Saturday, January 21, 2012

Mavericks assistant coach arrested in Calif. (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Los Angeles County sheriff's officials say an assistant coach for the Dallas Mavericks basketball team has been arrested on an outstanding warrant from Las Vegas.

Sgt. James Brown says Darrell Armstrong was arrested and booked Tuesday in a case involving non-sufficient funds. Details about the case weren't immediately available.

Armstrong's bail was set at $40,000, and someone posted it Wednesday morning.

Sheriff's officials say Armstrong was a passenger in a vehicle that was stopped for a traffic violation in Marina Del Rey on Tuesday. A deputy determined there was an outstanding warrant for the 43-year-old.

The driver and another passenger were not detained.

The Mavericks declined to comment.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_sp_bk_ne/bkn_mavericks_assistant_coach_arrested

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Friday, January 20, 2012

Analysis: Spain braces for labor reforms as Rajoy weighs in (Reuters)

MADRID (Reuters) ? Spain's new government will push ahead within weeks on labor reform aimed at tackling the European Union's highest unemployment rate after unions and employers failed to meet a deadline for agreeing how to modernize a rigid system that harms them both.

It is difficult to see how the reforms can help Spain's immediate battle with a chronically-weak economy and a jobless rate that has soared to 23.5 percent in recent months, leaving some 5.4 million out of work.

But Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy drove home the need for action by releasing the latest unemployment figures two weeks early this week and says he will do what is needed to loosen up the system and enable freer job creation.

To do so the government will have to take aggressive measures to worsen wages and conditions for employees that unions warn could prompt a national strike. From what signs the government has given on the shape of the reform, on the other hand, economists say it may also fail to please employers and risks not doing enough to generate meaningful improvement.

In a speech in Malaga on Saturday, Rajoy called the headline unemployment number - equivalent to almost one in four of the economically active population - "astronomical" and said his government would "wage war" on unemployment lines.

"This is in keeping with the change of government," Santiago Sanchez, chief economist at Juan Carlos III university in Madrid, said.

"The previous government looked for positive statistics to highlight its management (of the economy) .. and this one is rooting out the worst ones to justify its tough austerity measures."

Elected in a landslide in November, Rajoy gave worker and employer representatives until last Friday to agree on a broad sweep of reforms as he tried to draw a line under some 18 months of largely fruitless talks. They missed the deadline.

The government also faces credit agency pressure, with Standard & Poor's warning it could cut Spain further this year or next following Friday's two-notch downgrade if reforms were delayed or "insufficient to reduce the high unemployment rate."

'GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY'

Job creation in Spain has been crippled by a stagnant economy, a tough austerity program and exceptionally generous redundancy deals. Critics say the labor market is shackled by complex and rigid agreements on collective bargaining, statutory redundancy payments and temporary contracts.

"The (labor) reform has to be thought of as a golden opportunity to change the structure of the way the Spanish labor market operates and to be a major force for higher productivity and to reduce structural unemployment," Antonio Garcia Pascual, chief southern European economist at Barclays in London, said.

Unemployment rates were likely to rise further given Spain's economy was set to shrink this year, he said, but reforms making it easier and cheaper for companies to hire and fire as well as giving more workers better protection would promote jobs growth once the upturn comes.

Terms and conditions for Spanish workers tend to be agreed at regional level and sometimes across industries, giving unions strong negotiating powers that they will battle to protect.

But generous permanent contracts mean firms are more inclined to hire workers on temporary ones that offer little protection.

"Collective bargaining .., is something we are particularly sensitive about," said a spokesman for the country's biggest union, the blue-collar CCOO, warning that major changes could provoke a general strike.

Garcia Pascual said the government could "probably" live with that. "I suspect that with 23 percent unemployment the response (to a strike call) may not be so enthusiastic."

Gilles Moec, analyst at Deutsche Bank in London, said he expected the new laws to give firms greater freedom to opt out of collective contracts. "My understanding is that the government is ready to go there," he said.

The government will also scale back redundancy payments for permanent staff that are among the highest in the world, favoring contracts offering a statutory minimum of 33 days' pay for each year worked, Treasury Minister Cristobal Montoro said.

Unions are demanding 45 days' pay and employers 20, but even the lower figure dwarfs payoffs in other countries.

In Germany, at least half a month's pay is usual and in France a fifth, while in the United States there is no statutory requirement to award severance pay.

The heavy extra potential burden on employers in Spain means many are prepared to offer only temporary contracts that give workers little if any protection against dismissal.

A SINGLE CONTRACT

According to the national statistics institute, 26 percent of all Spanish employment contracts were temporary as of last September, and the proportion has almost certainly risen since.

For Barclays' Garcia Pascual, the labor market will not revive until that trend is reversed.

"I think they should be bold and think about a single contract where the firing cost increases with seniority. (But) that is not easy to sell to unions or employers."

"The best way forward would be to reduce the level of protection on permanent contracts and improve (it) ...on temporary ones," added Deutsche Bank's Moec.

The labor reform draft is expected to be ready by early February and Treasury Minister Cristobal Montoro said it would be pushed through without a broader consensus if necessary.

The government would however "keep lines of communication open" with unions and employers in the run-up to the new legislation, a labor ministry spokeswoman said.

While angering unions, more flexibility would please domestic employers and would-be foreign investors.

"What most people want is more flexibility and collective bargaining agreements" tailored to individual companies and sectors, said U.S. ambassador Alan Solomont.

He cited the U.S. practice of linking work hours to productivity cycles, for instance in auto plants. General Motors Co operates a large assembly line in Zaragoza.

The strategy also worked well during the 2008/9 economic crisis for Germany, where unemployment fell in December to its lowest level since the country's reunification two decades ago.

(Additional reporting by Feliciano Tisera and Fiona Ortiz, Stephen Brown in Berlin, Vicky Buffery in Paris and Timothy Ahmann in Washington; editing by Patrick Graham)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120118/ts_nm/us_spain_labour

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Jennifer Lopez's Boyfriend Says Age Doesn't Matter

Jennifer Lopez and Casper Smart have yet to publicly confirm their relationship, but the back-up-dancer's Twitter post Wednesday leaves little doubt that he's addressing his celebrity romance.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/jennifer-lopezs-boyfriend-casper-smart-age-doesnt-matter/1-a-420354?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Ajennifer-lopezs-boyfriend-casper-smart-age-doesnt-matter-420354

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

BREAKINGVIEWS-Samsung's $41 bln binge may shake Apple's tree

Wed Jan 18, 2012 9:54am GMT

(The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own)

By Wayne Arnold

HONG KONG, Jan 18 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Samsung?s (005930.KS) $41 billion investment splurge should ring alarm bells at its competitors. At least half of the Korean conglomerate?s planned outlays will probably go to expanding its global lead in smartphones and the chips and screens that drive them. It?s a bold bet in a slowdown, if its bet pays off Samsung could lengthen its lead over the likes of Apple (AAPL.O).

Samsung Electronics hasn?t announced just how much it plans to invest from the parent group's big number. But if history is any guide, its share should be at least $21 billion for expanding production and R&D. Relative to forecast annual revenue, that?s about 26 percent more than what Apple plans to invest this year. Competitors should worry, because chances are Samsung won?t put that into microwaves and dishwashers, but rather into its more profitable smartphones and flash memory.

Korea's tech companies have made great strides against Japanese and U.S. rivals. A falling currency -- the won has weakened 60 percent against the yen over 20 years -- helped the likes of Samsung break into the global consumer electronics market. Now, the company is the world?s largest maker of televisions, memory chips and smartphones. It leads the market for flash memory drives and state-of-the-art digital screens, so it not only competes with Apple but supplies it with parts.

Spending 13 percent of revenue on capex and R&D may seem risky in a slowing global economy, but Samsung can afford it. It has an estimated $10 billion in net cash on the balance sheet according to Daiwa, and forecast EBITDA of $29 billion for 2012. The company?s plans to take advantage of low U.S. interest rates to borrow $1 billion in five-year bonds shows it is considering building a more aggressive balance sheet.

The big risk is that in such a fickle, fashion-driven market as smartphones, even big investment budgets can go into the wrong ideas. Ask Motorola, Nokia or Research In Motion. But given that the smartphone market is still forecast to grow by 34 percent this year, Samsung deserves the benefit of the doubt.

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CONTEXT NEWS

-- South Korea?s largest conglomerate, the Samsung Group, said Jan. 16 it would increase investment by 12 percent in 2012 to a record 47.8 trillion won (roughly $41.6 billion). It didn't provide a breakdown of its investment plans by business division, but said it is looking to expand investment into new growth areas despite heightened uncertainties stemming from the global economic downturn.

-- Samsung said it would spend 31 trillion won on facilities investment, an 11 percent increase from last year, while outlays for research and development would rise 13 percent to 13.6 trillion won. The group, which spent 42.8 trillion won last year, said the remainder will go toward other investment tools, such as stake purchases.

-- Samsung Electronics Jan. 15 its U.S. operation was considering selling around $1 billion in bonds, its first major overseas debt sale in more than a decade, to fund operations at a chip plant in Austin, Texas. Samsung, which supplies semiconductors to Apple's iPhone and iPad tablet, has sent requests for proposals to banks for the potential sale of five-year bonds, a Samsung spokesman said.

-- Reuters: Samsung Group plans record $41 bln investment in 2012 [ID:nL3E8CH02B]

-- Reuters: Samsung plans $1 bln debt sale to fund U.S. chip plant [ID:nL3E8CG0DM]

RELATED COLUMNS

Dialling for dollars [ID:nL5E7M3274]

Seoul sacrifice [ID:nL4E7M231B]

Wages of war [ID:nS1E78M0UN]

(The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own)

-- For previous columns by the author, Reuters customers can click on [ARNOLD/]

(Editing by John Foley and David Evans)

((wayne.arnold@thomsonreuters.com)) Keywords: BREAKINGVIEWS SAMSUNG/

(C) Reuters 2011 All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing, or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/UKmedia/~3/ixlJiXV8CJw/idUKL3E8CI4G020120118

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Climate Change Ripples Through Mountain Ecosystems (LiveScience.com)

Like dominoes given one nudge, climate change in the form of reduced winter snowfall on mountaintops has subtle but powerful cascading effects felt throughout entire ecosystems, a new study finds.

In the northern mountains of Arizona, elk spend their winters in lower elevations where there?s much less snow and the cold is less pronounced. But the decrease in high-elevation snowfall in the mountains over the last 25 years has allowed elk to forage in these areas throughout winter. Researchers found that the elks' year-round high-elevation browsing has decimated the density of seasonal woodsy plants, which, in turn, has impacted the populations of songbirds (animals you might expect would actually benefit from less snow).

By preventing elk from entering several study sites for six years, the researchers were able to reverse the multi-decadal decline in plant and bird populations in these locations.

"Ecologic communities are pretty complex. There are all these tight interactions going on," said study co-author Tom Martin, a wildlife researcher with the U.S. Geological Survey. "Perturbation from climate can affect those communities in many indirect ways and cause all of these ramifying effects." [Odd Effects of Climate Change]

Dramatic declines

The densities of seasonal woodsy plants, including aspen and maple trees, in the northern Arizona mountains have steadily declined over the last two decades. Martin and his colleague John Maron, a biologist at the University of Montana, hypothesized that this decline is primarily the result of one of two things: decreased soil water or increased exposure to hungry elk.

To find out, the researchers set up 25-acre enclosures around three drainages, or?vegetation-rich valleys created by snowmelt. By keeping the elk out, the enclosures essentially mimicked the effects of large snowfall.

The researchers found that plant populations in the enclosures rebounded to levels last seen in 1996 ? suppressing winter-browsing elk for six years effectively reversed 15 years of plant-density decline. Plant populations in nearby open drainages, however, did not improve over the six years.

Similarly, the populations of five key songbird species rebounded in enclosed drainages. "With more vegetation, there are more nesting areas, and it becomes harder for predators to find the nests," Martin told Livescience.

Since the populations of elk have also strongly declined over the last 11 years, the results show that the elks' new tendency to stick around over winter is ravaging the plant and bird communities. "It doesn't take very many animals to have a pretty large impact if they?re there year-round," Martin explained.

Conservation implications

Eric Post, a biologist at Pennsylvania State University who was not involved with the research, said that the study demonstrates how observational and experimental research can compliment each other. "Both are necessary to study climate change ecology," Post told LiveScience.

While impressed with the study, Post thinks that the researchers "didn't nail down the driving factor in the relationship between plant growth and bird abundance." It seems convincing that the architecture of the vegetation would provide the birds with more nesting opportunities, he said, but that theory doesn't take into account the effect of invertebrate (animals without a backbone) abundance. The winter elk may also be affecting the populations of local insects, which the birds eat.

Still, Post believes that the study has important implications for conservation. "If you are interested in the conservation of birds, you need to look at more than just the birds and the vegetation they are dependent on," Post said. "You need to look at the broader system of browsing animals."

Martin agrees, adding that by "recognizing that these things happen, we can target priority habitats for conservation."

The study was published online Jan. 10 in the journal Nature Climate Change.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20120117/sc_livescience/climatechangeripplesthroughmountainecosystems

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Most Popular Wallpaper Site: Digital Blasphemy [Hive Five Followup]

Most Popular Wallpaper Site: Digital Blasphemy Every week we give you a fresh batch of wallpapers to download in our Wallpaper Wednesday series, but if you're looking for more selection, there are plenty of sites on the web with great images, huge databases, and lots of wallpapers to choose from. Last week, we asked you which site you visited to download new wallpaper, and then we took a look at five best wallpaper sites based on your nominations. Now we're back to highlight the winner.

Voting was fierce in this one, largely because the owners of the various sites put the call out on their social networks to get their fans and users to vote. Nevertheless, Digital Blasphemy took the top spot with 38% of the overall vote. Hot on its heels with just under 31% was WallBase.cc. In third place with 15% of the vote was InterfaceLift, and just behind that with close to 10% of the votes cast was DeviantArt. Bringing up the rear in fifth place was minimalist wallpaper site SimpleDesktops.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/h-FA3p2cCyk/most-popular-wallpaper-site-digital-blasphemy

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Greek bond swap talks to resume Wednesday

Protesters take part in a rally organized by the PAME Communist-affiliated union as they hold banners with anti-austerity slogans in Athens, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Strikes and demonstrations over austerity measures hit the Greek capital of Athens on Tuesday, as international debt inspectors returned to resume their scrutiny of the country's reforms. Banner at front reads: "For the crisis, unemployment, poverty, exploitation, immigration...responsible the imperialism. Let's organize, unite and fight..." (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

Protesters take part in a rally organized by the PAME Communist-affiliated union as they hold banners with anti-austerity slogans in Athens, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Strikes and demonstrations over austerity measures hit the Greek capital of Athens on Tuesday, as international debt inspectors returned to resume their scrutiny of the country's reforms. Banner at front reads: "For the crisis, unemployment, poverty, exploitation, immigration...responsible the imperialism. Let's organize, unite and fight..." (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

Protesters shout slogans during a rally organized by the PAME Communist-affiliated union in Athens, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Strikes and demonstrations over austerity measures hit the Greek capital of Athens on Tuesday, as international debt inspectors returned to resume their scrutiny of the country's reforms. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

Protesters take part in a rally organized by the PAME Communist-affiliated union as a Greek flag is seen on a department store advertising banner in Athens, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Strikes and demonstrations over austerity measures hit the Greek capital of Athens on Tuesday, as international debt inspectors returned to resume their scrutiny of the country's reforms. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

A protester takes part in a rally organized by the PAME Communist-affiliated union as a Greek flag is seen on a department store advertising banner and reads ''I love you Greece...'' in Athens, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Strikes and demonstrations over austerity measures hit the Greek capital of Athens on Tuesday, as international debt inspectors returned to resume their scrutiny of the country's reforms. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

A security guard opens the shutters of Syntagma metro station during a 24-hour strike in Athens, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. International debt inspectors visit Athens to review the course of Greece's austerity reforms. Unions call for strikes and work stoppages in some sectors in the Greek capital. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

(AP) ? Talks between the Greek government and its private creditors on a bond swap deal needed to avoid a catastrophic bankruptcy will resume on Wednesday, the investors' representatives said Tuesday.

Charles Dallara and Jean Lemierre, senior officials from the Institute of International Finance, have been leading the talks on behalf of banks and other investment firms. They "reiterated their commitment to seeking an agreement on a voluntary debt exchange for Greece," the institute said in an announcement.

The two "encouraged all parties to work in good faith toward this end with a sense of urgency."

As part of the deal, the private creditors would exchange their existing Greek bonds with new ones of a lower value with the aim of cutting Greece's debt by euro100 billion ($127 billion).

Talks on the deal were suspended on Friday due to disagreement over the interest rate Greece will have to pay on the new, lower-value bonds.

The bond swap is crucial because it is a precondition for a second, euro130 billion ($166 billion) bailout for Greece. The country's international rescuers, the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund, have warned that they will not extend any more support if a bond swap deal is not agreed.

That means Greece could default on its debt in late March, when it faces a euro14.5 billion bond repayment it cannot afford, potentially threatening the entire eurozone financial stability.

The debt relief from the bond swap deal is necessary if Greece is to have a fighting chance to emerge from its debt hole.

Greeks are increasingly angry over the size and scope of austerity measures made to cut debt.

On Tuesday, strikes and demonstrations against government cutbacks hit the Greek capital again, just as international debt inspectors returned to decide whether the country's reforms are strong enough for it to secure the vital bailout.

The inspectors from the European Commission, European Central Bank and IMF, known as the troika, are expected to press the government for faster cost-cutting reforms. Lower-level members of the troika started the talks in Athens on Tuesday, with the mission chiefs due Friday.

Some 10,000 protesters took part in rallies in central Athens over potential pay cuts in the recession-battered private sector. Anti-austerity strikes in the capital disrupted public transport and other services, while journalist unions also launched a 48-hour strike.

Police said a plain-clothed officer from the anti-terrorism division was beaten and seriously injured by a group of about 30 protesters who also took his handgun. The rally was otherwise peaceful.

Under government pressure, unions and employers are due to launch talks Wednesday to explore ways of slashing labor costs.

Meanwhile, Greece saw its borrowing rates ease marginally in a bill auction. Unable to issue long-term debt due to untenably high borrowing interest rates of 33 percent, the country maintains a market presence through regular treasury bill auctions.

The public debt agency said it raised euro1.625 billion ($2.06 billion) in a sale of 13-week treasury bills, an interest rate of 4.64 percent, compared with 4.68 percent in the last such auction in December.

Demand for the bills was 2.90 times the amount on offer, roughly the same as last month.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-01-17-EU-Greece-Financial-Crisis/id-6aab3fa780044c189d19f50eeb9e4189

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Pakistani court clashes with weakened government (AP)

ISLAMABAD ? The political crisis engulfing Pakistan deepened Monday when the nation's top court clashed with a beleaguered government already under attack from the powerful army ? a combined assault that could bring down the U.S.-backed administration.

The Supreme Court launched contempt proceedings against Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani for failing to carry out its order to reopen a corruption case against President Asif Ali Zardari and demanded Gilani make a rare appearance before the judges Thursday. If the court convicts Gilani of contempt, he could serve up to six months in prison and be disqualified from holding office.

The nuclear-armed country is already grappling with an ailing economy and a violent Islamist insurgency. The latest clash could also complicate U.S. efforts to get Pakistan to cooperate on the war in neighboring Afghanistan, especially peace talks with the Taliban ? although Washington had made little headway on that even before this crisis.

"The Supreme Court and the government are in an open clash now, and it seems fairly obvious the court is unwilling to back off," said Cyril Almeida, a lawyer and columnist for Pakistan's Dawn newspaper.

Even before the latest clash with the court, the government was locked in a bitter conflict with the army over a secret memo sent to Washington last year aimed at stopping a supposed military coup.

The Supreme Court ruling boosted the sense that the administration could fall, squeezed between the court and Pakistan's powerful generals. Some observers have speculated the army is working behind the scenes with the court to oust the government by constitutional means.

"Once the Supreme Court, the army and the political opposition agree the government needs to go sooner rather than later, it seems very difficult for the government to stay on," Almeida said.

Still the court could have its own reasons for stepping up pressure on the government. Supreme Court Justice Mohammad Iftikhar Chaudhry has clashed with Zardari in the past, and the judges could be fed up with the government defying its order to reopen the corruption case against the president.

Gilani promised to appear before the Supreme Court on Thursday but warned both the judges and the army that they must protect democracy.

"It cannot happen that they derail system," said Gilani after a majority in parliament ? mostly the ruling party and its allies ? passed a resolution supporting the government.

The resolution said the balance of powers "must be fully respected and adhered to and all state institutions must strictly function within the limits imposed on them by the constitution."

Critics have predicted the civilian government's demise many times since it was elected in 2008 after 10 years of military rule, and it has always defied the forecasts. But this time around, the crisis has drawn the army in more directly, and the court seems to be in no mood to compromise

Since Pakistan was founded in 1947, no civilian government has ever completed a full five-year term before being toppled by a military coup or forced to call early elections. There have been three coups over that period, and while a fourth is considered unlikely, early polls look increasingly possible because of the rising tension.

The Supreme Court has ordered the government to ask Swiss authorities to reopen a corruption case against the president that dates back to the 1990s. The case centers on $60 million in kickbacks that Zardari and his late wife, former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, allegedly received from Swiss cargo companies.

The government has refused to reopen the case, saying Zardari has immunity, and supporters say the court is pursuing a vendetta against the civilian leadership.

Zardari has been vulnerable to prosecution since 2009 when the Supreme Court struck down an amnesty granting him and other leading political figures immunity from past graft cases. The court deemed the amnesty, which was granted in 2008, as unconstitutional.

The court initiated contempt proceedings against the prime minister on Monday after the government failed to respond to an order outlining a series of punitive options the judges could take if the government did not reopen the case against Zardari. Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq told the court he had not received instructions from the country's leaders on how to respond to the order ? a response that clearly angered the judges.

Faced with going to jail, Gilani may tell the court during his appearance Thursday that he intends to write the letter to Swiss authorities authorizing them to reopen the case against Zardari, but that could come with a serious political cost.

Zardari stated in an interview last week that he would never send the letter, saying it would dishonor his late wife. Last year, Swiss prosecutors told reporters they couldn't reopen the case because Zardari had immunity.

The prime minister has also clashed with army ? the strongest institution in the country ? over the memo scandal.

The army was outraged by the memo, which was allegedly sent by the government and offered the U.S. a raft of favorable security policies in exchange for reining in the military.

The army pushed the Supreme Court to open an inquiry into the scandal last month against the wishes of the government, which has denied any connection to the memo and argued the matter was already being probed by parliament.

Gilani criticized the army last week for cooperating with the Supreme Court probe, saying the standoff was nothing less than a choice between "democracy and dictatorship." The prime minister's comments followed a warning from the generals of possible "grievous consequences" ahead if the government did not stop its criticism of the army.

Gilani warned members of parliament Thursday, especially in the opposition, of serious consequences if they didn't stand by the government in supporting democracy.

"If there is no democracy, everything will be finished," said Gilani. "If there is no democracy, we will all go together."

____

Associated Press writers Chris Brummitt and Asif Shahzad contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120116/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan

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'Words With Friends' saves man's life

Zynga

"Words with friends" as played on the iPhone

By Athima Chansanchai

UPDATE: Beth Legler called msnbc.com back, so we've included information from her interview.

The rise of social media has not only led to new friendships ? especially in gameplay?? but?in the case of two couples who met and played "Words With Friends," it helped prevent one woman from becoming a widow.

One couple, Dr. Larry Legler and his wife Beth, based in Missouri, met another couple, Simon and Georgie Fletcher from Australia, through the hugely popular Scrabble-ish word game more than a year ago. They were all in their 50s and enjoyed the release from long workdays the game gave them. Beth Legler, who I interviewed today (Jan. 14) after leaving a message yesterday, plays on her iPhone and iPad and has scored 120 points in one move. The friendship between the two women who found a common passion for words and strategy developed gradually, but once they engaged in chat, it took off to the point where the ladies emailed regularly and even Skyped (hard to do with a 16-hour time difference!).

During their conversations, Georgie Fletcher revealed to her friend how her husband Simon had collapsed, been sick and to the hospital in the past year, with all the bloodwork coming back normal. But in mid-November, three or four days had gone by and Beth Legler had not heard from Georgie Fletcher, which was unusual for them.

"For me, it was an intuition that I hadn?t heard from her," said Beth Legler. "That was when she wrote me back, and as an RN, I sprung into action and wrote back right away."

Simon Fletcher's symptoms had progressed to fatigue so bad it was hard for him to walk to the mailbox. For a man who used to walk his dogs for an hour, it was enough of a sign to the Leglers that something was seriously wrong with their friend.

After talking with her husband, a family practitioner who lives and works in a suburb of Kansas City, Mo.,?they suggested taking an aspirin, but two things tipped them over to strongly urge the Fletchers to immediately seek medical attention at a hospital. One was the?fact he had trouble walking to the mailbox, and the second was the burning at the back of his throat, which he thought was reflux.

Dr. Larry Legler believed it could actually be angina.

"Late in the evening, I sent the note off, I was beside myself, I didn?t know when she would see it, and I tossed and turned in bed," Beth Legler recalled. "They were out shopping. But Georgie checked her phone and they went to hospital."?

They followed his advice, and as they told the story to Kansas City's KCTV, it saved Simon Fletcher's life, as the doctors who treated him found a "99 percent blockage near his heart."

He told them, "I've gotta buy that man a beer, he saved my life ... I'd? really like to put my arms around him and give him a big squeeze."

And Beth Legler told us he recovered quickly after a surgery in which 2 stents were put in through the radial artery in his wrist.

For her, this experience has made a big impact on her.

"All of this technology can serve the good or the evil and where you choose to go with that is really a personal decision, " she said. "But it does say, one person can make a difference. That game means more to us than it could ever mean, a starting off point for a friendship that will last for all time for the four of us. The goal for us is to meet."

We've seen "Words With Friends" lead to marriage, as well as to Alec Baldwin's ejection from a flight, as it has amassed players (getting on Facebook certainly helped), but this might be the first instance of the game being instrumental in life-saving.

How many points is that worth?

Hear the couples tell their own story here:

More stories on how social media has made an impact:

Check out Technolog on?Facebook, and on Twitter, follow?Athima Chansanchai, who is also trying to keep her head above water in the?Google+?stream.

Source: http://digitallife.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/13/10149951-words-with-friends-saves-mans-life

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Giants-Packers a formula for offensive fireworks

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning throws a pass during an NFL football practice, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Giants are scheduled to play the Green Bay Packers in an NFC divisional playoff game on Sunday, Jan.15, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning throws a pass during an NFL football practice, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Giants are scheduled to play the Green Bay Packers in an NFC divisional playoff game on Sunday, Jan.15, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

New York Giants running back Ahmad Bradshaw throws a pass during an NFL football practice, Friday, Jan. 13, 2012, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Giants are scheduled to play the Green Bay Packers in an NFC divisional playoff game on Sunday, Jan.15, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun)

Jackson Ranck, center, of Pulaski, Wis., shovels snow with hundreds of others in an effort to clear snow from the upper level bleachers inside Lambeau Field on Friday, Jan. 13, 2012, ahead of Sunday's NFL divisional playoff football game between the New York Giants and Green Bay Packers. (AP Photo/The Green Bay Press-Gazette, Corey Wilson) NO SALES

(AP) ? Going into Sunday's NFC divisional playoff game against the New York Giants, Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers are best known for all the fireworks they've produced on offense.

That's a good thing for the Super Bowl champions, because they've been remarkably vulnerable on defense.

All season, the Packers have been giving up yards in big chunks and bailing themselves out by forcing turnovers. And while the Giants might hope to slow the game down by establishing the run and keeping Rodgers on the sideline, the last meeting between the two teams ? a 38-35 victory by the Packers on a last-second field goal Dec. 4 ? could mean Sunday is shaping up as another fast-paced game that comes down to the last possession.

With Eli Manning and the offense on a role, the Giants like their chances this time around.

"I think if we get into a shootout like we did last time, I think we will be OK," wide receiver Victor Cruz said. "But it will have to come down to who has the last touch."

Meanwhile, the Packers' defense is looking to hit the reset button in the playoffs.

"This is a fresh start for us to right all our wrongs," defensive lineman Ryan Pickett said. "We're excited about it. It's the same group that did it last year, the same team, so we know it's there to do it. You just have to do it. Time is running out. This is one-and-done, so we have to get it done."

Manning can draw on the Giants' victory in a frigid NFC championship game at Lambeau Field four years ago, but he doesn't think that experience is relevant.

"It's a new year, a new team, new players going against a new team," Manning said. "It's just a matter of guys executing, guys knowing the game plan, going in there, looking forward to the opportunity that's ahead of us, getting excited about it and have the attitude that we're going to go in there and play great football."

They'll likely have their chances.

Green Bay's defense gave up more yards than any other team this season, an average of 411.6 per game. Packers coaches and players shrug off that statistic, pointing out that their ball-hawking defense has been able to come up with enough turnovers and stops in critical situations to help the team go 15-1.

What's more troubling than the yards is the number of big plays. According to STATS LLC, the Packers gave up 80 plays of 20-plus yards this season ? third-most in the league this season, and 26 more big plays than they gave up last season.

The Packers have been better in the second half of the season, giving up 25 big plays in the past eight games, according to STATS.

They're certain to be tested by Manning, a talented group of wide receivers and a running game that finally seems to be playing up to its potential.

"One thing about Eli, he's having I think his best year," Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers said. "The guy's been very accurate throwing the deep ball."

Capers said Manning has improved considerably when it comes to throwing on the move.

"Eli doesn't move to run, but he moves to buy time for those receivers," Capers said. "They do a good job of adjusting their routes. I've seen him move ? he moves more to his right than he does his left ? but he can move and still throw the ball with some accuracy. I think he's doing a better job with that."

To Packers defensive lineman B.J. Raji, the biggest difference in Manning's game is that he's throwing fewer interceptions.

"He's always been able to make every throw," Raji said. "Just when he's choosing to make those throws, I think he's doing a fantastic job."

And for all their faults, the Packers defense has lived off interceptions this year, picking off an NFL-best 31 passes this season.

"In their secondary at least, they like to gamble a lot, they like to take a lot of chances and risks," Cruz said. "Which means they either win or they lose big, which explains why they lead the league in interceptions and why they lead the league in giving up big plays, they are tops in the league in giving up big plays. So we understand that and we've seen it on film."

Manning threw 16 interceptions this season after throwing 25 in 2010, and will be especially mindful of avoiding turnovers against the Packers.

"They try to make some big plays so they give up a few plays," Manning said. "But especially with an offense like they have, that has the ability to score and score quickly, you can't give them extra opportunities. You can't give them a short field. We have to take care of the football."

That's the challenge for a Packers defense that hopes to make a fresh start in the playoffs.

"I think our defensive guys are excited about the opportunity," Capers said. "I think we know what we've got to do. We're facing an offense that's hitting on all cylinders. They did a really nice job against the Falcons last week so they come in with momentum."

___

AP Sports Writer Tom Canavan contributed to this report from East Rutherford, N.J.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-01-14-FBN-Giants-Packers/id-9e0d08fcbeb24cf98ea93ced9dbb212e

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Nations hunt for info on Italy cruise accident (AP)

PORTO SANTO STEFANO, Italy ? Language barriers, overwhelmed local authorities, squads of foreign diplomats with lists of awkward questions ? the international mix of passengers and crew aboard the stricken Costa Concordia cruise liner added to the complications Saturday for Italian officials handling the emergency.

Local authorities were fielding inquiries from dozens of nations worried about the 4,234 people who were aboard the ship when it ran aground and tipped over off the coast of Italy, including Italians, Germans, French people, Britons and Americans, and about 1,000 crew members from across the globe.

As international travel has grown easier, aid agencies and lawmakers alike have frequently warned of the potential for confusion in the wake of international emergencies, as sometimes competing nations or international organizations arrive at a disaster site.

In Italy, a host of countries sent diplomatic staff to the scene as three bodies were recovered from the sea off the tiny island of Giglio, close to the coast of Tuscany.

British ambassador Christopher Prentice said he had seen his counterparts from Germany and Spain at local hospitals, where diplomats were checking identities and tallying numbers of those injured.

Officials from the U.K. and Australia set up a joint base at Porto Santo Stefano middle school, which had been transformed into a temporary holding center for rescued passengers.

Though the school was a scene of chaos, as passengers tried to find buses to take them back to Rome or the coastal town of Savona ? where most had embarked ? and embassy officials cross-referenced ship logs and passenger lists, Prentice said nations were cooperating well.

"This is obviously a very serious and major incident, my impression at this stage is that the Italian authorities have responded excellently and our cooperation with them has been very good," Prentice said, as he offered advice to Britons at the school.

Other embassies sent lower-level officials to work with the ship operator Costa and local authorities, offering help to foreign passengers who didn't speak Italian and were struggling to understand the response to the accident or how to get home.

Consular officials wore bright green or orange emergency vests to identify themselves to their co-nationals, offering help in how to obtain emergency passports, since many non-Europeans had to turn them in to cruise officials upon boarding.

Prentice said that in a still unfolding crisis scenario, good coordination was key. "It is about cooperation, and things are being done here very calmly and sensibly, I've been impressed by the effort of the Italian authorities," he said.

As nations were still attempting to confirm the identities of passengers who had been rescued from the ship, rescuers focused on several dozen people still unaccounted for.

Monty Mathisen, of the New York-based publication Cruise Industry News, said Costa would be well prepared to handle the demands of countries searching for news of the passengers and crew.

"They are well set up to deal with those kind of issues," said Mathisen. "The cruise industry is one of most regulated industries."

Marcus Oxley, then disaster management director of the relief charity Tearfund told a committee of British lawmakers in 2006 of the nightmare confronting local authorities as organizations descend on an area requesting information, or offering help.

"In the white hot heat of an emergency these things are extraordinarily difficult to do," he said.

______

Stringer reported from London.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120114/ap_on_re_eu/eu_italy_cruise_aground_international_emergency

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Golden Globes 2012 Predictions: Best Picture

'The Artist' and 'The Descendants' seem poised to take home top prizes, but MTV News has some different suggestions.
By Eric Ditzian


Jean Dujardin and Bérénice Bejo in "The Artist"
Photo: Weinstein Company

MTV News has already made its pick for the Best Movie of 2011. But "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo," for some bizarre and troubling reason, didn't make the cut for the folks in the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, even though 10 films were nominated across two categories.

Thus, tonight's Golden Globes celebration will not bestow its ultimate prize upon David Fincher's sizzling exploration of Swedish sex, psychology and sadism. But there remain many worthy contenders facing off on Globe night. Which films will triumph? Check out our picks and our unrealistic wishes below:

Best Picture - Musical or Comedy
We remain baffled by the adulation for "Midnight in Paris," a film whose fantastical exploration of Paris in the 1920s is more cliché-ridden than your average GOP primary stump speech. And how "My Week With Marilyn," despite an admirably imitative performance from Michelle Williams, snuck into this category would be a question we'd ask if the extent of HFPA's corruption weren't a matter of public record. We've got no beef with the rest of the nominees, especially considering "50/50" and "Bridesmaids" both ended up on MTV's year-end list. Alas, neither is likely to win.

Who Will Win: For anyone who thought "The Hurt Locker" and its sub-$20 million box-office haul made for too populist an awards-season darling, meet "The Artist," a silent, black-and-white film that has so far reeled in less than $8 million domestically.

Who Should Win: Any human who tells you "Bridesmaids" wasn't the funniest movie of 2011 is either a liar or dead inside. Or a producer of "The Artist." Kristen Wiig drunkenly romping around an airplane? Maya Rudolph pooping in the street while clad in a wedding dress? Jon Hamm offering up the most lovably hateable douche bag in recent cinematic memory? That's a whole lot of win. Too bad HFPA won't agree.

Best Picture - Drama
This category could turn any which way Sunday. A surging "Help" took home the most prizes at the Critics' Choice Movie Awards on Thursday. Not that the CCMAs are a terribly good predictor of the Globes. What's more, "The Help" is likely going to triumph in the acting categories rather than Best Picture. When George Clooney is in the mix, you can never count out one of his films, so "The Descendants" could pull off an eyebrow-raising win. The same can be said for legends like Martin Scorsese ("Hugo") and Steven Spielberg ("War Horse"). Anything. Can. Happen.

Who Will Win: People love Clooney. And movies about families dealing with grief. And Clooney. Why people don't love Matt Damon and his similarly themed "We Bought a Zoo" as much remains a mystery. "Descendants" will take this one home.

Who Should Win: Um, "Dragon Tattoo"? Or "Drive"? Right, those films didn't get nominations. "Moneyball" is an exceedingly ordinary baseball movie, "War Horse" is just too silly at its core to take seriously (even though it did reduce us to tears before the credits rolled), and "Help," as stellar as its individual performances were, just didn't wow us as a whole. Scorsese's "Hugo" is the last film remaining standing. We're cool with that.

Stick with MTV News all night for the 2012 Golden Globes winners, and don't miss all the fashion from the Golden Globes red carpet!

For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com.

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1677312/golden-globes-2012-best-picture-the-artist-descendants.jhtml

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Romney tells SC voters he's 'pro-life' candidate

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, campaigns with South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley at The Hall at Senate?s End, in Columbia, S.C., Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, campaigns with South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley at The Hall at Senate?s End, in Columbia, S.C., Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

(AP) ? Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney on Thursday insisted he is "pro-life" and said he's raising the issue on the campaign trail to counter his rivals' attacks.

"I understand that there are some attack ads coming my way that question" his commitment to life, Romney told reporters gathered at a motorcycle dealership in Greer, S.C. "Obviously it's important for me to remind people that I'm pro-life."

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich's campaign is running ads in South Carolina attacking Romney for changing his position on abortion. It's part of an onslaught of negative ads Romney is facing in the first-in-the-South primary, some from his rivals and some from their wealthy SuperPAC allies.

Romney arrived in South Carolina Wednesday and held a rally in Columbia, where he added extra emphasis to his typical campaign speech focused on protecting life.

"I'm convinced that the principles of opportunity, and freedom and the protection of life were not temporary but are permanent," Romney said Wednesday. And on Thursday, campaigning in the conservative Upstate, he repeated "life, life" twice as he recited the Declaration of Independence.

Gingrich has been hammering away at Romney's claim to conservative credentials, calling Romney a "Massachusetts moderate." Gingrich said Thursday he intends to emphasize Romney's views on social issues such as abortion, gun control and gay marriage in the days leading up to South Carolina's Jan. 21 primary.

Romney also is defending his record as a venture capitalist, repeating his contention that the company he ran was set up to save businesses where possible, although he's admitted that in private business, these efforts aren't always fruitful.

Romney came to South Carolina Wednesday as the unmistakable front-runner in the GOP presidential sweepstakes. But many of the state's voters are conservative Christians and tea party supporters, and Romney struggled here four years ago. He came in fourth.

Romney said Thursday the environment has changed enough that he could win here.

"Four years ago, we were really focused on Iraq and what was happening there and the surge. And that was an area that really was in John McCain's wheelhouse," Romney said. "Now the economy is the issue people are most concerned about. That's in my wheelhouse."

"This is a time when people care about the economy and the scale of government. It's the message of the tea party, it's the message of the Republican Party," he said.

Romney was leaving South Carolina Thursday to hold a midday rally in West Palm Beach, Fla., where absentee voters are already mailing in ballots. The primary is Jan. 31.

But first he stopped to admire the motorcycles on display at Cherokee Trikes and More after he wrapped up the rally in the back warehouse. He stood with an array of motorcycles behind him as he took reporters' questions ? but refused to sit on a motorcycle and pose for pictures.

Instead, he joked: "And, what, put a helmet on, Dukakis style?"

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-12-Romney/id-208717c8daef42bab6aa2b09474641c6

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Did 300 Workers at an Xbox 360 Factory Threaten Mass Suicide? (Mashable)

Three hundred Chinese factory workers who manufacture Microsoft Xbox 360s threatened mass suicide last week, according to unconfirmed reports. The Foxconn employees threatened to throw themselves off of a factory roof due to a payment dispute, according to Record China and Want China Times. According to these reports, the incident began when employees asked for raises on Jan. 2 and were asked to either quit with compensation or keep their jobs without a raise.

[More from Mashable: Comcast App for iPad Lets Users Watch Live TV]

Most of them chose to quit, but did not receive the promised compensation.

Microsoft could not confirm whether the mass suicide incident took place at Foxconn Technology Park in Wuhan, China. A spokesperson declined to confirm whether the factory is even a manufacturer of Xbox 360s, saying that the company does not disclose which specific products are manufactured by which suppliers.

[More from Mashable: Meme Machine: 5 Hilarious Viral Topics Trending Right Now]

"Microsoft takes working conditions in the factories that manufacture its products very seriously, and we are currently investigating this issue," a Microsoft spokesperson said in a statement to Mashable. "We have a stringent Vendor Code of Conduct that spells out our expectations, and we monitor working conditions closely on an ongoing basis and address issues as they emerge.

"Microsoft is committed to the fair treatment and safety of workers employed by our vendors, and to ensuring conformance with Microsoft policy."

Foxconn Technology Group, the world's largest electronics contract manufacturer, counts Apple, Dell and HP among its clients -- most famously producing the iPhone. But despite the employee talent shows, sports tournaments and training programs in its promotional material [PDF], the company has a lousy track record when it comes to employee suicide. Wired calculated in its March 2011 issue that 17 Foxconn workers have killed themselves in the past five years.

Some of Foxconn's factories are surrounded by anti-suicide nets, and employees have reportedly been asked to sign a "no suicide" pact. After interviewing 120 Foxconn workers, authors of a May 2011 report [PDF] by Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehaviour found significant instances of labor abuse at the factories.

"Workers always have excessive and forced overtime in order to gain a higher wage," says the report. "Workers are exposed to dust from construction site and shop floor without adequate protection. Even worse, they are threatened by potential harm of occupational diseases in various departments. Additionally, military-styled management is still in practice, characterized by 'military training' for new workers."

In June 2011, Apple sent its then-COO Tim Cook and a team of independent suicide prevention experts to review Foxconn's factory in Shenzhen. According to an Apple report released in February 2011: "The investigation found that Foxconn?s response [to the suicides] had definitely saved lives.?

If the current reports are true, however, the response may not have been enough.

Graphic courtesy M.I.C. Gadget

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20120110/tc_mashable/did_300_workers_at_an_xbox_360_factory_threaten_mass_suicide

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Friday, January 13, 2012

fredblesser: CES 2012: Live Blog: Sony Press Conference #in http://t.co/bl6iwoVJ

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omelete: Opa, saiu a lista dos indicados a melhor diretor do Sindicato de Diretores de Hollywood http://t.co/u4pTa5dM

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

EU's chicken-and-egg conundrum

In this photo taken Monday, Jan. 6, 2012, farmer Eric Pierart, left, and his son Ludovic, pose for a photograph alongside thousands of hens caged in his renovated barn in Fleurus, Belgium. A dozen years after the European Union set Jan. 1, 2012 as the date to eliminate the most cramped cages to improve the living standards of egg laying hens, half of the 27 European Union nations have failed to fully comply. Pierart says he spent some euro 1.5 million ($1.9 million) on new equipment for 100,000 chickens to comply with EU legislation. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

In this photo taken Monday, Jan. 6, 2012, farmer Eric Pierart, left, and his son Ludovic, pose for a photograph alongside thousands of hens caged in his renovated barn in Fleurus, Belgium. A dozen years after the European Union set Jan. 1, 2012 as the date to eliminate the most cramped cages to improve the living standards of egg laying hens, half of the 27 European Union nations have failed to fully comply. Pierart says he spent some euro 1.5 million ($1.9 million) on new equipment for 100,000 chickens to comply with EU legislation. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

In this photo taken Monday, Jan. 6, 2012, hens are seen at a chicken farm in Fleurus, Belgium. A dozen years after the European Union set Jan. 1, 2012 as the date to eliminate the most cramped cages to improve the living standards of egg laying hens, half of the 27 European Union nations have failed to fully comply. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

In this photo taken Monday, Jan. 6, 2012, hens are seen at a chicken farm in Fleurus, Belgium. A dozen years after the European Union set Jan. 1, 2012 as the date to eliminate the most cramped cages to improve the living standards of egg laying hens, half of the 27 European Union nations have failed to fully comply. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

In this photo taken Monday, Jan. 6, 2012, hens are seen at a chicken farm in Fleurus, Belgium. A dozen years after the European Union set Jan. 1, 2012 as the date to eliminate the most cramped cages to improve the living standards of egg laying hens, half of the 27 European Union nations have failed to fully comply. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)

(AP) ? When Eric Pierart takes in the chaotic wiggling of thousands of hens caged in his renovated barn, he's reminded of how tough it is for Europe to unite on anything.

And how much time it takes.

A dozen years after the European Union set Jan. 1, 2012 as the date to eliminate the most cramped cages to improve the living standards of egg laying hens, half of the 27 European Union nations have failed to fully comply ? a flop seen as a metaphor for Europe's current state of disarray.

"In all, they have been talking about it for 30 years," complained the ruddy-cheeked Pierart, who adhered to the new rules.

"Now, it shows that common ideas for everyone are still hard to come by."

Such is the way of the EU, where legislation seeps through layers of political and institutional granite in 27 nations at barely a trickle. And it affects a lot more than just the happiness of chickens.

Take the global economy.

For nearly two years, the world has been crying out for immediate and drastic measures to combat a debt crisis that has threatened to trigger a worldwide depression.

For nearly two years, the world has come away frustrated with explanations that Europe is not a legislative superhighway.

Now the fate of the lowly laying hen is again underscoring how slow a process it is to get everyone in the quilt of nations that is the European Union to unite on a common cause.

Many chicken farmers who made the heavy investment on time are now at a competitive disadvantage from laggards who didn't. Pierart says he spent some euro1.5 million ($1.9 million) on new equipment for 100,000 chickens.

In this chicken-and-egg situation, it's hard to pinpoint who's ultimately to blame.

Some fault the glacial pace of continentwide legislation, as well as the EU's poor checks, controls and enforcement.

Others point the finger at the perceived bad faith of some EU nations, seen as turning a laudable ideal into a logistical mess.

"If it is already so difficult for this, then how tough is it for 27 nations on much bigger issues?" Pierart asked.

It's all deepened well-worn stereotypes that have long dogged the European Union ? about how the less affluent south and east skirt the rules, about how upright nations like Germany end up paying for it all, and about the bloated EU institutions that seem unable to do anything about it.

Those institutions, often identified simply as "Brussels", can be a soft target. Fix something, and they're accused of meddling. When things goes wrong, they're accused of inaction or incompetence.

"It's an absolute joke," said Ian Plant, the owner of Plants Eggs in England's Lincolnshire, who, like Pierart, made the switch on time.

"This is such a serious situation that someone at the end of the day has to get to grips with it."

Even EU Consumer Policy Commissioner Dalli has said the hen imbroglio is undermining the EU's credibility.

His office said that 14 member states are still not complying with the rules, including France, Italy, Poland and Spain.

That has particularly irked Britain, which has deep animal rights traditions and often seizes on any perceived slight from the European Union.

"It is unacceptable that after the ban on battery cages comes into effect around 50 million hens across Europe will still remain in poor conditions," said British Agriculture Minister Jim Paice.

The European Commission says the total stands at 46 million hens still kept in illegal battery cages out of 330 million, or roughly 14 percent.

The new rules require cages to boost living space per hen to at least 750 sq. centimeters (115 sq. inches) from at least 550 square centimeters (85 square inches), among other measures.

"We have all had plenty of time to make these changes," Paice said. "It would be unthinkable if countries continuing to house hens in poor conditions were to profit from flouting the law."

The European Commission says it will be sending inspectors and starting legal proceedings against the recalcitrant nations as soon as possible. But those, too, can be lengthy, and meanwhile member states are left to deal with the potentially unfair competition as best they can.

"It can go all the way to the European Court of Justice," said EU Commission spokesman Frederic Vincent, referring to the EU's highest court. "It can lead to penalties."

To many farmers, though, that is too little too late.

And animal welfare activists are equally frustrated. The cock-up with the hens reminds Michel Vandenbosch, leader of Belgian animal rights group Gaia, of how Greece ? whose debt woes triggered the financial crisis ? cooked its budgetary books for years until it was found out in 2009.

"Greece made a fool of the EU for years," Vandenbosch said. "And now in this case too, they see things when it is too late."

After all the years of work, Vandenbosch said the campaign to win hens a bit more wiggle room almost wasn't worth the effort.

"Chickens won't notice the difference," he said. Instead of working with EU politicians, he said his organization has had at least as much success working on market players like Unilever, which is now moving well beyond EU rules and toward using only eggs from cage-free birds in their food products.

"Politics will have to realize how the market reacts, and they will have to follow," Vandenbosch said.

In England, Plant said his renovations cost several million pounds.

"Having made this sort of investment, having been told by our government all the way along that this legislation was gold-plated, that it had to be completed by Jan. 1, we are now very disillusioned to find that substantial parts of Europe haven't complied," he said.

And when Europe fails, many still look to national borders as a line of defense.

"We're now faced with a situation where something has to be done about these illegal eggs coming onto the British market," said Plant.

___

Videojournalists Mark Carlson in Brussels and Martin Benedyk in Stamford, England contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-11-EU-Europe-Fowl-Play/id-63668b1d33b3485eb20412c9040292d2

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Samsung Galaxy S 2: svelate le cause del malfunzionamento di Android 2.3.6 per alcuni device

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Source: colombom.altervista.org --- Monday, January 09, 2012
L?ultimo update rilasciato da Samsung, per il proprio gioiellino Galaxy S 2, ha portato non pochi problemi agli utenti in possesso di questo fantastico smartphone. Come ? oramai noto, alcuni possessori di questo device hanno riscontrato problemi come impossibilit? di utilizzare il Wifi, impossibilit? di utilizzare il Bluetooth, impossibilit? di riavviare/spegnere il cellulare, rallentamenti e [...] ...

Source: http://colombom.altervista.org/blog/2012/01/10/samsung-galaxy-s-2-svelate-le-cause-del-malfunzionamento-di-android-2-3-6-per-alcuni-device/

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Sam Shankland clear first in the Northern California International

The 2012 Northern California International was held from 2nd to 8th January, 2012, at the NorCal House of Chess at Northwestern Polytechnic University in Fremont, California.

Following the tradition of Berkeley International, the tournament offered the possibilities for obtaining GM and IM norms.

Presented by NorCal House of Chess
Time Control: 40/90, SD/30 with 30 second increment
Organizers: Arun Sharma and Ted Castro
Prizes: $3000, $1500, $1000; U2500 ? $1000; U2300 ? $1000

GM Sam Shankland took a clear first place with 7 points from nine games and earned the $3000 prize. GM Alejandro Ramirez won in the last round to leap ahead and share the 2nd place.

Sam Shankland

GM Sam Shankland (Photos courtesy of Inga Gurevich)

Final standings:
1. GM Sam Shankland 2565 ? 7.0 (1st: $3000)
2-4. GM Alejandro Ramirez 2594, GM Josh Friedel 2523 and IM Marc Arnold 2482 ? 6.5 (T-2nd/3rd/U2500: $1166)
5-11. GM Georg Meier 2671, GM Bartlomiej Macieja 2617, GM Yury Shulman 2598, GM Axel Bachmann 2560, GM Giorgi Margvelashvili 2531, IM Mackenzie Molner 2449 and IM Daniel Rensch 2401 ? 6.0 etc

Full crosstable

The Northern California International conveniently started only a couple of days after the North American Open in Las Vegas ended, and it concluded only a few days before the Golden State Open in the same area begins.

Marc Arnold

IM Marc Arnold

Josh Friedel

GM Josh Friedel

Source: http://www.chessdom.com/sam-shankland-clear-first-in-the-northern-california-international

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