Thursday, January 26, 2012

What You Missed While Not Watching the Florida GOP Debate (Time.com)

0 minutes. TV Guide lists a new episode of Fear Factor at 9 p.m. on NBC. It's called "Leaches & Shaved Heads & Tear Gas, Oh My! Part 1." And yet, as the hour strikes, the screen shows another patriotic montage, this time from Tampa, Florida, introducing the 18th Republican debate. The NFL plays a 16-game regular season. There are nine circles of hell. God got it done in six days. But democracy is unrelenting, a bit like Joe Rogan, with less forced regurgitation and fewer critter challenges. Which is to say, Fear Factor has been preempted. A fearful nation takes its place.

2 minutes. Blue gels on the audience again, like Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, except there will be no "dum-dum-dum," at least as sound effects. Brian Williams, the handsomest man to have never been a movie star, is not wasting any time. He lists a lot of bad stuff former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has been saying about former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. "Erratic, failed leader," it goes on. "Your response tonight Mr. Speaker?"

3 minutes. Gingrich responds by reciting his resume, with extra emphasis on confusing historical analogies that only he knows. He says Reagan carried "more states than Herbert Hoover carried -- than Roosevelt carried against Herbert Hoover." As is often the case with Gingrich, his words form a shield. By the time he gets to, "they're not sending somebody to Washington to manage the decay," it's impossible to remember what was asked.

4 minutes. A wide shot shows Romney standing there, next to Gingrich, with his right hand hanging at his side, ready to draw. But dapper Williams tries again with Gingrich, which allows the speaker to continue taking credit for everything good that happened during his decades in the House. "When I was speaker, we had four consecutive balanced budgets, the only time in your lifetime, Brian, that we've had four consecutive balanced budgets." This is not true. The four years of surplus ran through 2001. Gingrich resigned from office in 1999. Newt gets two out of four. If this were a history class, he would fail.

5 minutes. Romney gets his chance. "I think it's about leadership," he says, "and the speaker was given an opportunity to be the leader of our party in 1994. And at the end of four years, he had to resign in disgrace." This is the same Mitt Romney who said in the last debate that he wished he had spent more time attacking President Obama, and less time attacking his rivals. Romney calls Gingrich an "influence peddler," says he encouraged cap and trade and called Paul Ryan's budget plan "social engineering."

6 minutes. Gingrich, doing his best imitation of Romney, from when Romney was the frontrunner, acts like he is too big a deal to worry about the criticism. "Well, look, I'm not going to spend the evening trying to chase Governor Romney's misinformation," he says, adding that he would rather be attacking Obama. "I just think this is the worst kind of trivial politics."

8 minutes. Williams still looks like every 1940s radio drama detective sounded. He asks Romney whether he can appeal to conservatives. Romney says he does, and pivots. "Let's go back to what the Speaker mentioned with regards to leadership," Romney says. He notes that Gingrich was the first speaker in history to resign. "I don't think we can possibly retake the White House if the person who's leading our party is the person who was working for the chief lobbyist of Freddie Mac," he adds.

9 minutes. Romney says almost exactly what Gingrich said after Iowa: That the last election taught him he can't sit back. He has to go on offense. "I had incoming from all directions, was overwhelmed with a lot of attacks. And I'm not going to sit back and get attacked day in and day out without returning fire," Romney says. The too men have traded strategies since South Carolina. Or traded bodies. Gingrich is now aloof and focused on the general. Romney is trying to muddy the field.

10 minutes. Gingrich returns fire with a couple of zingers:"He may have been a good financier," he says of Romney. "He's a terrible historian." So is Gingrich. (See minute 4.) Then Gingrich proceeds to respond to a lot of stuff he just said he would not waste his time talking about. He tells a rosy version of his fall from the atop the U.S. House that would not please his fellow historians. "Apparently your consultants aren't very good historians," Gingrich tells Romney. "What you ought to do is stop and look at the facts." The intellectual insult. A classic Gingrich move. Like I-know-you-are-but-what-am-I?

11 minutes. Debonair Williams, he of the slender face and half-Windsor knot, throws it to former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who has apparently been standing on stage this entire time. How, asks Williams, is Santorum going to actually win? Santorum hits his stump speech, saying he is positive, and that this is not a two person race. [BOLD "MORE:"]What You Missed While Not Watching the Last South Carolina GOP Debate

14 minutes. There is actually a fourth person on stage as well. Texas Rep. Ron Paul gets a question that is basically this: You have no chance of winning, you said you don't envision yourself in the Oval Office, so will you run as a third-party candidate? Paul says he has been winning the under-30 vote, and otherwise doing "pretty darned well." Then he calls the historian on his rosy history about giving up the speaker's gavel. "This idea that he voluntarily reneged and he was going to punish himself because we didn't do well in the election, that's just not the way it was." True that. Then Paul says, once again, that he has "no plans" to go third party.

17 minutes. Gingrich gets a question about Paul. Gingrich praises Paul for his criticism of the Federal Reserve and desire for a "gold commission," which is nothing like a blue-ribbon panel. It would study bringing back gold as currency.

18 minutes. Romney says he will release his tax returns for two years on Wednesday morning. But again he gets tongue tied. Rich people don't like to talk about their own money. It is impolite. So Romney says, "The real question is not so much my taxes, but the taxes of the American people." Suddenly, out of nowhere, Romney, who previously opposed any debt compromise that raised any taxes, is praising the Bowles-Simpson plan, which raises tax revenues by nearly $1 trillion. But Romney doesn't talk about the deficit part. He talks about the cutting marginal rates part, which by itself would make the debt problem worse. He chastises Obama for having "simply brushed aside" the Bowles-Simpson recommendations, in much the same way that Romney did previously.

20 minutes. More discomfort, as Romney is asked again to talk about his money. "I pay all the taxes that are legally required and not a dollar more," he says. "I don't think you want someone as the candidate for president who pays more taxes than he owes." Now that is settled.

21 minutes. Gingrich tries to needle Romney by saying he wants everyone to enjoy Romney's 15 percent tax rate. Romney points out that under the Gingrich tax plan, investment gains would be taxed at zero. "Under that plan, I'd have paid no taxes in the last two years," Romney says. This is true. It is the reason Gingrich's policies are better for wealthy financiers than Romney's policies. Romney would keep his own tax rate on investments at 15%.

22 minutes. More awkward talk about Romney's wealth. "I will not apologize for having been successful. I did not inherit what my wife and I have, nor did she. What we have, what I was able to build, I built the old-fashioned way, by earning it," he says. This is true, if you discount the fact that his father's money helped to put Romney through college (Bringham Young, Stanford) and joint degrees at Harvard (Law, Business).

25 minutes. Now it's time to talk about what lobbying means. Gingrich worked for lobbyists at Freddie Mac, a quasi-government agency that conservatives despise. He also took lots of money from health care companies, while at the same time writing articles and giving talks that furthered those company's agendas in Congress. But technically none of it was "lobbying," which is a legal term of art. Williams asks the right question, by avoiding the L-word. "You never peddled influence, as Governor Romney accused you of tonight?" Gingrich can't answer. "You know, there is a point in the process where it gets unnecessarily personal and nasty," he says, before avoiding the question by saying he never lobbied.

28 minutes. Romney and Gingrich go at it. Romney accuses Gingrich of profiting from an organization that destroyed the housing market in Florida. Gingrich tries to compare his consulting work for lobbyists with Romney's consulting work for corporations. "Wait a second, wait a second," protests Gingrich at one point, after Romney admits that his firm made money too. "We didn't do any work with the government. I didn't have an office on K Street," Romney says. It goes on.

33 minutes. Never-a-bad-hair-day Williams cuts them off and goes to commercial break.

36 minutes. We're back, with charity time for the other two candidates on stage who have not had much time to talk. Paul and Santorum talk about the housing market and say nothing new. Then Romney says he wants to help homeowners too. And Gingrich says he wants to repeal Dodd-Frank, the banking regulation bill, because of its effect on smaller banks. Romney agrees.

43 minutes. Cuban question: "Let's say President Romney gets that phone call, and it is to say that Fidel Castro has died. And there are credible people in the Pentagon who predict upwards of half a million Cubans may take that as a cue to come to the United States. What do you do?" The premise is a stretch, since Fidel has already ceded most government control to his brother, Raul. Romney tries to make a joke about how Fidel is a bad guy. "First of all, you thank heavens that Fidel Castro has returned to his maker and will be sent to another land," he says.

44 minutes. Gingrich retells the joke, but gets the punchline right. "Well, Brian, first of all, I guess the only thing I would suggest is I don't think that Fidel is going to meet his maker. I think he's going to go to the other place," he says. Fidel in hell jokes must poll really well in Miami. Then Gingrich says he would authorize "covert operations" to overthrow the Castro regime.

46 minutes. "I would do pretty much the opposite," says Paul.

47 minutes. Having stirred up the Cuban pot, Williams now accuses the candidates of pandering for votes. Why don't they care as much about Chinese dissidents and embargo China? Santorum says China is not 90 miles off the coast.

49 minutes. Iran time. Romney criticizes Obama, "We ought to have and aircraft carrier in the Gulf." Nevermind that the USS Abraham Lincoln is there right now. Gingrich picks up where Romney left off. "Dictatorships respond to strength, they don't respond to weakness," he says. The same can be said of Republican primary voters.

52 minutes. Romney tears into Obama on Afghanistan, saying the president should not have reduced troops so much, allowed elections to go bad or announced withdrawal date.

53 minutes. Paul pretty much has the opposite view.

54 minutes. Another break. "I'll welcome two colleagues out here to the stage when we continue from Tampa right after this," says Williams. Hope for Joe Rogan and Donald Trump. Or Alec Baldwin and Tina Fey.

58 minutes. We're back. It's National Journal's Beth Reinhard and the Tampa Bay Times' Adam Smith. After Santorum gets a chance to talk about the evils of Iran, he is asked about offshore drilling. Santorum said the economy in Florida went bad in 2008 "because of a huge spike in oil prices," which is like saying people watch Fear Factor to see Joe Rogan.

62 minutes. Reinhard asks a great question: How can the candidates be against bilingual balloting, even as they advertise in Spanish to Hispanics. Gingrich and Romney don't really have answers. So they dance around the edges. Everyone on stage is against multi-lingual education, except Paul who doesn't mind if states do whatever they want.

66 minutes. Immigration time. Same as before, except Gingrich makes clear that he would support a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who serve in the military. Romney agrees. Then Romney says of other undocumented immigrants, "Well, the answer is self-deportation, which is people decide they can do better by going home because they can't find work here because they don't have legal documentation to allow them to work here." Self-deportation is one of those neologisms that gets added to dictionary at the end of the year. Sign of the times.

70 minutes. Questions about sugar subsidies. Gingrich says you can't beat the sugar lobby, because "cane sugar hides behind beet sugar," and there are "just too many beet sugar districts in the United States." Surely someone can work that into a Haiku.

71 minutes. Romney says he is against all subsidies. Then he pivots into a long rant about the awfulness of President Obama. It is telling that it has taken Romney 71 minutes to get into this rant on Obama. South Carolina has transformed him as a candidate.

72 minutes. Paul is asked is he supports federal funding for conservation of the everglades. Paul lets down his strict libertarian guard to pander for Florida votes. "I don't see any reason to go after that," he says.

73 minutes. Another break. Things are speeding up. [BOLD "MORE:"] Debates Gingrich Scorches Media at Fierce GOP Debate in South Carolina

77 minutes. Some talk about Terri Schiavo, a woman in a vegetative state who became a cause celeb for conservatives in 2005. The answers are inconsequential.

81 minutes. Space cadet time. No, really. Romney says Obama has no space plan, and America needs a space plan. Gingrich gets asked about going to Mars. He says he wants a "leaner NASA," but then lists off a terribly expensive list of goals: "Going back to the moon permanently, getting to Mars as rapidly as possible, building a series of space stations and developing commercial space." At least something new is happening. First time in 18 debates that anyone has talked about Mars.

84 minutes. Gingrich is asked why the Bush tax cuts in early 2000s did not create a lot of jobs. His answer is priceless. He channels Obama, seemingly unaware of the irony. "In 2002 and '03 and '04, we'd have been in much worse shape without the Bush tax cuts," he says. That's what Obama says about the stimulus bill. Both are basically right, though neither would give the other credit.

85 minutes. Last break. Almost there. Actually scratch that. You will never get there. When this debate ends, there will be another. The next one is Thursday. No joke.

90 minutes. We're back. Romney is asked what he has done to further the cause of conservatism. He is sort of stumped. Talks about his family, his work in the private sector, neither of which is all that ideological.

92 minutes. Gingrich talks about how he went to Goldwater meetings in 1964, when he would have turned 21.

93 minutes. Santorum is asked about electability. Suddenly he comes alive. It's the best moment of any of his debates. Yet few will ever notice, and it will almost certainly not matter. He makes the case that he is the only true conservative who can take on Obama, and that both Romney and Gingrich are fundamentally flawed because they are too close to the political positions of Obama. "There is no difference between President Obama and these two gentlemen," Santorum says. This is not true, if you were wondering.

95 minutes. Paul talks about the constitution.

97 minutes. Romney talks about RomneyCare and ObamaCare.

98 minutes. Gingrich says, "I never ask anyone to be for me. Because if they are for me, they vote yes and go home and say, I sure hope Newt does it. I ask people to be with me, because I think this will be a very hard, very difficult journey." No doubt.

99 minutes. Romney, who talks all the time about "restoring American greatness," is asked when America was last great. "America still is great," Romney says, thus undercutting the meaning of his signature campaign message. 101 minutes. That's it. See you Thursday.

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Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The top 10 employers of Gen Y workers

A new study by Millennial Branding reveals how and where Generation Y is working today, and may shed light on the future of work.

Data and analytics company Identified.com analyzed the Facebook profiles of 4 million Gen-Y users, aged 18 to 29, in November 2011. Of those reviewed, most (90 percent) lived in the U.S. and listed at least one college (80 percent).

However, just a third (36 percent) listed a job entry on their profiles, possibly because they view their education as a life-long identifier and their job as more temporary. ?Gen-Y workers are job-hoppers,? says Dan Schawbel, founder of Millennial Branding, a Boston-based personal branding agency, and author of "Me 2.0." ?They spend an average of two years at their first jobs, and the average American will have nine jobs between the ages of 18 and 32.?

Slideshow: Most common jobs for Gen Y workers

By 2025, Gen Y is expected to comprise 75 percent of the total workforce, yet currently just 7 percent work for America?s largest companies, according to the study. Interestingly, the biggest recruiter of Gen Y is the U.S. Armed Forces, which employs 3.2 percent in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force. In fact, the breakdown of Gen Y?s top 10 employers looks like this:

  1. Armed Forces
  2. Wal-Mart
  3. Starbucks
  4. Target
  5. Best Buy
  6. McDonald?s
  7. Abercrombie & Fitch
  8. YMCA
  9. CVS Caremark
  10. UPS

A quick glance shows that most are major retailers. Large companies more closely associated with professional positions ? tech firms like IBM and Microsoft and accounting firms like PricewaterhouseCoopers and Ernst & Young ? are featured much lower on the list. Comparatively, the most common positions held by Gen Yers include server, manager, intern, sales associate, owner, cashier, teacher, supervisor, assistant and sales representative.

Jobs expert and executive recruiter Skip Freeman says the incredible unemployment rates experienced by 16- to 24-year-olds ?means that the jobs they will be able to get are the ones that don?t require education or experience.? Furthermore, he says companies are now looking for candidates with ?current, relevant experience? that don?t require an investment in training and development. In a competitive market that demands specific skills, that?s bad news for the youth population. ?Only as the job market improves will we see the opportunities for the Gen-Y folks get better.?

At the same time, Gen Yers who can?t find stable employment or no longer trust traditional work structures are starting their own businesses. ?Owner? was the fifth most popular job title among Millennials. ?I think we?re looking at the end of the 9 to 5,? says Schawbel. ?Gen Yers would rather work for smaller companies, and they want flexibility and to do work that has an impact.? It may also help explain the high incidence of retail employers, he adds, as Gen-Y workers would be more likely to take part-time jobs as they juggle school or small businesses.

Corporations would be wise to take notice of the trend. ?There is a disconnect between Gen Y and their employers,? Schawbel says. Current management views Millennials? job-hopping as disloyal, while Millennials crave a more entrepreneurial work style enabled by new technologies, he notes. To avoid a potential clash, he advises employers to offer their Gen-Y workers more freedom over their time, activities and budgets.

For their part, the young workers may want to think twice about their Facebook identities. According to the study, Gen Yers have an average of 16 coworkers as Facebook friends but are using the social network primarily for personal rather than professional reasons. Schawbel warns that an unfiltered Facebook feed could come back to haunt them in the workplace, possibly leading to termination.

More from Forbes.com

? 2012 Forbes.com

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45987983/ns/business-forbes_com/

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Friday, January 20, 2012

Lost snowshoer burned cash, socks to survive

The survival of a 66-year-old snowshoer who spent two nights on Mount Rainier was being called a miracle, even as National Park Service staff waited out bad weather to see if four overdue hikers are OK.

Yong Chun Kim said he survived by using fire starters to burn leaves and eventually $1 and $5 bills in his wallet as well as socks, KOMO TV of Seattle reported.

Kim also told said he marched in place to keep warm and took shelter in a tree well.

Kim was rescued after searchers traversed deep snow at 6,300 feet and snowshoed up a river valley to pull him from the icy remote backcountry.

The team reached Kim on Monday afternoon but it wasn't until 11 p.m. local time that he was brought from the rugged terrain covered in deep snow to a road, Mount Rainier National Park spokeswoman Lee Taylor said late Monday.

She told the News Tribune newspaper of Tacoma, Wash., that he did not need to go to a hospital and instead was going home. Kim "seems to be in good shape and we're just thrilled to have been able to bring this search to such a successful conclusion," Taylor said.

Taylor said the experienced snowshoer from Tacoma was alert, conscious and stable when he was found by three searchers.

He was reported missing on Saturday after he fell down a slope and became separated from a group he was leading in the Paradise area, a popular high-elevation destination on the mountain's southwest flank, about a 100-mile drive south from Seattle.

Kim, who has been snowshoeing for a decade, was well equipped for a day trip but didn't have overnight gear and the weather was not helpful.

"The weather was wintry, with fresh snow each day, low temperatures in the teens, and high winds," the park service said.

Because Kim was the leader of his group, other snowshoers weren't able to accurately describe where he had slipped, Taylor said. Searchers had initially believed Kim fell in a different area, based on descriptions from the group, Taylor said.

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Taylor said he was in a remote area with deep snow. Mount Rainier has seen temperatures in the teens, and eight inches of new snow fell in some places since Saturday. Wind-blown snow drifts were as high as 30 inches in some areas.

Bad weather prevented a helicopter rescue, so crews used a Sno-Cat snow vehicle to reach the area where Kim was. Then "searchers had to snowshoe up the river valley to reach him, load him into a kind of a litter that could be slid across the snow, sort of a sled, bring him back down and get him back into the Sno-Cat and bring the Sno-Cat back out to the road," Taylor said.

Kim's son, Malcom An, thanked authorities and the rescuers in a statement released through the National Park Service.

"It?s a miracle that he is alive," he said, "but it?s an assisted miracle. I want to thank all the volunteers and the National Park Service staff who worked so hard to find my father."

With a new storm moving into the Seattle area Tuesday night , Mount Rainier staff said Tuesday that two climbers are one day overdue and two campers are two days overdue.

The campers were on the Muir snowfield, where it's been below zero in recent days with winds up to 90 mph, the News Tribune reported.

The climbers were also on the mountain but their route was not immediately known.

The couple, Mark Bucich of San Diego, Calif., and Michelle Trojanowski of Atlanta, Ga., had planned to summit the 14,411-foot mountain and then return Sunday afternoon. They are said to be skilled climbers with enough camping gear to stay out several nights, KOMO TV reported.

"Both parties are equipped for camping in winter weather," the park service said in a statement. "Due to weather conditions it is expected that they are waiting out the weather before attempting their descents."

"A limited field search is underway," the park added, "but putting searchers extensively on the mountain is not expected due to the risk involved including current severe weather, white out conditions and high avalanche danger.

In a separate incident, a backcountry skier at Crystal Mountain, right across from Mount Rainier, was lucky to be alive after getting lost Friday. A search team found him that night suffering from hypothermia and pulled him out at 6 a.m. Saturday.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46010767/ns/us_news-life/

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Mubarak trial encapsulates divisions in Egypt

Former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak is wheeled into a court house in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Mubarak faces charges of complicity in the killing of hundreds of protesters during an 18-day uprising that toppled his regime nearly a year ago. If convicted, Mubarak, 83, could face a death penalty. (AP Photo/Mohammed al-Law)

Former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak is wheeled into a court house in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Mubarak faces charges of complicity in the killing of hundreds of protesters during an 18-day uprising that toppled his regime nearly a year ago. If convicted, Mubarak, 83, could face a death penalty. (AP Photo/Mohammed al-Law)

Gamal Mubarak, son of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, left, arrives at a court house in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Hosni Mubarak and his two sons, wealthy businessman Alaa and his one-time heir apparent Gamal face corruption charges in the same case. All three were in court Tuesday. (AP Photo/Mohammed al-Law)

A man holds a placard depicting ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak with Arabic writing that reads, "People's role ", outside a courtroom in Cairo, Egypt, Egypt, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Hosni Mubarak and his two sons, wealthy businessman Alaa and his one-time heir apparent Gamal face corruption charges and all three were in court Tuesday. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

An Egyptian girl carrying a photo of ousted Egyptian President Mubarak, stands next to riot police outside a courtroom in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Hosni Mubarak and his two sons, wealthy businessman Alaa and his one-time heir apparent Gamal face corruption charges in the same case and all three were in court Tuesday, prompting increased security outside the court. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

An Egyptian man chants slogans in front of a courtroom in Cairo, outside a courtroom in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Jan. 17, 2012. Hosni Mubarak, seen in poster behind, and his two sons, wealthy businessman Alaa and his one-time heir apparent Gamal face corruption charges and all three were in court Tuesday. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

(AP) ? Hosni Mubarak, on trial for his life, is ferried to court by helicopter from a presidential hospital suite. His sons and co-defendants swagger in wearing designer track suits and no handcuffs. His security chief is treated with near reverence by police in the courtroom.

For activists in Egypt, the scenes only deepen their feeling that the authoritarian system the ousted president oversaw remains largely in place, almost a year since the 18-day uprising that toppled him.

When Mubarak's trial began five months ago, many hoped it would bring not only punishment but a clear sense of victory for a movement that aimed to wipe the slate clean and start again.

Instead, it has boiled down to a bare-knuckled showdown between supporters and foes of the "revolution," reflecting the tensions that have been gripping the country.

Those divisions were clear in court Tuesday as Mubarak's defense began its arguments. His chief lawyer, Farid el-Deeb, went for maximum effect with flowery language depicting him as an unjustly maligned victim who tried to improve Egypt during 29 years in power.

"This man before you, who is 83, has been fatigued and burdened by ailments and mauled by the malice of cunning people," el-Deeb said.

"He is looking to your justice to save him from the oppression that surrounds him from every direction, after his reputation and history have been targeted by tongues and pens."

The courtroom erupted when he said that Mubarak in fact supported the revolution. El-Deeb quoted from a letter he said Mubarak wrote to his lifetime friend Ahmed Shafiq ? who was prime minister at the time of the uprising ? saying that protesters were exercising their right to stage peaceful protests but were infiltrated by criminals and Islamists who destroyed public property and challenged the regime's "legitimacy."

"Lies, lies!" and "Execution for Mubarak!" screamed the lawyers representing the families of protesters killed by police during the revolution.

They rushed at el-Deeb and nearly set upon him, but court police quickly moved to keep them back.

Mubarak, who has worn an unwaveringly grim expression ever since the trial began on Aug. 3, looked content as el-Deeb praised him. For the first time in the trial, he sat in a wheelchair in the courtroom cage where the defendants are kept, rather than lying on a hospital gurney as he has in previous sessions.

Mubarak, his former security chief Habib el-Adly and four top security officers are charged with complicity in the killing of hundreds of protesters and could face the death penalty if convicted. Mubarak's sons Alaa and Gamal, along with their father, are charged with corruption in the same trial, a crime that would carry a prison sentence.

But the near-melee over el-Deeb's speech gave a peek into the issue running under the surface of the trial: what the revolution has really meant for Egypt.

That issue has polarized Egyptian politics since Mubarak's Feb. 11 ouster and the takeover of the reins of power by army generals widely believed to be beholden to him, led by his loyal defense minister of 20 years, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi.

Many of the activists who engineered the anti-Mubarak protests see the generals as just an extension of their former patron's regime with no interest in bringing significant change. Notably, the military only ordered the arrest of the former president and his two sons after mass protests demanding that they be brought to justice.

Activists also charge that the generals have methodically tried to divert attention away from the revolution's main goals ? freedom, democracy and social justice ? and instead decreed a cumbersome transition, allowing Islamist parties to dominate the political landscape and missing what they see as a historic chance to become a truly democratic state.

At the same time, the generals have gone to great lengths to discredit protest leaders and capitalize on Egyptians' longing for stability by demonizing the revolutionaries as foreign agents and troublemakers while projecting an image of themselves as the nation's true patriots.

Activists, lawyers for the victims and some in the public see the soft treatment for the defendants as evidence that those in power still grant Mubarak and those around him the aura of prestige.

Police assigned to courthouse security have been captured on camera offering their former boss el-Adly a salute as he arrived for one of the early hearings. Those images caused an uproar, but el-Adly, who as interior minister commanded the intensely hated police force, continues to walk from the armored police vehicle that brings him from jail to the courtroom without escort or handcuffs. Dark sunglasses, a navy blue baseball cap and a matching prison uniform have become the iconic look of a man whose name once struck fear in the hearts of the regime's foes.

Similarly, Mubarak's sons parade boldly into the courthouse, with Alaa carrying a purple chair that he sits on when inside the defendants' cage. Both Alaa and Gamal, who barely a year ago was thought to be Egypt's second most powerful man after his father, wear immaculate white track suits with matching sneakers.

Two other security commanders face dereliction of duty charges in relation to the crackdown on protesters in the trial. A friend of the Mubarak family, Hussein Salem, who has fled the country, is also a defendant in the corruption component of the trial.

Activists grumble that the treatment contrasts with the use of deadly force by troops in recent months against peaceful protesters demanding that the generals step down immediately ? as well as the use of cursory military tribunals to prosecute at least 12,000 civilians, including protesters, since the generals took over. Those rounded up over the months from Tahrir Square complained of being beaten, hit by clubs or shocked by stun guns while in police custody.

The prosecution last week gave a startlingly harsh and dramatic denunciation of Mubarak in its courtroom summations, calling him a tyrant who maneuvered to get his son Gamal to succeed him.

Tuesday's hearing was the first of five set aside by Judge Ahmed Rifaat to hear the defense argue its case. El-Deeb, who over the years built a reputation as a suave and expensive celebrity lawyer, sharply criticized the prosecution's comments, saying it used phrases that "for no reason insulted Mubarak."

"Mubarak is neither a tyrant nor a bloodthirsty man. He respects the judiciary and its decisions, a clean man who could say no wrong," he said.

"Mubarak has seriously and faithfully worked to the best of his abilities and energy for Egypt and its people, lived a life burdened by his nation's problems," he said. "For that, he is worthy of justice and no one should discredit his efforts, question his loyalty or history."

The victims' lawyers were again enraged when Salwah al-Soubi, a member of the defense team, chanted "Mubarak, we love you!" in addressing the ousted leader in the defendants' cage.

"Sit down and shut up!" shouted some of the lawyers for the victims.

Outside the trial venue, some 300 hundred Mubarak supporters chanted slogans in support of the former president. They came close to fighting with about 100 relatives of the victims, but riot police intervened and separated the two camps.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-17-ML-Egypt-Mubarak-Trial/id-6187a6050d794aaf8b01142bcbc1f8d8

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Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing survivor joins city's 2012 MLK Celebration | Slideshow

Sarah Rudolph Collins was 12 years old when her sister was killed by a bomb in Birmingham, Alabama.

She walked to the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church with her sisters on the morning of Sept. 15, 1963, in the heat of the Civil Rights Movement.

She remembers how they all played and share carefree fun on the way there. Soon after arriving at church, Collins was standing by the sink in the ladies' lounge. All of a sudden ? BOOM ? she was blinded in both eyes.

"It scared me so bad, all I could do was call out 'Jesus,'" she said. "I just stayed in the hospital and cried all night."

Three members of the Ku Klux Klan had planted 19 sticks of dynamite in the church's basement. The explosion destroyed the church's back wall and steps. Four girls died: Addie Mae Collins, 14, Denise McNair, 11, Carole Robertson, 14, and Cynthia Wesley, 14. The bombing, which also injured 22 more people, sparked outrage nationwide and brought more attention to civil rights legislation.

Sarah Rudolph Collins ended up losing an eye in the blast. At the hospital that day, she learned of her sister's death. The trauma haunted her for years as she struggled to cope without counseling, sinking deep into depression, desperate to escape the past. She eventually found a spiritual awakening that gave Collins the courage to share her story. The connection with a new church and a higher power helped steer her life toward a positive path.

"God healed me of all that fear," she told the audience Jan. 14 as the keynote speaker for Federal Way's Martin Luther King Celebration. (See slideshow here)king

Event coordinator and Federal Way City Councilman Roger Freeman joined several local leaders to honor the enduring influence of Martin Luther King's legacy on everyday life.

"Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement opened participation in American society to all cultures and ethnicities," Freeman said. "His heroic efforts opened the door to Federal Way becoming the diverse community it is today."

This year's MLK Celebration was sponsored by the city and held at Our Savior's Baptist Church on South 320th Street. Among the more poignant moments was a candlelight vigil and moment of silence for those four girls who died in the 1963 church bombing.

In addition to performances by ARIA Dance Company, the audience watched a video of King's iconic "I Have a Dream" speech from Aug. 28, 1963. The speech, which called for racial equality and harmony, was named the top speech of the 20th century.

King was assassinated on April 4, 1968, at The Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tenn. In 1983, King's birthday was designated as a federal holiday set for the third Monday in January. The holiday was first observed in 1986.

SLIDESHOW

See more photos from the 2012 MLK Celebration by clicking here.

?

Contact Federal Way Mirror Editor Andy Hobbs at editor@fedwaymirror.com or 253-925-5565.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/fwmnews/~3/UuC2Y6YwTOc/137510818.html

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Failing to Review Your Insurance Can Cost You

The personal insurance plans you have may need to be adjusted from year to year. The life, health care, disability, car and homeowners' insurance that you have may no longer do what you need them to do. Each plan should be reviewed and adjusted as necessary.

The life insurance needs of your family may have changed since the last time you reviewed it. You may have too much life insurance. You may have too little coverage. You may have the wrong kind of life insurance.

If you are earning a better salary you may need to adjust the limits of the life insurance you have. One of the more important reasons to buy life insurance is to replace lost income. Having too little life insurance can mean that your spouse has too little income.

If you have more obligations now than when you purchased your plan you may want to update your contract. A now larger family can increase your requirements for insurance. The opposite is also true. If your children are adults and son their own, you may need less coverage than you did before.

When is the last time you thought about your medical insurance plan? Your medical insurance plan may have a maternity rider that you no longer require. Or, it may not have coverage for pregnancy and you are planning to expand your family.

Your policy's deductible may be too low or too high. You can easily over pay by buying a plan with a deductible that is too low.

The limits on your plan may be lower than you need. The cost of a hospital stay goes up each year. Medical providers charge more each year. Unless your policy has unlimited lifetime and annual limits it may fall short if you have a major health problem.

Disability insurance gives you an income when you are unable to work due to a sickness or accident. If your income has grown, your disability insurance should also rise.

If your need for income is less than it was before, you may want to reduce your coverage. If you are able to live off of your investments now you may no longer require this coverage.

Your car insurance plan has probably been adjusted when you bought and sold cars. It may not have been updated to make sure that you have adequate liability limits. It may not have been adjusted as your autos have grown older and perhaps no longer require physical damage insurance.

Your home insurance needs adjustment on a regular basis. The amount of coverage you have on your dwelling needs to equal the cost of rebuilding your home. (Not the cost of purchasing a new dwelling.) This amount changes from year to year and your plan should be updated.

If you have bought jewelry since you bought your home contract, you may want to make sure that you have enough jewelry insurance. You may need to purchase a rider or a separate plan to cover your jewelry. The standard home insurance contract will only cover a limited amount of jewelry.

Checking rates with various companies to get the best price is an important part of reviewing your insurance. Your needs change from year to year. So do the prices of the various insurance carriers. Although it is more important to be sure that you have the right kind and amount of insurance protection, it is also important that you not pay too much for it.

The only way to ensure that your insurance policies are still appropriate for you is to review your needs and your insurance contracts one by one. Having too much coverage means your coverage is more expensive than it should be. Having too little insurance isn't good either. It means that you get paid too little when you need it the most.

Source: http://www.articlesaffair.com/article/97772/failing-to-review-your-insurance-can-cost-you.html

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Son of Green Bay Packers coach found dead: police (Reuters)

MILWAUKEE (Reuters) ? Oshkosh police confirmed Tuesday that the body of the adult son of Green Bay Packers offensive coordinator Joe Philbin was recovered from the Fox River near the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh campus.

Michael Philbin, 21, had been last heard from during a cell phone conversation early Sunday in Oshkosh where he was visiting friends, about the same time that authorities received a report that a person had fallen into the river.

A dive rescue crew from the Winnebago County Sheriff's Office searched the river and found Philbin's body on Monday, according to Oshkosh Police Officer Joseph Nichols.

Philbin, who lived in Ripon, Wisconsin, was reported missing Sunday night.

His father Joe Philbin joined the National Football League's Packers in 2003 and has served as offensive coordinator since 2007.

In a statement on the team's web site Tuesday, General Manager Ted Thompson said that the Packers family was "saddened" to hear of Michael Philbin's death.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with Joe, his wife, Diane, and the Philbin family as they cope with their loss," Thompson said. "This is an emotional and difficult time for them, and we ask that everyone respect their privacy. All of us in the Packers family share in their grief."

The defending NFL champion Packers had the best record in the NFL this season. They play the New York Giants in a playoff game on Sunday at Lambeau Field in Green Bay.

(Reporting by John Rondy; Editing by Mary Wisniewski and Paul Thomasch)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120110/sp_nm/us_nfl_packers_death

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Monday, January 9, 2012

St. Louis County Retesting Tornado Sirens This Week

Reporter

5:54 a.m. CST, January 9, 2012

ST. LOUIS COUNTY, MO (KTVI - FOX2now.com)?

A number of St. Louis County tornado sirens will be sounding Monday morning but there's no reason to take cover. However, there are concerns that 18 of the new sirens cannot be heard.? The County has been working on this new system for some time, but 18 of the brand new sirens haven't cut it.

It was an unwelcome result when the county tested its new 185 siren system last week. There were dead spots in the system, many of them near highway sound walls, where residents say they simply couldn't hear the alarm sounding. And these were folks that heard the sirens just fine back when the old system was in place.

Now, all this week, officials plan to test the problem sirens one at a time. And it's a relief to folks who suddenly don't feel so safe with the county's new early warning system.


Source: http://www.kplr11.com/news/ktvi-st-louis-county-retesting-tornado-sirens-this-week-20120109,0,282682.story?track=rss

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

ASUS promises Windows 8 on ARM tablet, 3G Transformer Prime, 7-inch Eee Memo Pad

ASUS
We're still days away from CES but the promises show no signs of slowing down. ASUS is the latest, hosting a Taipei event in which its representatives rattled off a long list of fabulous devices to whet your appetite. First up is a 3G version of the Transformer Prime, presumably boasting some more capable AGPS onboard. We're told the 7-inch Eee Memo Pad will be on display here at CES as well but, most interestingly, that a tablet running Windows 8 on ARM is coming a little further down the road. It's said to be at least similar in design to the Prime but an indicated release of late 2012 sadly leaves us wanting.

ASUS promises Windows 8 on ARM tablet, 3G Transformer Prime, 7-inch Eee Memo Pad originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 07 Jan 2012 11:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcenetbooknews.de (translated), netbooknews.com  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/07/asus-windows-8-tablet-promised/

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Saturday, January 7, 2012

Global Study Finds Drug Abuse Highest in Richer Nations (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Jan. 6 (HealthDay News) -- About 200 million people worldwide use illicit drugs each year, and use is highest in wealthier nations, a new study shows.

The researchers also found that the burden of health problems caused by illicit drug use in developed countries is similar to that caused by alcohol, but much less than that caused by tobacco.

Experts in the United States weren't surprised by the numbers, and said that more needs to be done to reduce Americans' dependence on illegal drugs.

The study "serves to confirm something addiction experts have known for some time -- that the extent of illicit drug use and abuse in developed countries like the United States has reached epidemic proportions," said Dr. Jeffrey T. Parsons, a professor in the department of psychology at Hunter College, in New York City.

The analysis of available data from a team of Australian researchers estimates that there are up to 203 million marijuana users, anywhere from 14 million to 56 million amphetamine users, 14 million to 21 million cocaine users, and 12 million to 21 million opioid users around the world.

The researchers also estimate that there are 15 million to 39 million "problematic users" of opioids (which include prescription painkillers such as Oxycontin or Vicodin), amphetamines or cocaine, and 11 million to 21 million people who inject drugs worldwide.

Marijuana use appears to be highest in Oceania (Australia/New Zealand), with up to 15 percent of those aged 15 to 64 using the drug, according to estimates made by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime. Amphetamine use was also highest in Oceania (2.8 percent of this age group), while use of heroin and other opioids was highest in the Near and Middle East (up to 1.4 percent). Cocaine use was highest in North America (1.9 percent).

There is no gold-standard method for estimating the true number of illicit drug users and no one method is ideal for all drugs or all countries, said Louisa Degenhardt, of the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre at University of New South Wales, Sydney, and the Burnet Institute in Melbourne, and colleague Wayne Hall of the University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research in Brisbane.

Lack of data also means there are no estimates of the extent of use, or the health effects, of Ecstasy; hallucinogenic drugs; inhalants; or non-medical use of benzodiazepines such as valium or anabolic steroids.

The study, published Jan. 6, is the first in an addiction series appearing in The Lancet.

The toll on human health from illicit drug use is enormous. According to the investigators, the most recent (2004) data from the World Health Organization suggest that illicit drugs caused 250,000 deaths that year, compared with 2.25 million deaths from alcohol and 5.1 million deaths due to tobacco.

Years of life lost because of illicit drug use were 2.1 million, compared with 1.5 million for alcohol. That's likely because drug deaths generally affect younger people while deaths from alcohol (and tobacco) tend to affect middle-aged and elderly people, the researchers said.

Illicit drug use also caused 13 million years lost to disability (disability-adjusted life years, or DALYs).

Wealthy nations, including the United States, are lagging in efforts to beat back the scourge of drug abuse, experts said.

"Unfortunately, the U.S. has made little progress in the prevention and treatment of drug abuse in the past decade," Parsons said. "More research is needed on effective educational and prevention programs designed to reach young people before they begin to use/abuse illicit drugs," he added.

And expert Dr. Marc Galanter said that "it is important that we call attention to very serious drug abuse problems that still exist in the United States. For example, we are seeing recent increases in abuse of painkillers in the United States, as well as the abuse of MDMA [Ecstasy] by adolescents and young adults. Abuse of these particular drugs is not prevalent in less industrialized countries."

Galanter is director of the division of alcoholism and substance abuse at NYU Langone Medical Center/Bellevue, and a professor of psychiatry at the NYU School of Medicine, in New York City. He said that while drug abuse remains at serious levels, "we have made great progress in treatment in many areas, particularly, in the early recognition of alcohol abuse and alcoholism by the general public. This has led to people seeking help before problems become much more serious."

Still, Galanter said, "much more, however, needs to be done."

The new study also "puts substance use in a societal context," noted Dr. Bruce Goldman, director of Substance Abuse Services at the Zucker Hillside Hospital of the North Shore-LIJ Health System, in Glen Oaks, N.Y. "Social norms have a very powerful impact on drug use patterns," he said, and "we need to create norms where substance use and availability, especially for young people is not acceptable."

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse has more about drug abuse and addiction.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20120107/hl_hsn/globalstudyfindsdrugabusehighestinrichernations

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Friday, January 6, 2012

New York archbishop named as cardinal

A "humbled" Archbishop Timothy Dolan said on Friday his elevation to cardinal by Pope Benedict is more of an honor for New York than for himself.

One of 22 newly named cardinals from around the world, Dolan was the only one representing an Archdiocese in the United States. One other American, the former archbishop of Baltimore, Edwin O'Brien, who heads the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, was also promoted.

Dolan's elevation means that New York will have a cardinal for the first time since 2009, when Edward Cardinal Egan stepped down. He would also be eligible to be one of the secretive conclave of cardinals that will elect a new pope when Benedict XVI dies.

?My major duty is still to be archbishop of New York, so that?s the biggie but there might be a few added responsibilities to the wider church,? a jubilant Dolan said Friday on NBC's TODAY Show, after being congratulated by Matt Lauer and Al Roker. ?I would probably be, for instance, appointed to a couple of what they call congregations which would be the Vatican?s version of cabinets.?

The election of a new pope is "the weightiest responsibility" for a cardinal, Dolan said.

?It?s the cardinals of the world under 80 who would enter conclave to elect him,? Dolan said. ?God willing I'm not going to have to do that for a while.?

'Humbled and grateful'
Eighteen of the new cardinals including Dolan, 61, are under 80, young enough to be eligible to enter the secret conclave.

"Yes, I'm honored, humbled and grateful. But let's be frank. This is not about Timothy Dolan. This is an honor from the Holy Father to the archdiocese of New York," Dolan told a news conference after morning Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral.

"It's almost as if Pope Benedict XVI is putting the red hat of the cardinal on the top of the Empire State Building or upon the Statue of Liberty or home plate at Yankee Stadium or on the spires of this great St. Patrick's Cathedral," Dolan said.

The Archdiocese of New York, with some 2.6 million members, has been at the center of heated policy battles within the U.S. Roman Catholic community, particularly in the 1980s and '90s over the church's position on homosexuality and AIDS education.

By being named cardinal, Dolan follows in the footsteps of his predecessors, including Edward Cardinal Egan, John Cardinal O'Connor, Terence Cardinal Cooke and Francis Cardinal Spellman.

Dolan was named archbishop of New York in 2009 after serving as the archbishop of Milwaukee.

'Great joy'
The pope announced the names "with great joy" following an Epiphany Mass that ended the Vatican's main Christmas celebrations. He said they will be formally elevated at a Feb. 18 ceremony in Rome.

The 18 new cardinals under 80 are:

  • Santos Abril y Castello, (Spanish), Archpriest of the Basilica of St. Mary Major
  • George Alencherry, (Indian), Major Archbishop of the Syro-Malabar Church in India
  • Giuseppe Bertello, (Italian), President of the Government of the Vatican City State
  • Giuseppe Bettori, (Italian), Archbishop of Florence
  • Jo?o Braz de Aviz, (Brazil), Prefect of the Congregation for Religious
  • Domenico Calcagno, (Italian), President of the Apostolic Patrimony of the Holy See
  • Francesco Coccopalmerio, (Italian), President of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts
  • Thomas Collins, (Canadian), Archbishop of Toronto
  • Timothy Dolan, (United States) Archbishop of New York
  • Dominik Duka, (Czech), Archbishop of Prague
  • Wim Eijk, (Dutch), Archbishop of Utrecht
  • Fernando Filoni, (Italian), Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples
  • Antonio Maria Veglio, (Italian), President of the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Refugees
  • Manuel Monteiro de Castro, (Portuguese), Major Penitentiary of the Apostolic Penitentiary
  • Edwin O'Brien, (United States), Grand Master of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre
  • John Tong Hon, (Chinese), Bishop of Hong Kong
  • Giuseppe Versaldi, (Italian), President of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See
  • Thomas Woelki, (German), Archbishop of Berlin

The four new cardinals over 80 are:

  • Karl Becker (German), a priest and professor
  • Prosper Grech, (Maltese), a priest and professor
  • Lucian Muresan (Romania), an archbishop
  • Julien Ries, (Belgian), a monsignor and professor

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45898681/ns/us_news/

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Fred Milano of Dion and the Belmonts dies at 72

(AP) ? Fred Milano, who made rock and roll history on doo-wop hits with Dion and the Belmonts in the 1950s and continued to perform while starting a late-in-life career with the New York City Department of Correction, has died. He was 72.

Milano died Sunday, three weeks after his lung cancer was diagnosed, said Warren Gradus, who joined the Belmonts in 1963. Milano lived in Massapequa, on Long Island, and died in a hospital, Gradus said.

Dion DiMucci, the lead singer who left the Belmonts in 1960, said on his Facebook page Tuesday, "May he rest in peace and rock on in heaven."

Milano and three friends from the Bronx formed the Belmonts in the mid-1950s, borrowing their name from the borough's Belmont Avenue. They became Dion and the Belmonts after DiMucci joined in 1958.

Milano sang tenor on hits like "A Teenager in Love" and "Where or When."

The Belmonts continued to perform and to record with different lineups after DiMucci left for a solo career. Gradus said Milano was performing with the Belmonts at casinos and other venues just weeks ago.

There was strife between DiMucci and Belmonts members, who were not pleased when DiMucci was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame without them in 1989.

In his Facebook posting, DiMucci said Milano "was very savvy with harmonies" and added, "We had our ups and downs through the years but that's how things go in families, even rock-and-roll families."

Milano went back school in middle age and joined the Department of Correction in 2003.

In his position as a legal coordinator at the Rikers Island jail complex, he helped inmates research their cases and taught a legal research class, said Karen Powell, director of law libraries for the department.

Powell said Milano had more energy than colleagues two decades younger and "was a person who really loved life."

"We'd know it was him coming through the door because we'd hear him singing and skipping up the stairs," Powell said.

Milano is survived by his wife, Lynn, two children and 10 grandchildren.

____

Online: http://www.thebelmonts.net

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-01-03-Obit-Milano/id-a302ab9f32a84a27a878f9b2265fea2e

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Kyobo eReader receives initial review, comes up short despite Mirasol display

If one of your e-reader's components is great but the rest of the device is lacking, where does that leave you? The first review of the Kyobo eReader has arrived and while its Qualcomm-provided Mirasol screen is lauded, that's about it for the good news. Despite the snazzy 5.7-inch touchscreen combined with 1Ghz SnapDragon CPU, WiFi and Android 2.3.5, the package falls apart due to its inability to load apps, subpar battery life and long load times. The reading app crashed frequently during testing, the device was unable to load DRM-protected ebooks even after authorizing with Adobe DE, the reader displays EPUB formats incorrectly, PDF view controls proved poor and YouTube video playback proved slow and stilted. Still, the page turn speed proved slightly faster than that of the Kindle Touch, so why harp on the negatives?

Kyobo eReader receives initial review, comes up short despite Mirasol display originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 04:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/03/kyobo-ereader-receives-initial-review-comes-up-short-despite-mi/

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Garden-based learning lessons put to work in Africa

Lindsay Myron cooks ugali (made from maize flower) at Magoma, Tanzania.

Lindsay Myron cooks ugali at Magoma, Tanzania.

Less than a year ago, Lindsay Myron ?11 (Plant Sciences, Natural Resources) got her first taste of garden-based learning along with other students in HORT/IARD 3200 (Experiential Garden-Based Learning in Belize). Today, she?s putting what she learned to work as a Project Coordinator for The Magoma Project in rural Tanzania.

The project is part of the nonprofit 2Seeds Network (www.2seeds.org), which focuses on meeting community goals and teaching African farmers best practices. 2Seeds? projects grow from the concept of a ?triple bottom line? that integrates economic viability, social equity and ecological sustainability.

In Magoma, Lindsay is helping to turn the primary school into a community center to nourish, teach, and empower both youth and adults. The primary school?s farm, which was started last year, is cultivated by the students and promotes food security through practice in critical thinking and agricultural education using existing lines of communication. Profits from the farm fund a school lunch program for the students.

Pilipili hoho (green peppers) in the school garden at Magoma.

Pilipili hoho (green peppers) in the school garden at Magoma.

?We now have about half an acre of pilipili hoho (green pepper) seedlings that are steadily growing,? writes Lindsay. ?The students did a great job finishing up the cultivation and bed preparation in the last week of school, and we?ve transplanted (and re-transplanted) about forty beds. We anticipate that within the next week or so, after the seedlings have grown a little more, we?ll be intercropping cowpeas between rows to help cover the soil and fix nitrogen for those growing peppers!?

Lindsay has also involved the students in the twice-daily irrigations necessary to keep the peppers thriving in this hot, dry season. The students struggled with large buckets, so Lindsay burned holes in the bottoms of old plastic water bottles to create make-shift watering cans. To increase participation, students receive a colored ribbon bracelet and an additional ribbon to tie onto the bracelet for each time they help.

Students display the bracelets they receive for helping with irrigation.

Students display the bracelets they receive for helping with irrigation.

?If they reach seven ribbons they receive a zawadi (gift) and move up to the next colored ribbon,? writes Lindsay. ?This week?s zawadi was a pencil and balloon, generous donations from a Brazilian couple who passed through Magoma awhile back. The students are loving the bracelets maybe even more than the zawadis and it has sparked some competition among them to see who can come the most often. The bracelets also serve as a visual reminder about the project to both the kids who wear them and their friends who admire them. It?s been working great. At least 15 to 20 kids show every time and we can finish irrigating in 20 to 30 minutes!?

Other projects include creating a colorful mural at the primary school and building a chicken coop at Kijango primary school located in a neighboring village that is also starting a school feeding program with 2Seeds Network support. ?I?ve been looking into integrated chicken farming methods, including a tilapia-azolla-poultry system. We?re looking for diversity on both economic and ecological levels.?

Because of differences in culture and the environment, Lindsay has had to adapt what she learned in Belize. For example, it hasn?t been feasible to incorporate the school farm into the students? curriculum because the Tanzanian education system is too rigid.

?However, I have taken the foundational understanding about garden-based learning and school garden programs that I learned in HORT/IARD 3200 and am using it to critically think about and develop the Magoma Project here,? writes Lindsay. ?Things like developing community buy-in, student interest, teacher involvement, and project sustainability. I cannot overstate how much the exposure and the experience I had in Belize has helped me constructively address the challenges we?re facing here.

?It?s so funny too, because I essentially stumbled into garden-based education in the last semester of my Cornell career when I, by chance, passed by the course announcement poster in the basement of Plant Science. Who knew a little piece of paper could shape so much!?

HORT/IARD 3200 is offered alternatives years, coming again spring semester 2013.

More information:

Source: http://blogs.cornell.edu/hort/2012/01/02/garden-based-learning-lessons-put-to-work-in-africa/

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Monday, January 2, 2012

Samsung Leads Smartphone Market in India

The Samsung Group has overtaken Finnish company Nokia to become India's leading smartphone seller. The Korean giants are also, reportedly, ready to become the world's leading smartphone seller, edging out Apple, Nokia and HTC.

According to figures revealed by market research firm Gfk, the company's domestic market share (by volume) stood at 38 percent, while that of share by value was 35.2 percent for November.

It was a little different a few months back. Nokia led by volume and Samsung had to be content to dominate sales in the value category, with 32.3 percent. Since then, Samsung has actually moved on to dominate market share on the global front as well, by edging out Apple in the third quarter ending September.

A far cry from last year's figure of 2.5 million units, the growth of the smartphone market in India was expected to touch 8.5 million by the end of 2011 and then double in 2012. The broad price range of the phones - Rs. 6,000 to Rs. 40,000, on average, is expected to meet the varying needs of a number of consumer categories.

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Samsung's greatest underlying strength is its affordability and flexibility across various operating platforms, including Windows, Android and the native Bada. If Samsung succeeds in its quest to become the world's leading smartphone seller, Apple and Nokia could well be fighting for survival.

However, Google might still be a force to reckon with, given the fact that handsets powered by its Android OS are selling extremely well across the world.

The final battle may well be between Samsung and Google.

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/274911/20111231/samsung-leads-smartphone-market-india.htm

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