Friday, December 30, 2011

Teamspeed: FS: CCW wheels for Ford GT: Forum: Automotive Parts & Accessories Posted By: titannero Post Time: 12-28-2011 at ... http://t.co/d2rsmJyy

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FS: CCW wheels for Ford GT: Forum: Automotive Parts & Accessories Posted By: titannero Post Time: 12-28-2011 at ... bit.ly/suYi3x Teamspeed

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Source: http://twitter.com/Teamspeed/statuses/152156859757899776

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

South Florida family finds Burmese Python in backyard pool

A South Florida family got a big surprise on Christmas Day, but it couldn?t exactly be called a present.

Miami-Dade Fire Rescue's Venom Unit was called in to capture a 13-foot Burmese Python that had made its way into a backyard pool at Southwest 97th Avenue and 183rd Street on Sunday., according to TV reports from WSVN and NBC Miami.

The incident occurred just as a proposal to ban the import and interstate sale of Burmese pythons and eight other large exotic snakes has stalled, swallowed up in White House bureaucracy for nearly a year, as reported by The Miami Herald this week.

Burmese pythons are a problem in South Florida.

In the Everglades, and its surrounding farm and wild lands, a population estimated in the thousands has eaten everything from alligators to endangered wood rats. Two months ago, in the latest gruesome find, South Florida Water Management District workers captured a 16-footer swollen with a 76-pound deer inside.

Florida wildlife managers have moved swiftly on the snake threat, last year effectively banning personal ownership of Burmese pythons and seven other constrictors as pets. Snakes whose owners had obtained $100 annual licenses and implanted them with microchips before July 2010 were grandfathered in. Reptile breeders, dealers, researchers and exhibitors also can continue operating under a separate permit program, as long as they agree to strict storage and transport rules.

But it?s proven far more difficult to secure sweeping nationwide curbs on the pet trade, which many scientists blame for first unleashing pythons into the Everglades.

Read the full Herald story on the stalled efforts to restrict the Burmese Pythons trade.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/26/2562058/palmetto-bay-family-finds-burmese.html

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Lies Entrepreneurs Tell

lying noseEntrepreneurs are always in ?sell mode?, but that doesn?t mean they need to be BS-artists.? Most entrepreneurs aren?t born liars, but we?re brought up in a system that rewards bad behavior and taking the easy way out by lying instead of being truthful, something that eventually catches up with you. If you?re an entrepreneur, here are 5 common lies you?ve probably told.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/pDn0dy_fwbg/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Turkey slams France over genocide bill (AP)

ANKARA, Turkey ? Turkey's prime minister on Saturday sharply criticized France for a bill that would make it a crime to deny the World War I-era mass killing of Armenians was genocide.

Saying France should investigate what he said was its own "dirty and bloody history" in Algeria and Rwanda, Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisted Turkey would respond "through all kinds of diplomatic means."

Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks as their Empire collapsed, an event many international experts regard as genocide and that France recognized as such in 2001. Turkish leaders reject the term, arguing that the toll is inflated, that there were deaths on both sides and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

On Dec. 22, the lower house of French Parliament will debate a proposal that would make denying that the massacre was genocide punishable by up to a year in prison and euro45,000 ($58,500) in fines, putting it on par with Holocaust denial, which was banned in the country in 1990.

Erdogan lashed out at France during a joint news conference with Mustafa Abdul-Jalil ? the chairman of Libya's National Transitional Council ? saying there were reports that France was responsible for the deaths of 45,000 people in Algeria in 1945 and for the massacre of up to 800,000 people in Rwanda in 1994.

"No historian, no politician can see genocide in our history," Erdogan said. "Those who do want to see genocide should turn around and look at their own dirty and bloody history."

"The French National Assembly should shed light on Algeria, it should shed light on Rwanda," he said, in his first news conference since recovering from surgery three weeks ago.

France had troops in Rwanda, and Rwandan President Paul Kagame has accused the country of doing little to stop the country's genocide.

There was no immediate reaction from France. Ties between the two countries are already strained by French President Nicolas Sarkozy's opposition to Turkey's bid to join the European Union.

Erdogan's criticism comes a day after an official said the Turkish leader had written to Sarkozy warning of grave consequences if the Armenian genocide bill is adopted. A Turkish diplomat said Turkey would withdraw its ambassador to France is the law is passed.

"I hope that the (French Parliament) steps back from the error of misrepresenting history and of punishing those who deny the historic lies," Erdogan said. "Turkey will stand against this intentional, malicious, unjust and illegal attempt through all kinds of diplomatic means."

Erdogan called the proposed bill a "populist" act, suggesting it was aimed at winning the votes of Armenian-French in elections in France next year.

A Turkish parliamentary delegation is scheduled to travel to France on Sunday to lobby French legislators against the bill.

Turkey has long argued that parliaments should not be left the task of deciding whether the killings constituted genocide, insisting on the creation of a joint independent committee of historians to look into the events that started in 1915.

Several countries have recognized the killings as genocide, including Uruguay, Chile, Argentina, Russia, Canada, Lebanon, Belgium, Greece, Italy, the Vatican, Switzerland, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Poland, Lithuania and Cyprus.

In 2007, a Swiss court convicted a Turkish politician under its anti-racism law and fined him for denying that the killings of Armenians was genocide. The case caused diplomatic tensions between Switzerland and Turkey.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111217/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_france_genocide

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Facebook app updated, timeline comes to mobile

Facebook for Android

We're really being spoiled of late with Facebook app updates, as today the second update in little over a week went live. The star attraction this time, the ability to access the timeline feature through the app if you already have a timeline. I don't, so hit us up in the comments with your impressions of it. 

It's not the only new feature to appear though. Notifications have been improved with faster push notifications, faster overall navigation throughout the app, and the ability to play your favourite games  and access your favourite apps.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/yRcVJRu7X6U/story01.htm

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10 police questioned in Mexican students' deaths (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? The governor of a Mexican state where two protesting college students died during a clash with police said Wednesday that 10 officers are being investigated in the case.

Guerrero state Gov. Angel Aguirre said five state police officers who helped clear the students from a highway they were blocking and five other officers who arrived at the scene with the state's deputy security secretary were under investigation.

Students from the Ayotzinapa teachers college were blocking a highway that leads to the Pacific coast resort of Acapulco when shots were fired Monday. They were demanding more funding for the school and assured jobs once they graduate.

Aguirre said investigators had not yet determined who shot the students.

A few hours after the governor's comments, federal prosecutors announced that they were taking charge of the investigation.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_violent_protest

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Where are Mr. and Mrs. Right? Matrimony suffers slump

A record-low 51 percent of adults aged 18 and older in the United States were married in 2010, compared with 72 percent in 1960, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of census data. NBC's Chris Jansing reports.

By Kari Huus, msnbc.com senior reporter

Is it a hiccup or a long-term bear market for marriage?

A new report shows that the share of American adults who are married dropped to a record low in 2009-2010 ? to just a smidgen over half of population 18 and older. And the age at which Americans first tie the knot has never been higher, according to analysis of U.S. Census data by Pew Research Center published Wednesday.


It?s no secret that the ?market share? of marriage has been in decline for decades ? from 72 percent in 1960 to 51 percent today, a trend that has been accompanied by a rising tolerance for single parents, cohabitation without marriage and other alternatives. At the current pace, the share of U.S. adults who are married will dip to less than half within a few years, the Pew study says.

?

"There?s been a retreat from marriage going on for awhile now," says Bradford Wilcox, director of the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia. "The economic fallout from the Great Recession has made the retreat from marriage accelerate. That?s just because even today, Americans see marriage at least in part as an economic undertaking. So particularly when partners, especially men, don?t have decent stable work they are more likely to postpone or forego marriage."

More dramatic news from the report was a 5 percent decrease in the number of new marriages between 2009 and 2010, an unusually sharp one-year drop that ?may or may not be related to the sour economy,? according to the Pew study.

Over the long haul, the marriage rate for the 18-29 age group has fallen from 59 percent in 1960 to 20 percent today. Divorce rates soared in the 1960s and '70s, becoming a major factor in the growing contingent of singles in the United States but then leveled off in the last two decades.

Wilcox says that divorce rates remain high, and declines in marriage are particularly concentrated in lower income brackets. He calls the trend the "de-institutionalization of the working class."

"Strong marriages and strong families flourish in a healthy economic and community context. Those contexts have weakened particularly in working class and poor communities in the last 30-40 years," Wilcox said. "People are less likely to be engaged in stable fulltime work, their church community, the Jaycees."

The age of first marriages has climbed to a record high of 26.5 for brides and 28.7 for grooms, Pew reports.

Isaac Brekken / Getty Images

Patrice Washington and Army Quartermaster Victor Mitchell after their wedding ceremony at Chapel of the Flowers in Las Vegas, Nevada on Nov. 11.

?It is not yet known whether today?s young adults are abandoning marriage or merely delaying it,? the study said.

"I think that unlike Europeans, Americans have for the last 40 years still held onto their belief in marriage, but their expectations of what marriage can deliver have increased," says Wilcox of the University of Virginia. "They are desperate to get married but picky about who they will marry and under what conditions, and more tolerant of (behaviors) outside the marriage norms. Mr. Right or Mrs. Right never comes along, so they're willing to have a baby even if Mr. Right isn?t there."

Expectations take a hit after divorce, apparently. The Pew study says that a majority of adults who have never been married hope to get married (61 percent), compared with just 26 percent of adults who have been married but were single again.

Do you think the popularity of marriage will continue to decline in the United States?

?

More from msnbc.com

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Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/13/9425241-matrimony-suffers-a-slump

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Square snags one million merchants, liberates the cashless

For those of us addicted to plastic, "I love you" hardly holds the same clout as those three magical words: "we accept credit." Taking the dream one step closer to plastic payment monogamy is the mobile checkout service, Square. According to founder Jack Dorsey, the company has hit a milestone today, signing up over one million small business owners ready to swipe. For merchants, all it takes is a Square reader and an iPhone, iPad or Android to start processing the plastic of the cash-o-phobic -- practically rendering those ATM pit stops pre-taco run or flea market excursion useless.

Square snags one million merchants, liberates the cashless originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Dec 2011 03:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/14/square-snags-one-million-merchants-liberates-the-cashless/

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

APNewsBreak: Clinton orders review of visa program (AP)

JACKSON, Miss. ? Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has ordered an "extensive and thorough review" of a foreign exchange program that has been used by U.S. businesses as a source of cheap labor and exploited by criminals to import women to work in the sex industry.

In the latest debacle for the J-1 Summer Work Travel visa, a federal indictment unsealed last week accuses the mafia of using the cultural exchange program to bring Eastern European women to work in New York strip clubs.

The U.S. House Judiciary Committee's immigration subcommittee also has been gathering information on the J-1 visa, which was created in 1963 to allow college students from other countries to spend their summer breaks living, working and traveling in the U.S.

As the program has grown to bring more than 100,000 young people here annually, it has become as much about money as cultural understanding.

The State Department has made several changes since an Associated Press investigation last year uncovered widespread abuses, including living and working conditions that some participants compared to indentured servitude. In one of the worst cases, a woman told the AP she was beaten, raped and forced to work as a stripper in Detroit after being promised a job as a waitress in Virginia.

More common than sex trade abuses is shabby housing, scarce work hours and paltry pay. In August, dozens of workers protested conditions at a candy factory that packs Hershey chocolates in Hershey, Pa., complaining of hard physical labor and pay deductions for rent that often left them with little money.

A State Department spokesman, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Clinton "has called for an extensive and thorough review of the program."

"We continue to be committed to working to strengthen the Summer Work Travel Program to safeguard the health and welfare of the participants," the official said in an email late Friday. "We have already instituted one set of reforms and are working toward additional ones that take additional measures to protect participants and prioritize the original cultural intent of the program."

The New York case was made public just days after the State Department opened a period of public comment on proposed changes that would require companies that sponsor the participants to gather more information about employment and living arrangements.

It's not clear if the proposed changes would have prevented the situation in New York, in which authorities say fraudulent offers for jobs as waitresses were used to help Eastern European women get visas to come to the U.S. Instead of working in restaurants, they allegedly danced in strip clubs. Authorities say members of the Gambino and Bonnano crime families were involved, along with the Russian mob.

The reforms being considered by the State Department would limit and refine the types of jobs students can have, expand the list of prohibited employment categories, and strengthen the "the cultural aspects of the program to ensure that the objective of the program ? positive exposure to the United States ? is accomplished."

The agency already prohibits participants from taking jobs "that might bring the Department of State into notoriety or disrepute" but the AP found that strip clubs and adult entertainment companies openly solicited J-1 workers.

Most of the abuses in the J-1 program over the years have been blamed on unregulated, third-party labor brokers who work with the students. Critics say the students have gotten little help from companies designated as sponsors by the State Department.

The State Department said in November that it has temporarily stopped accepting any new sponsors and will limit the number of future participants to this year's level, or about 103,000 students. The State Department also revised its rules to require more oversight by its 53 designated sponsors, which help students arrange for visas and find jobs and housing in return for a fee.

"Foreign exchange student abuse continues due to lack of oversight by State and the unadulterated greed of the exchange sponsors," according to Danielle Grijalva, director of the Committee for Safety of Foreign Exchange Students, an advocacy group. Grijalva called on the State Department to enact a strict moratorium and impose sanctions for sponsors who fail to maintain the integrity of the program.

Under the J-1 program, foreign students are granted visas for up to four months and often land jobs at hotels, resorts and restaurants. Participation has boomed from about 20,000 students in 1996 to a peak of more than 150,000 in 2008, and roughly 1 million foreign students have taken part in the past decade. The students come from around the world, with some of the top participating countries being Russia, Brazil, Ukraine, Thailand, Ireland, Bulgaria, Peru, Moldova and Poland.

The students sometimes work as maids or groundskeepers in high-priced resorts, but they can also be found flipping burgers on the Mississippi Gulf Coast or working at fish factories in Alaska. The State Department says most participants enjoy the program and some sign up to participate more than once.

The J-1 program generates millions for the participating employers and middleman companies. The students pay fees that reach several thousand dollars for help getting visas. Businesses that hire a foreign student over an American can save 8 percent because they don't have to pay Medicare, Social Security and unemployment taxes. Also, the foreigners must have their own health insurance.

In its own review, the AP found plentiful examples of students who made $1 an hour or less after deductions for housing, transportation and other expenses. Sometimes, labor recruiters charge students exorbitant rent for packing them into filthy, sparsely furnished apartments so crowded that some endure "hotbunking," where they sleep in shifts.

George Collins, an inspector with the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Department in the Florida Panhandle, has investigated abuses in the program for years, and said the State Department has done little to fix the problems, even when he has told them the names of corrupt labor brokers.

Collins said the middlemen between the sponsors and work sites should be cut out completely, the students should be better informed of their rights and sponsors who don't comply should be fined, suspended or banned.

There also needs to be a better system for verifying compliance and checking students' living and working conditions, perhaps through partnerships with state and local governments, he said.

"There's an old saying that `what the boss doesn't check doesn't get done,'" Collins said. "The boss needs to start checking."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111205/ap_on_re_us/us_student_visa_abuses

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

MF Global fallout delays U.S. farm seed, land deals (Reuters)

CHICAGO (Reuters) ? For the first time in 25 years, Minnesota farmer Dean Tofteland has missed his deadline to buy seed for next spring's corn and soybean crops.

With $200,000 of his money yet to be returned from the accounts of MF Global, his former broker, the 49-year-old farmer has missed a $5,000 discount for early buyers, and is watching friends and neighbors snap up the best varieties of seeds.

In the latest sign of how MF Global's failure is continuing to cascade across the commodity industry, Tofteland and other farmers who have yet to recover more than a third of their money from the bankrupt broker now find themselves in a cash crunch that risks rippling far beyond the futures market.

Some farmers have had to postpone purchases of land or equipment. Tofteland still expects to sow his 1,000 acres in the southwest corner of the state, but may have to borrow money to do so.

Still, the delay in returning billions of dollars in customer funds more than a month after MF Global filed for bankruptcy is starting to affect actual decisions on the farm. This threatens to cloud the outlook for U.S. crops, warn farmers who have been ratcheting up pressure on the bankruptcy trustee to move faster to disperse any cash he secures.

"That's pretty serious when you're raising food for the country and the world," Tofteland said.

For most farmers, the fact that their broker may have taken as much as $1.2 billion of customer money for its own use is bad enough. But the seasonal business of farming is now being disrupted since regulators still can't account for the missing funds, or even agree how big the hole is.

"The amount of money that we have tied up is significant," Tofteland said. "Because of this I've been delaying my seed purchase decisions."

Tofteland normally would have made his purchases at least two weeks ago to take advantage of discounts for farmers who buy early. He has avoided borrowing money in order to do so because he does not want to take on more debt but says he will consider a loan if the delay persists.

Tofteland worries his harvest next fall will suffer because the best-performing types of seeds will likely be sold out by the time he makes his purchases. He still plans to plant his crop in the spring.

DAWNING IMPACT

Farmers are among the thousands of former MF Global clients who are missing money from the brokerage. The firm run by former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine, an ex-CEO of Goldman Sachs, collapsed October 31 after making bad bets on European debt.

The bankruptcy had an immediate impact on farmers' abilities to hedge their crops at grain exchanges. Many had to liquidate positions or put up additional cash to meet margin calls after their accounts were transferred from MF Global to other brokerages.

Now, the collapse has begun to impact farm decisions that can directly affect output.

In Montana, Marty Klinker, who grows wheat and barley, is missing about $275,000 from his accounts at MF Global. He said the shortfall caused him to delay buying more than $500,000 worth of farm equipment, including a tractor and combine, from manufacturer Case IH.

Klinker didn't know whether he would eventually buy the equipment, which would replace older models on his farm. He said he has to make a decision by the end of the year to take advantage of prices he previously negotiated with the company.

Case is a brand of CNH, a majority-owned subsidiary of Fiat SpA. A Case spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

"We're right in the middle of year-end equipment decisions," Klinker said.

FARMERS CAUGHT OFF GUARD

MF Global's collapse has not completely halted farm purchases.

Stine Seed, which calls itself the largest independent U.S. seed company, has not seen a slowdown in sales, said Myron Stine, vice president of sales and marketing.

Yet, other agribusiness professionals confirm shockwaves from the bankruptcy have disrupted plans affecting crop production.

Diana Klemme, a broker for Midwest grain elevators and vice president of Grain Service Corp in Atlanta, said one of her clients was holding about $400,000 cash in a MF Global account at the time of its collapse. The client had to delay purchasing some land because the money had been frozen, she said.

Farmers were caught off guard by the disappearance of their money because it was held in segregated accounts considered to be immune from troubles at brokerages. Several farmers said they had felt it was safer to keep cash in the accounts than at local banks.

Farmers worry the cost of doing business could go up permanently due to the increased risk of keeping money in segregated accounts, making it more expensive to produce crops. For Klinker, whose oldest son is entering the family business, that could mean upgrading equipment less frequently than he has in the past.

"It impacts everything," he said.

(Reporting by Tom Polansek)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111206/us_nm/us_mfglobal_agriculture

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Pivotal week for Europe's leaders and fate of euro (AP)

BRUSSELS ? Europe's government-debt crisis, which has dragged on for more than two years, is entering a pivotal week, as leaders across the continent converge to prevent a collapse of the euro and a global financial panic that could result.

Expectations are rising that Friday's summit of leaders of the 27 countries in the European Union will yield a breakthrough. An agreement on tighter integration of the 17 EU countries that use the euro ? especially on budget matters ? would be seen as a crucial first step. That could trigger further emergency aid from the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund or some combination, analysts say.

The coming days "will decide if the euro will survive or not," Emma Marcegaglia, the head of Italy's industrial lobby, Confindustria, said Sunday.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, European Central Bank Chief Mario Draghi and even U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner will star in a 5-day financial drama leading up to the summit.

If the summit is a failure, Sarkozy warned last week, "the world will not wait for Europe."

Sarkozy and Merkel meet in Paris on Monday to unveil a proposal for closer political and economic ties between the 17 euro countries. While the leaders differ on some of the details, their cooperation has been so tight they have come to be known by a single name ? "Merkozy."

The two agree overall on the need for tougher, enforceable rules that would prevent governments from spending or borrowing too much ? and on certain penalties for persistent violators.

"Where we today have agreements, we need in the future to have legally binding regulations," Merkel said Friday.

Merkel wants to change the basic EU treaty to reflect the tougher rules on euro countries and make them enforceable. Even if there is general agreement on Friday, actually putting new rules in place through treaty changes could take more than a year. And many economists fear the new rules alone would not be enough to halt the rise in Europe's borrowing costs.

The hope is that a firm expression of intent, however, would reassure the ECB, so that it can make stronger efforts in the short term. That would give governments time to get their finances under better control and make economic reforms that would improve growth.

The urgency has been heightened in recent weeks as Italy and Spain, the continent's third- and fourth-largest economies, face unsustainable high costs to finance their debts. The yield on 10-year Italian bonds is around 7 percent. Yields above that level forced Ireland, Portugal and Greece to seek bailouts. By comparison, bond yields in Germany, Europe's largest and most stable economy, are roughly 2 percent.

"The eurozone is threatened to face an existential situation if it becomes clear over the next few weeks that several member states cannot cover their refinancing needs, or can only do so at suicidal conditions," former German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck told the Sunday edition of German tabloid Bild.

"Everything must be done to hinder the eurozone from breaking up," he said.

Italy, whose government debt is equivalent to 120 percent of the country's annual economic output, needs to refinance euro200 billion ($270 billion) of its euro1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) of outstanding debt by the end of April.

The size of the problems facing Italy and Spain are considered too large for the existing funds available to the European Financial Stability Facility ($590 billion) and the IMF ($389 billion.) To boost the firepower of the IMF, several economists have proposed that the ECB lend to it.

"We are now entering the critical period," the EU's financial chief, Olli Rehn, said last Wednesday.

That same day, the U.S. Federal Reserve, in coordination with the ECB and four other central banks, sought to give stressed-out European banks some relief. The Fed announced a plan to make it cheaper for banks to borrow American dollars, which is the dominant currency of trade. It was the most extraordinary coordinated effort since October 2008, and it prompted a nearly 500-point rally in the Dow Jones industrial average.

Still, that help did not address the fundamental problem in Europe: unsustainable levels of government debt.

In Italy, Premier Mario Monti had that on his mind as he unveiled his new austerity and gowth measures he said his government of technocrats approved Sunday. They include what he called immediate cuts to the costs of maintaining Italy's bulky political class as well as significant measures to fight tax evasion. As part of the political cost cuts, Monti said he would forego his salary as premiere.

The package also includes measures to spur growth and competition, while aiming to stamp out rampant nepotism. Monti will outline the measures on Monday to Parliament, which must approve them.

In a sign of how all 17 eurozone nations see their fates as intricately linked, Dutch Premier Mark Rutte on Monday will be visiting Monti in Rome.

"It is really important that the markets see that Europe is prepared to help the countries in trouble, so long as those countries commit to very tough reforms and austerity programs," Rutte said.

Indeed, the debt loads of countries like Italy and Greece are everyone else's problem.

Germany's economy depends heavily on exports. If economic output in the rest of Europe collapsed, demand for German goods would fall sharply. Across the Atlantic Ocean, the United States depends on Europe for 20 percent of its own exports. And investors in American banks have worried about their holdings of European debt.

The bigger threat to the U.S. and the global financial system is that Europe's debt crisis could spiral out of control.

If governments default on their bonds, banks that own them could take a significant hit. It could become very difficult for these banks to borrow and nervous depositors could flee with their cash. In the worst case, a global financial panic could be triggered, in which banks all over are too skittish to lend to each other. That would cause a credit crunch that deprives businesses of the short-term financing they depend on for day-to-day operations.

With such fears in the air, the United States is ratcheting up its involvement.

Geithner will meet Tuesday in Germany with Draghi and German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble. On Wednesday, he travels to France for talks with Sarkozy and the prime minister-elect of Spain, Mariano Rajoy Brey. And Geithner will meet Monti in Milan just before the new Italian leader heads for the EU summit in Brussels.

On Wednesday, many of Europe's most important leaders will be in Marseille, France, for a meeting of the conservative-leaning European People's Party. Merkel, Sarkozy and Spain's new conservative prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, will all be there.

On Thursday, the ECB holds its monthly policy meeting. Many analysts expect one or more actions by the bank aimed at boosting growth and steadying the financial system.

One step would be to cut its key short-term interest rate from the current 1.25 percent. It made a surprise quarter-point cut at November's meeting. Another would be to extend loans to banks for up to two or three years, instead of the current limit of 13 months.

Even more significantly, Draghi hinted last week that the bank could be willing to take a more direct and aggressive role in solving Europe's government-debt crisis, if EU leaders agree to the coordinated belt-tightening being pushed by Merkel, Sarkozy and others.

"Other elements might follow, but the sequencing matters," he said in a speech Thursday.

The ECB extends unlimited short-term loans to banks. It cannot lend directly to governments, including buying their national bonds. It can, however, buy national bonds on the secondary market and has been doing that each week in modest amounts.

Many economists have urged the bank to sharply increase these purchases because that would stabilize or lower the yields on them. That would reduce borrowing costs of the heavily indebted countries that issue them and keep the countries from defaulting.

The ECB has so far resisted expanding its support because it believes that would take the pressure off politicians to cut spending and reform government finances, a concern known as moral hazard. The ECB has also worried that injecting too much money into the European economy could trigger inflation.

EU leaders gather in Brussels for Friday's summit the night before. Sarkozy and others say the stakes couldn't be higher.

"What will remain of Europe if the euro disappears?" Sarkozy asked. He then provided an answer: "Nothing."

___

Don Melvin from Brussels, Dave McHugh from Frankfurt, Sara DiLorenzo from Paris, Frances D'Emilio from Rome and Mike Corder from Amsterdam contributed

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111204/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_europe_financial_crisis

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Keep Acidulated Water on Hand for Sliced Fruit [Kitchen Hacks]

Keep Acidulated Water on Hand for Sliced FruitEveryone knows that adding lemon juice to sliced fruit will keep it from browning, but it can also impart a bitter flavor to the fruit unless you balance it with a little sugar or other sweetener. Bento weblog Lunch in a Box recommends having a small container of water with lemon juice and sweetener ready to go in your fridge so you can quickly assemble lunches and snacks on the fly.

Lunch in a Box also notes that

any form of ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) will work including lime juice, orange juice, cream of tartar, a crushed vitamin C tablet dissolved in water, or even ground chili pepper. I like the flavor that orange juice adds to fruit, but often use bottled lemon juice with a little Splenda or sugar for the same effect without the pucker. Salt water also slows browning and adds an interesting savory bite to fruit.

Adding the acidulated water to a spray bottle would also work well.

Speed Tip: Keep acidulated water for slicing fruit | via

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/jpjoLRxz3HA/keep-acidulated-water-on-hand-for-sliced-fruit

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

DNA helps ID victim of Houston serial killer (AP)

HOUSTON ? A Houston teenager who went missing four decades ago has been identified as one of at least 28 young men and boys who were kidnapped, tortured and killed by a serial killer.

A Harris County forensic anthropologist says DNA and circumstantial evidence helped identify Roy Eugene Bunton as one of Dean Corll's victims.

The Houston Chronicle reports ( http://bit.ly/tjRwvV) that Bunton was 17 or 18 when he was last seen leaving for work in the early 1970s.

Corll's known victims were found in mass graves. Bunton's body was among two bodies still unidentified.

Like many of Corll's victims, investigators believe Bunton may have accepted a ride from Corll or one of his two teenage accomplices.

Corll's killing spree ended when he was slain in 1973 by one of his accomplices.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111202/ap_on_re_us/us_houston_serial_killings

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Doug White: Making Long-Distance Marriages Work

During much of our dating and the first eight years of our marriage, we had a long-distance relationship. That is, Doug's work required that he be away from home several nights each week, while Polly's work kept her mostly in Richmond. While the old adage states that, "absence makes the heart grow fonder," distance can actually put a lot of strain on a relationship. We came out of our "traveling phase" with a strong, loving relationship. Here are a few tips that helped us keep the fires burning across the miles.

1. Remember, business travel is not a vacation. It is easy for the one left at home to believe that living in a hotel, eating out and having maid service equals a grand vacation. This can be especially true on laundry day. However, anyone who has spent significant time traveling on company business would beg to differ. They would tell you that eating by yourself in restaurants or entertaining business clients or associates is not as enjoyable as spending time around the family table. They would explain that having the whole bed to themselves is actually lonely. Maid service is nice, but most travelers would gladly put up with a ring in the tub and toothpaste on the sink if it meant they could kiss their spouse and kids goodnight. If you are the one at home, know that your traveling spouse would rather be with you than on the road. As much as advertisements try to make it glamorous, staying at a Holiday Inn Express will not make you feel like a star.

2. Find ways to do simple, everyday things together. When Doug was traveling, we used to make time to watch TV together. Thank goodness for cell phone plans that allow unlimited minutes to specific numbers. Before and during the show, we would talk to each other, make comments about the show, or simply sit quietly and watch until a commercial break. Being linked by phone while doing the same activity made it seem like we were sitting together on the couch rather than hundreds of miles from each other. We found other ways to spend time together. Doug would call the home number each morning to wake Polly. "She called him, her personal alarm clock." We always talked the first thing in the morning and the last thing at night regardless of how busy our schedules.

3. Find ways to share special occasions. We remember one Halloween when Polly had to be out of town and Doug was home. This was a rare occasion. She always looked forward to the kids arriving in costume and demanding candy with a loud, "Trick or treat." Polly was actually a bit upset to be stuck in a hotel room, missing out on the fun. Doug had a solution. He slipped his cell phone into his pocket each time the doorbell rang. He would greet the the children by saying things like, "What a pretty princess you are with your pink dress and sparkly crown," or "how scary you look in that ghost mask." He kept a running commentary going, chatting with each goblin and witch, allowing Polly to feel a part of the action. With the advent of Skype and other technology, travelers should never have to miss singing happy birthday, hunting for Easter eggs, or sharing in family celebrations.

4. Actively work on your relationship. As much as you like to be together, you can get used to living apart. To keep the spark alive, you need to make your relationship a priority. You should talk to each other. Discuss your goals, dreams, needs and wants. Reminisce about happy times. Tell each other about important and unimportant matters. We used to "do calendars" each week. This simply meant reviewing our schedules with each other. We would talk about what we were doing at work and in the evenings, what we had planned and what we wanted to do when we saw each other again. The point is to share more, not less. Make the other person fully involved in your life so that it will be as if they never left, when they return.

5. Make your reunion a joy. It's easy for the spouse at home to save up chores, problems and frustrations for his or her returning spouse. Our advice: don't do it! Your time physically together each week is precious. Yes, there are always chores to do and problems to solve, but make sure they don't suck up all of your face time. Likewise, if you have been away all week, don't spend your few hours at home playing golf with your buddies or with other activities that take you away from your spouse and/or kids. Work hard to find a balance between must-do activities and time together. We had a special date night each weekend. We had as much fun discussing and planning these events as going on the date. Whatever works for you, make your time together so special that you can't wait to see each other again.

Managing a long-distance relationship can put extra strain on both the traveler and the one at home. It is easy to let relationships fade when two people are living in different cities. Developing techniques to bring you closer together while being physically apart can help you enjoy your time away as well as your time together.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/doug-white/making-longdistance-marri_b_1108757.html

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Zynga Sets Price Range For IPO At $8.50 To $10 Per Share, Will Raise $1B

zyngaSocial gaming giant Zynga has just filed its updated S-1 with pricing information ahead of its roadshow. The price range, according to the filing, will be between $8.50 and $10 per share. Offering 100 million shares, the company plans to raise as much as $1 billion. As reported previously, this price range gives Zynga a $10 billion valuation. Zynga plans to list on the Nasdaq under the symbol 'ZNGA.'

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/kuCaU68hEAk/

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Police Urge Occupy LA to Leave Los Angeles City Hall (Time.com)

This morning, time ran out for the U.S.'s largest surviving Occupy encampment. After allowing a tent city to inhabit the lawn outside city hall for nearly two months, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa ordered protesters to vacate the premises at one minute after midnight on Nov. 28. While some campers fled, many defied the deadline and risked possible arrest. After midnight, police blocked demonstrators who flocked to the streets, and Occupiers chanted, "Back to the park!" But there was no immediate confrontation, as the officers appeared to respect the mayor's promise that protesters would have "ample time" to remove their belongings.

The lack of a midnight raid was consistent with the city's notoriously friendly attitude toward the protesters. (The Occupy camp in Philadelphia, facing a similar deadline, was reportedly equally calm into daylight Monday.) While other cities have witnessed violent clashes between police and Occupiers, Los Angeles has prided itself on cooperation; its city council has even voiced support for the movement. The mayor's advance notice of the planned eviction was an almost civil gesture, especially when compared with New York City's unannounced raid on Zuccotti Park. And the mayor has kept up a pleasant tone, saying he sought a "peaceful and orderly departure from the park." (See photos of the Occupy Wall Street protests.)

Still, eviction is eviction, and the mayor made it clear that the encampment was "simply not sustainable indefinitely." In other words, it seems a matter of when, not if, police will force out the remaining Occupiers, and it remains in question whether there will be unnecessary force.

So why did the mayor turn? Was he fed up with the damage done to the park lawn? Was it the vague safety and health concerns he cited in a statement? Or did it perhaps not look good to the rest of the nation for L.A. to continue being nice to its Occupiers? Some protesters thought the city might have grown frustrated with negotiating with a leaderless movement that often struggles to reach consensus. Indeed, the city backed away from a deal it had proposed that would have given the movement indoor office space and land to garden in exchange for vacating the park. Other demonstrators, however, suggested more sinister motives. Jim Lafferty, director of the National Lawyers Guild, which gives legal advice to the movement, accused Villaraigosa of acting in favor of corporate interests to ensure getting future campaign contributions in case he decides to run for higher office. "The banks have been pressuring him to do something about this encampment because it allows people to go out and protest at the banks," Lafferty said. A city spokesman declined to elaborate on the mayor's motives.

Whatever the reasoning, and despite the looming deadline, the mood was festive in the park Sunday, Nov. 27. Occupiers organized a "block party" on the central part of the encampment, where droves of people ? many of whom weren't dedicated campers ? snapped photos and nodded their heads to house music spun by a DJ. Towering over the square was a large mural depicting the Federal Reserve as a giant, snarling octopus about to devour the earth. Off to the side, a yoga-and-meditation class proceeded as usual. (See sights and hear sounds from Occupy Wall Street's Day of Action.)

As night fell, the area swelled with even more supporters, and it became clear that many weren't going to budge. Those who took the microphone at the jam-packed general assembly spoke about the next evening's meeting, not considering the possibility that there might not be one. "This is Day 58," one Occupier announced to hundreds of cheering supporters. "Don't forget, we'll see you all here tomorrow night for Day 59." Many people outspokenly declared they were ready to get arrested, prompting the moderator at the assembly to give out the National Lawyers Guild's phone number in case people found themselves in jail and needing help. Standing near his tent, protester Larry Hageman scoffed at the notion that he might give in. "They'll be breaking the law if they try to move us," he said. "We will ask them to take an oath to the constitution, and if they don't answer us, we will charge them with treason."

Still, underneath the party atmosphere lurked a melancholy that even tended toward cynicism at times. Some people had decided to pack up their tents, as evidenced by bare patches of dirt in the park. "I'm not ready to be incarcerated," said Wade Gardner, 58, who was putting away his tent. The media area, once five tents long, with throngs of equipment, was reduced to one small tent with a couple of laptops. Clark Davis, a 43-year-old carpenter who has become a spokesman for the movement, said he was disappointed that people were leaving and said infighting and an inability to reach consensus kept protesters from accomplishing more. "I'm absolutely disillusioned that people are fleeing, that in the last 58 days we couldn't truly get organized," said Davis, who was the first person to bring a generator to the camp. "We could've put a lot more pressure on the system, on public officials, on getting at the core issues dragging the nation down."

The eviction brings to the forefront the question of whether the movement has achieved its goals or not. If it hasn't, does Occupy have what it takes to keep moving forward even without its original encampments? Posed this question, many protesters said they had no doubt they would keep building on their successes. "We're just going to re-occupy somewhere else, because this is a revolution," said Regina Quetzal Qui?ones, a 42-year-old camper.

See TIME's Pictures of the Week.

See the Cartoons of the Week.

Who should be TIME's Person of the Year 2011? Vote for your choice here.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/time_rss/rss_time_us/httpwwwtimecomtimenationarticle08599210038300htmlxidrssnationyahoo/43745036/SIG=12ltc3du7/*http%3A//www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2100383,00.html?xid=rss-nation-yahoo

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