gingrich finally won in a 1978 race that previewed his win-at-all-costs mindset. In a speech to college Republicans that year, he told the students: "One of the great problems we have in the Republican Party is that we don't encourage you to be nasty. We encourage you to be neat, obedient and loyal and faithful and all those Boy Scout words, which would be great around the campfire, but are lousy in politics."

Democrats, he added admiringly, "understand that cannibalism is the nature of the business."

Gingrich was ready to upend things up in Congress before he even arrived. Then-Rep. Pete du Pont, R-Del., remembers candidate Gingrich coming up for a visit ? not to seek counsel, but to provide it. "He was telling me all of his advice about how the Congress should be doing this and that," du Pont recalls.

He liked Gingrich's ideas and energy so much that in 1986, when du Pont decided to run for president, he gave Gingrich control of his GOPAC political action committee. Gingrich set to work building a farm team of Republican candidates in the states ? and a band of GOP revolutionaries within the Capitol.

"It was clear that he was looking to be an agent for transformation," says former Rep. Bob Walker, R-Pa., who joined with Gingrich in creating an upstart group of House Republicans called the Conservative Opportunity Society. "We were viewed as the people that the Republican establishment didn't want others to associate with."

Gingrich was scornful of the GOP leadership's defeatist attitude toward the Democratic majority and set out to show that Republicans were not to be trifled with ? even if he had to make the case to an empty House chamber, hoping to hook C-SPAN viewers far afield. He'd already claimed a couple of Democratic scalps by pushing ethics charges, and now he settled on a target so bold that even Walker remembers feeling uncomfortable at the stretch: House Speaker Jim Wright.

Gingrich plotted his assault patiently and meticulously, pursuing his prey for nearly two years. In the end, Wright resigned in 1989 after the House ethics committee charged him with violating rules that limit lawmakers' gifts and outside income.

As Wright stepped down, he called for an end to "this period of mindless cannibalism."

No one would accuse Newt Gingrich of being a Boy Scout Republican.

___

Driving north in a red 1969 VW Beetle, Gingrich had headed for Congress with one wife and before long had a different one. Now he's on his third.

They're just a few branches of what his youngest sister, Candace Gingrich-Jones, calls a "rather knotty" family tree.

Gingrich's mother, Kathleen, or Kit, was 16 when she married Newton McPherson, a mechanic. The marriage fell apart within days, but Newton Leroy McPherson was born nine months later in Harrisburg, Pa. Three years later, Newt's mother married Robert Gingrich, an Army officer who adopted "Newtie."

Gingrich, proud to call himself an Army brat, grew up in Pennsylvania, Kansas, France, Germany and Georgia, where he went to high school. Young Newt tutored pretty girls but was more interested in his books ? and his geometry teacher, Jackie Battley. He married her at 19. She was 26.

Robert Gingrich boycotted the wedding. Kit Gingrich, now deceased, said in a 1996 interview with PBS' "Frontline" that her husband felt "there was too much riding on Newt even then as to what he was going to be, what he was going to do. And marrying his math teacher was not one of them."

In fact, Jackie put her husband through a decade of schooling and turned out to be an important ally as Gingrich pursued a seat in Congress. But even as Gingrich campaigned as a family-values candidate, his marriage was disintegrating amid rumors of infidelity.

His second wife, Marianne, has said Gingrich proposed to her before the divorce from Jackie was final in 1981, and they were married six months later. That marriage ended in divorce in 2000, and Gingrich admitted he'd already taken up with Callista Bisek, a former congressional aide who would become his third wife. The speaker who pilloried President Bill Clinton for his affair with Monica Lewinsky was himself having an affair at the time.

With Newtonian chutzpah, Gingrich last spring attributed his infidelities in part to his work for the American people.

"There's no question at times of my life, partially driven by how passionately I felt about this country, that I worked far too hard and things happened in my life that were not appropriate," he told the Christian-oriented CBN network.

For all of that, Gingrich describes the family of his childhood as the stuff of Norman Rockwell. One of his daughters, Jackie Gingrich Cushman, recalls the whole family immersed in books, taking long walks together, going to the movies, camping out with college students in the Okefenokee Swamp.

These days, he's the doting grandfather to her two children, and Cushman says she's got to scold Gingrich to stop emailing her 12-year-old daughter after her bedtime.

Gingrich-Jones, 23 years younger than her brother, describes Newt as a "fun person." The chatter at family gatherings tends to be about food, music, sports, Guinness, she says.

Gingrich-Jones, who is gay, says she's never discussed her sexuality with Gingrich, who was married and gone before she was born. But she says that after she came out in 1987, Gingrich told their mother, "it's your life and you have the right to live it the way you want to."

She says Gingrich and wife Callista sent wedding and shower gifts when she married Rebecca Jones in 2009, and the four went out to dinner together last February and saw a play that Rebecca had written.

In public, the same Newt Gingrich calls gay marriage an "aberration" and suggests a constitutional amendment to ban it is in order if the federal law defining marriage as a union between a man and a woman is overturned.

"Yeah, it does hurt," says Gingrich-Jones.

She wonders what he really thinks.

___

She's not the only one to wonder where Gingrich's heart is.

He's got a stem-winder of a stump speech that's catnip to conservatives, with its pledges to follow the Reagan and Thatcher playbooks. Extending first one hand and then the other, he stands before voters and offers them disarmingly easy choices: A food-stamp president or a paycheck president. An "Alinsky radical" or an "American exceptionalist." A proponent of class warfare or a creator of jobs.

But then there are those pesky paradoxes.

Gingrich was for individual mandates for health insurance before he was against them. He was for U.S. intervention in Libya before he was against it. Just three years ago he planted himself on a couch with Democrat Nancy Pelosi to talk up the need for action on climate change, then called it the dumbest thing he'd done in years. He opened his campaign with a rant against fellow Republican Paul Ryan's plan to overhaul Medicare as "right-wing social engineering," then apologized. He criticized politicians for getting cozy with Freddie Mac, yet collected more than $1.6 million in consulting fees from the federally backed mortgage giant. He's running as an outsider, yet making the case that "having someone who actually knows Washington might be a really good thing."

The candidate who's tried to present himself as the voice of calm and reason in GOP presidential debates has made an art form of what Clinton once labeled institutionalized name-calling. He's still quick to brand Democrats as dumb, pathetic, disgusting and more.

"I never found him to be a conservative or anything else," says former Rep. Mickey Edwards, R-Okla., who served with Gingrich in the House. "I found him to be somebody who was primarily interested in his own advancement. ... Newt has had one primary interest for his entire public life, and that's Newt."

A liberal standard-bearer who disagrees with Gingrich on just about everything has reached an opposite conclusion.

"He is an absolute right-wing zealot ? but I think he really believes that stuff," says the Rev. Al Sharpton, who traveled the country with Gingrich in 2009 to promote education reform. "I think he's sincere. That's what scares me about him."

Whatever his shifts in conviction, Gingrich consistently presents himself as the smartest guy in the room, tossing out ideas faster than a pitching machine spits out baseballs, and decrying those who haven't learned the lessons of history as he has.

He's got Day One plans to sign 100 to 200 executive orders as president. He thinks child labor laws are "truly stupid." He wants to transform government with Lean Six Sigma principles of efficiency. In fact, why wait for Inauguration Day? He'll have Congress get to work on repealing "Obamacare" and financial regulations before he even takes the oath of office.

"We don't rely enough on actually knowing things," he tells one interviewer.

It's an intellectual fervor that Gingrich supporters love.

Walker casts the Gingrich idea factory as evidence of "a reasonably complex leader with a very agile mind."

Edwards dismisses it as an act.

"When Newt would walk through the halls, he would be very careful to be clutching reams of paper, and books and articles and newspapers and magazines, as if to say, `Everybody look at me. I'm the thinker. I'm the reader,'" Edwards recalls. "A lot of us would just roll our eyes."

___

Gingrich's bare-knuckled assault on Wright set him on a trajectory to his own tumultuous reign as speaker a few years later.

"It's a whole Newt world," one excited Republican proclaimed as Gingrich took charge in 1995 after he led congressional Republicans in a rout of Democrats in the 1994 midterm elections that ended their 40-year majority in the House.

And so it seemed.

A copy of Gingrich's "Contract With America," the policy agenda he pushed through Congress in his first 100 days as speaker, now sits in the Smithsonian. His tape-recorded GOPAC messages ? "We Are a Majority," "Visualizing Victory" and more ? are part of the Library of Congress' national recording registry. Time named him "Man of the Year" in 1995.

The balance of power shifted abruptly from the White House to Capitol Hill, and Clinton was left to assert gamely that "the president is relevant."

What followed was a period of both great productivity and great turmoil. Gingrich and Clinton ultimately figured out that they needed each other: "If I didn't pass it, he couldn't sign it. And if he didn't sign it, it didn't matter that I passed it," Gingrich recently told CNN.

Together, they balanced the budget, overhauled welfare, cut taxes.

But Gingrich's speakership also was combustible. He ran roughshod over fellow Republicans in his headlong quest to, as he put it, "drive through change on a scale that Washington wasn't comfortable with."

Republicans would sit through leadership meetings that turned into five-hour lectures on ancient history. They'd watch Gingrich pop out policy pronouncements on Sunday talk shows that were at odds with what they'd agreed upon. Some on the right thought he compromised too much.

He got most of the blame for shutting down the government ? twice ? in the budget wars, and made things worse by pouting over a perceived slight in his treatment by Clinton on Air Force One. He took heat for pushing the House to impeach Clinton.

And the man who tripped up Wright with ethics charges ultimately was caught in a similar snare.

In January 1997, Gingrich became the first speaker ever reprimanded and fined for ethics violations, slapped with a $300,000 penalty. Gingrich admitted he'd failed to follow legal advice concerning the use of tax-exempt contributions to advance potentially partisan goals.

He limped to re-election as speaker and by midsummer was fending off a revolt from GOP dissidents weary of his antics and tired of defending him.

"Some members had frustration because he wasn't all he dreamed to be," Rep. Jim Greenwood, R-Pa., said at the time.

Little more than a year later, it was all over for Gingrich when Democrats made unexpected gains in Congress and in the states in the 1998 elections.

Three days after the election, Gingrich announced plans to resign not just the speakership but his seat in Congress.

The man who'd once advised students that cannibalism is the nature of the business told House Republicans, "I'm willing to lead but I'm not willing to preside over people who are cannibals."

___

Associated Press writer Tom Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, contributed to this report.

___

Follow Nancy Benac at http://twitter.com/nbenac

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111217/ap_on_el_pr/us_gingrich_profile

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Flood victims face higher crop insurance premiums

As if the water damage wasn?t enough, farmers who were flooded out by the Missouri River this summer may now be facing substantial increases in crop insurance premiums. The problem is many of the levees damaged or destroyed by the flood waters have not been repaired or not rebuilt to previous levels. The Army Corps of Engineers says it does not have enough money to make all of the needed repairs so they have been forced to prioritize projects. As a result, cropland protected by the levees is at a higher risk of getting flooded again.

USDA?s Risk Management Agency says $114 million has been paid out to cover damage to 436,000 acres along the river this year.

Source: http://brownfieldagnews.com/2011/12/15/flood-victims-face-higher-crop-insurance-premiums/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

The War in Iraq: It's Over!!


Almost nine years after the first U.S. tanks crossed the Iraqi border, and approximately eight years and seven months after President George W. Bush declared "Mission Accomplished," the Pentagon declared an official end to the Iraq War today.

Nice.

USA! USA!

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/the-war-in-iraq-its-over/

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Lagarde: Global economy facing gloomy prospects (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The head of the International Monetary Fund sketched a dim outlook for the global economy and said all countries must work together to resolve Europe's escalating debt crisis.

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said Europe's problems will not be solved by Europe alone.

"It's not a crisis that will be resolved by one group of countries taking action," Lagarde said in remarks at a State Department conference. "It's going to be hopefully resolved by all countries, all regions, all categories of countries actually taking action."

She said if the issues are not dealt with decisively, the global economy could confront the same threats that pushed the world into the Great Depression of the 1930s.

"It's a question of actually facing the issues, not being in denial, accepting the truth, accepting the reality, then dealing with it," Lagarde said.

She did not provide details on what actions she expected individual countries or the IMF to take.

She also cautioned financial markets to allow time for individual nations to work through the political process to arrive at a solution.

"It would be ideal and it would be lovely from a market perspective if it was not just currently but immediately signed, sealed and delivered, done deal, overnight," she said. "Unfortunately, for those of you who have the privilege of belonging to democracies, things do not happen in that way and things do take time and have to go through parliamentary processes."

Last week, a number of European countries said their central banks would make loans to the IMF to bolster IMF resources. After the announcement, the Obama administration said it would not provide more support to the IMF because it said the agency had sufficient resources.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_bi_ge/us_imf_europe

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