Thursday, December 29, 2011

Legal and Symbolic Relationships | Weddingbee

Both of my parents liked Mr. Mole from the very beginning. They liked him for the same reasons that I did: he is incredibly caring, considerate, and supportive (plus a whole long list of other admirable qualities). Of course, they also liked him because he made me happy. Yet during the holidays, I was able to see how much they love him ? and not just as my future husband but as their own son.

Seeing this subtle shift in the relationships between Mr. Mole and my parents made me think about the way that the relationship between Mr. Mole and me is about to change. Now, I know that to some extent that a legal marriage is no more than paperwork. I can?t imagine that I will love Mr. Mole any more just because I signed my name to the marriage license. I can?t imagine that either of us will change in the way we act, talk, sleep, eat, do the dishes, etc., now that we are called husband or wife. Nothing fundamental will change. But I also have to acknowledge that there is a great deal of symbolic value tied up in these legal categories (something that just makes the bans of gay marriage in many states and countries even more problematic and unfair). This symbolism may very well affect the way that we feel or think about ourselves as a couple.

I started thinking specifically about how getting married is going to turn us ? legally, symbolically, magically ? into one household. We become a unified front, both socially and financially. We?ve ignored Judge Judy?s sage advice not to open a joint checking account before the wedding, but we are soon going to be combining all of our assets together. His salary will be mine; my salary will be his. (Same thing with our cars, but the sudden shared ownership of a 1996 Camry or a 1998 GTI is somewhat less of a big deal.) We have no individual debts coming into the marriage, but we will share any that we now undertake together.

I struggle with my feelings about some of these financial implications sometimes. I still feel somewhat uncomfortable with the fact that I bring considerably less money to our household than Mr. Mole does. I know that I support him in a variety of other ways, but they are less quantifiable. I guess I need to stop thinking that ?he? will take care of ?me? and ?my? expenses with ?his? money. Instead, the legal and symbolic meanings of marriage means that ?we? will take care of ?us.?

Legal and Symbolic Relationships :  wedding las vegas relationships Img 1824 img_1824

We?re in this together. In very similar outfits.

How do you think marriage will change your relationship, if at all? What kind of symbolic value does marriage have for you?

Source: http://www.weddingbee.com/2011/12/28/legal-and-symbolic-relationships/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Let It Snow: The Science of Snowflakes

There?s a scene in Harper Lee?s To Kill a Mockingbird ? one of my all-time favorite novels ? where? the little girl-narrator, Scout, sees pretty white snow flakes falling and assumes the world is ending. She?s never seen snow before, since it?s a very rare occurrence in rural Alabama. The world didn?t end then, and it?s not ending now, but it?s just one more bit of evidence that weather is a very wacky thing.

Unless, like Scout, we?ve never experienced a genuine snowfall, we probably take snow a bit for granted. It?s just another form of precipitation, after all, and we have a pretty solid grasp of that particular cycle. Just for the record, snow is not frozen raindrops; that would be sleet. Under certain conditions, water vapor can condense directly into tiny ice crystals, skipping the raindrop phase altogether, and usually forming the shape of a hexagonal prism (two hexagonal ?basal? faces and six rectangular ?prism? faces).

But that crystal also attracts more cooled water drops in the air. Branchings sprout out from the single crystals? corners to form snowflakes of increasingly complex shapes. And yes, for all intents and purposes, no two snowflakes are shaped exactly alike, at least according to Caltech physicist Kenneth Libbrecht, who runs this Website devoted entirely to snow crystals. But there are 35 different types of snow crystals, all of which he has carefully documented.

Libbrecht usually has to create his own ice crystals in the lab, or go to more frigid climes, like Michigan or Alaska or Ontario, to make his high-resolution microscope images of snowflakes. (You can see movies of lab-based snow crystals forming here.)

Even then it?s a tricky business. He has to use a small paintbrush to transfer the delicate structures to a glass slide, taking the picture with a digital camera mounted on a high-resolution microscope. All of this is done outside to keep the crystals from melting too quickly. The final images are quite striking ? so much so that in 2007, they were featured on a new 39-cent commemorative postage stamp, courtesy of the US Postal Service.

Not surprisingly, the shapes of snowflakes and snow crystals have long fascinated scientists, like Johannes Kepler, who took some time away from his star-gazing in 1611 to publish a short paper entitled ?On the Six-Cornered Snowflake.? He was intrigued by the fact that snow crystals always seem to exhibit a six-fold symmetry.

Some 20 years later, Rene Descartes waxed poetical after observing much rarer 12-sided snowflakes, ?so perfectly formed in hexagons and of which the six sides were so straight, and the six angles so equal, that it is impossible for men to make anything so exact.? He pondered how such a perfectly symmetrical shape might have been created, and eventually arrived at a reasonably accurate description of the water cycle, adding that ?they were obliged to arrange themselves in such a way that each was surrounded by six others in the same plane, following the ordinary order of nature.?

(The lack of a detailed explanation can be excused: it took the development of x-ray crystallography for scientists to really be able to study the shape and structure of snow crystals/flakes in any great detail.)

Libbrecht has an historical predecessor in Robert Hooke. Hooke?s Micrographia, published in 1665, contained a few sketches of snowflakes he observed under his microscope ? sketched rapidly, one assumes, since the flakes no doubt melted soon after being placed under the lens, even working outdoors. If only he?d had access to Libbrecht?s equipment, he wouldn?t have had to do everything by hand ? and he would have appreciated the far more intricate details observable under orders-of-magnitude increases in resolution.

But nobody performed a truly systematic study of snow crystals until the 1950s, when a Japanese nuclear physicist named Ukichiro Nakaya identified and cataloged all the major types of snow crystals. (Nakaya had the bad luck to be appointed to a professorship in Hokkaido, with no available facilities for his nuclear research, so he applied his considerable skills to what was readily available: snow crystals. Now that?s taking lemons and making lemonade.)

Nakaya also proved Descartes wrong in the Frenchman?s assertion that no man could make anything so perfect. Nakaya was the first person to grow artificial snow crystals in the laboratory. In 1954 he published a book on his findings: Snow Crystals: Natural and Artificial. Here?s what Libbrecht?s Website has to say about it: ?Nakaya?s book offers a superb look at a scientific investigation which begins with almost nothing, and proceeds through systematic observation toward an accurate description of a fascinating natural phenomenon.?

Thanks to Nakaya?s pioneering work, we now know that certain atmospheric conditions, like temperature and humidity, can influence a snowflake?s shape. For instance, those shapes tend to be simpler in low humidity. The higher the humidity, the more complex the shape, and if the humidity is especially high, they can even form into long needles or large thin plates.

Scientists aren?t entirely sure why, but they suspect it has to do with the complex underlying physics of how water vapor molecules are slowly incorporated into the growing ice crystal ? what Descartes termed the ?ordinary order of Nature.? There?s still a lot of mystery in that ordinariness.

That?s why NASA launched the Global Snowflake Network a few years ago, a massive project that aims to involve the general public to? ?collect and classify? falling snowflakes. The data is being compiled into a massive database, along with satellite images, that will help climatologists and others who study climate-related phenomena gain a better understanding of wintry meteorology as they track various snowstorms around the globe. Participating students, teachers, and other interested parties now have the chance to take part in real science, and learn more about how climate, temperature and other atmospheric features combine to produce weather phenomena.

So next time snow falls in your area this winter, take a few moments from building snowmen and lobbing snowy missiles at the annoying kid down the street, and look more closely at each individual flake. You might even consider signing up with the GSN, thereby recording your observations for scientific posterity.

NOTE: This post adapted from an older post in the archives.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=62354d4837ef8d3787b2c5ff9a19ef4e

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Larry R. Lathrop, Albuquerque, New Mexico

Larry R. Lathrop, age 68, was a resident of Albuquerque, NM since July 2010. He previously resided in Chicago, IL for 34 years. He died on December 22, 2011 at 3:40 am at home. Larry was the son of Fred and I. Rose Lathrop. He is survived by his lifelong partner Tommy Wiley; sisters Peggy Figle and Sharon Lathrop of Monmouth, IL, Judy Crinklaw of Omaha, NE, and Cheryl Lathrop of Council Bluffs, IA; brothers Dan Lathrop (Kay) and Leroy Lathrop of Monmouth, IL, Darrell (Barb) Lathrop of Oquawka, IL, Joe (Lois) Lathrop of Dekalb, IL, Mike (Linda) Lathrop of Beardstown, IL; and numerous nieces, nephews and friends. He was preceded in death by both parents, his sister Rozella Liggett, and nephews Bryan Figle and Dustin Liggett. He was of Presbyterian faith. He was an avid St. Louis Cardinals fan and was joyous to see them win the World Series again! He loved flowers, gardening, traveling and music. Services will be held on December 27, 2011 at French funeral home at 10500 Lomas Blvd. NE at 2:30 pm. Cremation will follow. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society.

Source: http://krqe.tributes.com/show/Larry-R.-Lathrop-92979579

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

XBMC 11.0.beta1 - Powerful media center tool for Mac or Apple TV.. (Free)

Version 11.0.beta1:

It took a bit longer than expected due to a few bumps in the road, but we are excited to present the first preview release of (what we consider to be) the best version of the best home theater software out there.

Ladies and Gentlemen, XBMC 11.0 Eden: Beta 1 is available to download.

The sheer number of new features, platforms, and improvements to nearly every facet of the XBMC experience found within Eden are nearly too numerous to count.

Milestones include Addon Rollbacks, vast improvements in Confluence (the default skin), massive speed increases via features like Dirty-region rendering and the new JPEG decoder, a simpler, better library, additional protocol handling, better networking support, better handling of unencrypted BluRay content and structures, adjustable display refresh rate in OSX (to match the already available feature in Windows and Linux), AirPlay support, an upgraded weather service, and much more. Check out the highlights in the summarized changelog.

In addition to our many software improvements, we?ve increased our reach in the realm of hardware support since Dharma was released. Eden marks the first in-sync stable release for the Apple TV2, iPad, and other iOS devices. We?ve vastly improved the method by which we handle input, including heavily upgrading JSON-RPC support, making remote control support much, MUCH simpler in Windows, and enabling unique methods of device communication with hardware like the HDMI-CEC Adapter. And now even AMD devices are supported for GPU video decoding in Linux to some extent, thanks to the inclusion of VAAPI.

We are also in the process of drastically altering XBMC Live to make it more like a full ?*Buntu? version of XBMC with massive changes to the boot and install process. That alteration is not quite ready for prime time (and, thus, is not available at this time), but our devs are working on it round the clock. Keep an eye out for a more in-depth article on this in the next week or so. The XBMC Linux PPA is also not immediately available, but check back a few days after Christmas. It should be online at that time.

Because this is Beta software, you can likely expect minor issues over the course of the next few weeks. For example, you may discover issues with playing movie trailers that may require a manual install of the Youtube addon. If, after asking in the forum and updating to the most recently available Beta, your issue is not solved, feel free to follow the above link to the Trac service and create a ticket with the issue. As always, when troubleshooting, providing a debug log will be essential to resolving issues.

Version 11.0.beta1:

It took a bit longer than expected due to a few bumps in the road, but we are excited to present the first preview release of (what we consider to be) the best version of the best home theater software out there.

Ladies and Gentlemen, XBMC 11.0 Eden: Beta 1 is available to download.

The sheer number of new features, platforms, and improvements to nearly every facet more...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/macupdate/~3/TbNNoQSMDT0/xbmc

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At least 61 dead in northeast Nigeria violence (AP)

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria ? At least 61 people have been killed during several days of fighting in northeast Nigeria between security forces and a radical Muslim sect responsible for a series of increasingly bloody attacks in Africa's most populous nation, authorities said Saturday.

The fighting between suspected members of the sect known as Boko Haram and a joint task force of police and military began Thursday in Borno and Yobe states in Nigeria's arid northeast corner bordering Cameroon, Chad and Niger. The fighting left residents cowering in their homes amid gunfire and explosions.

At least 50 people have died in Damaturu and Potiskum in Yobe state during the fighting, local police commissioner Lawan Tanko told The Associated Press on Saturday. In Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, a mortuary official who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter told the AP at least 11 bodies had been brought in from the fighting.

The violence left at least two senior police officers dead in Yobe state, while a military spokesman in Borno said that three churches had been bombed during attacks there.

In Yobe state, the fighting became so intense that the military ordered those living in a neighborhood surrounding Damaturu's central mosque to evacuate. After a deadline, soldiers riding in armored personnel carriers and tanks drove into the neighborhood shooting, Tanko said.

"We were able to kill 12 of the Boko Haram armed sect and bombers," Tanko said. The police commissioner said officers also recovered Kalashnikov rifles, ammunition and explosives.

Boko Haram has launched a series of bombings against Nigeria's weak central government over the last year in its campaign to implement strict Shariah law across the nation of more than 160 million people home to both Christians and Muslims.

Boko Haram claimed responsibility for a Nov. 4 attack on Damaturu, Yobe state's capital, that killed more than 100 people. The group also claimed the Aug. 24 suicide car bombing of the U.N. headquarters in Nigeria's capital that killed 24 people and wounded 116 others.

Little is known about the sources of Boko Haram's support, though its members recently began carrying out a wave of bank robberies in the north. Police stations also have been bombed and officers killed.

Boko Haram has splintered into three factions, with one wing increasingly willing to kill as it maintains contact with terror groups in North Africa and Somalia, diplomats and security sources say.

The sect is responsible for more than 450 killings in Nigeria this year alone, according to an AP count.

___

Jon Gambrell reported from Lagos, Nigeria and can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/jongambrellAP.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_af/af_nigeria_violence

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Provident Automobile Insurance: one of the finest insurance ...

Why do I decide on Cheapest Car Insurance?

Provident Car Insurance coverage:With each and every automobile that you acquire, comes the problem of insuring it as well. You must constantly make certain it having a reputable insurance organization like Provident Car Insurance. With the uncertainties on the route that happen nearly everyday, one particular needs to insure one?s automobile together with all of the equipments and devices which are employed inside the car in order that one is able to revive the auto and its elements. Therefore, it truly is important that you insure your automobile into a policy that will provide you with an all-time coverage on the damages for your vehicle, theft, accident advantages and also offer a spare auto or carry out upkeep during and soon after a crisis. Typically, the organizations coping with the sale of autos and also other autos provide add-on possibilities of insurance coverage from reputed insurance coverage firms at really reasonable rates. However, it is also achievable for you to take separate insurance coverage options, one of which can be Provident Vehicle Insurance coverage. As a component of the GMAC, it has been declared as one of the top economic solutions firm. As for the company?s reputation, it has been the winner of Insurance coverage Times awards and British Insurance coverage Awards in the year 2009.
Provident Auto Insurance ? the Pro and Cons

Provident Auto Insurance coverage can be a private vehicle insurance business which was set-up in 1966 to cater to additional benefits along with car insurance coverage that they give.

Advantages of Provident Car Insurance:

1. Reduced rates of interest offered.

2. Experienced staff.

three. If a mistake has been accomplished in assessing your policy and on lodging a complaint, few insurance coverage holders have reported swift acceptance and acknowledgment.

four. As the business has been inside the organization for very several decades now, it tries to maintain a reputation of its personal.

5. The business supplies short term insurance policies commencing from month-to-month policies.

Disadvantages of Provident Car Insurance:

1. The organization has lately been into negative reviews by a lot of people, although the selection whether it truly is truly excellent or bad is totally relative to the user.

2. Buyer service will not meet as much as the expectations.

3. A single desires to undergo the supply policy completely since there are a few intricate details that the insurance coverage policy will not cover.

four. Because insurance policy is dependent on share markets and stocks, seldom, companies usually do not fully redeem the entire promised volume.
Exactly where can I get a Provident Car Insurance coverage?

Provident Insurance is fundamentally a self-profited organization that will not give hyperlinks by means of any online dealers. It operates via an inland network of brokers which count as much as 3000. Nevertheless, it has its very own internet site where you?ll find a number of their terms and situations that they give:

http://www.providentinsurance.co.uk

Address: Provident Insurance coverage Plc, Halifax Home, Ferguson Street, Halifax HX1 2PZ.

England -877728.

Get in touch with Data: 01422 331 166

For info on location of dealers, you are able to also e mail them at:

sales.support@providentinsurance.co.uk

Here are some of their terms and conditions:-

1. The insurance coverage policies are only valid in England and disputes relating to any policy will be under the jurisdiction of the court of law in England.

2. The insurance policy has got marketplace dangers.

3. Their policies cover imported vehicles apart from those which are left-hand drive ones or these that are made in Japan.

four. The policyholder can withdraw the policy devoid of stating any cause.

With a lot more than half a million policy holders, Provident insurance is excellent notion for auto insurance coverage especially if the vehicle owners are ladies and old people or if the car has been bought at resale outlets. One a last note, Provident Auto Insurance coverage ensures highly competitive costs and sells its automobile policies at reduced rates that may favor your specifications more than the years during long-term insurance coverage policies. General, in spite of a couple of negative reviews it has got over the years, the service is fairly appreciable. Thus, I would advise that you simply initial jot down your necessities and requirements which you need to be incorporated within your policy. As an example, costly autos could need an insurance which encompasses coverage of all the mechanical components which includes external systems. Provident Auto Insurance includes a range of policies to pick from, nevertheless it is for you personally to decide.

Source: http://one-day-car-insurance.info/insurance/provident-automobile-insurance-one-of-the-finest-insurance-coverage-organizations-within-the-marketplace/

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Yemenis rally, denounce killing of protesters

Protestors carry a youth who was injured during clashes with security forces in Sanaa, Yemen, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. More than 100,000 protesters who entered Yemen's capital Saturday after a 4-day march from another city were attacked by elite troops loyal to outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who opened fire with guns, water cannons and tear gas. Medical officials said at least three protesters were killed, including a woman.(AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

Protestors carry a youth who was injured during clashes with security forces in Sanaa, Yemen, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. More than 100,000 protesters who entered Yemen's capital Saturday after a 4-day march from another city were attacked by elite troops loyal to outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who opened fire with guns, water cannons and tear gas. Medical officials said at least three protesters were killed, including a woman.(AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

Protestors carry an injured man from the site of clashes with security forces in Sanaa, Yemen, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. More than 100,000 protesters who entered Yemen's capital Saturday after a 4-day march from another city were attacked by elite troops loyal to outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who opened fire with guns, water cannons and tear gas. Medical officials said at least three protesters were killed, including a woman. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

Protestors carry an injured man from the site of clashes with security forces in Sanaa, Yemen, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. More than 100,000 protesters who entered Yemen's capital Saturday after a 4-day march from another city were attacked by elite troops loyal to outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who opened fire with guns, water cannons and tear gas. Medical officials said at least three protesters were killed, including a woman. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

Yemeni medics treat a wounded protestor who was injured during the clashes with security forces, in Sanaa, Yemen, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. More than 100,000 protesters who entered Yemen's capital Saturday after a 4-day march from another city were attacked by elite troops loyal to outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who opened fire with guns, water cannons and tear gas. Medical officials said at least three protesters were killed, including a woman. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

Protestors stand behind the gate of a field hospital to watch wounded demonstrators being carried from the site of clashes with security forces, in Sanaa, Yemen, Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011. More than 100,000 protesters who entered Yemen's capital Saturday after a 4-day march from another city were attacked by elite troops loyal to outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who opened fire with guns, water cannons and tear gas. Medical officials said at least three protesters were killed, including a woman. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

(AP) ? Tens of thousands of people demonstrated Sunday in Yemen's capital, protesting the deaths of protesters and demanding the resignation of the vice president for failing to bring the killers to justice.

Marching past the office of Vice President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, the protesters denounced him as a "tool in the hands" of outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The march took place as Hadi was meeting with U.S. Ambassador Gerald Feierstein. A statement from Hadi's office said they discussed Yemen's crisis, and Hadi appealed for calm.

Hadi is heading a transitional government after Saleh agreed to transfer power following months of demonstrations and turmoil. Under the U.S.-backed plan, Saleh won immunity from prosecution, angering many of his opponents. Yielding to pressure to defuse the country's tensions, Saleh said Saturday he would leave for the United States.

The U.S. is concerned about months of turmoil in Yemen that has led to a security breakdown, because the dangerous al-Qaida branch in Yemen has taken advantage of the vacuum to expand its presence in the south of the country.

A security official said al-Qaida-linked forces on Sunday killed an intelligence chief responsible for fighting terrorism in southern Yemen. The official said Col. Hussein el-Shabibi was shot dead by al-Qaida-linked masked gunmen while he was in his car in a market in Sheik Othman, Aden.

In the capital Sanaa, troops commanded by Saleh's relatives attacked protesters on Saturday, activists said, killing at least nine and setting off Sunday's demonstration. They said the elite Republican Guard troops led by Saleh's son Ahmed fired at the protesters, and dozens were arrested by the National Security police led by Saleh's nephew.

"The situation will not stabilize, since Saleh's relatives and supporters are still holding sensitive positions in the army and government," said Fathi al-Rawdi, an activist at Sunday's gathering.

Activist Ahmed Ghilan criticized the power transfer deal Saleh signed in late November.

"We are fed up with this tragic farce deal that gives immunity but is impotent to force Saleh's troops out of the main streets," Ghilan said.

A military committee formed by Vice President Hadi was assigned to arrange the withdrawal of all army units and armed groups from the streets. That was supposed to be completed Saturday.

Ambassadors from the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and the EU are pressing the military committee to complete its mission.

Mohammed al-Sabri, an opposition spokesman, said the ambassadors were focusing on the withdrawal issue, which he said is the main obstacle to achieving security and stability.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-25-ML-Yemen/id-0f6ee0a3d35b4c8f9a9dab78aa5b8ea4

Monday, December 19, 2011

Russian rig sinks, more than 50 feared dead

A drilling rig with 67 crew on board capsized and sank off Russia's far eastern island of Sakhalin on Sunday while being towed through a storm, leaving more than 50 dead or missing in the icy Sea of Okhotsk.

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Emergency officials said the crew of an icebreaker and tugboat rescued 14 workers alive from the jack-up rig, the 'Kolskaya', which was operated by a Russian offshore exploration firm. They recovered four bodies from the water.

Four of the survivors, suffering from hypothermia, were airlifted by helicopter to land and taken to hospital after the disaster struck at 12:45 p.m. (0145 GMT).

The rest of the crew were missing, 200 km (125 miles) off the coast of remote Sakhalin island. The water temperature was one degree Celsius (33.8 Fahrenheit), giving survivors around 30 minutes before death from freezing, according to maritime and rescue websites.

"The Kolskaya keeled to its side ... and sank within 20 minutes. The depth of the water at the site is 1,042 metres (0.65 miles)," Russia's federal water transport agency said in a statement on its website.

Several rescue crafts and helicopters had been sent to the site to scour the waters for survivors from the rig owned by Arktikmorneftegazrazvedka (AMNGR), a unit of state-owned Zarubezhneft.

"There is no ecological danger. The vessel was carrying the minimum amount of fuel as it was being tugged by two craft," said a spokesman for AMNGR.

But the incident will deal a blow to efforts by Russia, the world's largest energy producer, to step up offshore oil and gas exploration to stave off a long-term decline in onshore production.

The jack-up rig, which has three support legs that can be extended to the ocean floor while its hull floats on the surface, was heading from Kamchatka to Sakhalin when it overturned in stormy winter conditions with a swell of up to 6 metres (19.7 feet).

"(President) Dmitry Medvedev has ordered all necessary assistance be provided to the victims of the drilling platform accident and has ordered a probe into the circumstances of the loss of the platform," the Kremlin said. The Emergencies Ministry said it would work through Sunday night.

"The violation of safety rules during the towing of the drilling rig, as well as towing without consideration of the weather conditions ... are believed to be the cause of the (disaster)," investigators said in a statement on their website.

The 'Neftegaz-55' tugboat, also owned by AMNGR, had been towing the Kolskaya and took part in the search effort, but pulled out after suffering hull damage from the high waves.

The tug, carrying most of the crew rescued from the rig, was taking on water and trying to limp to port. An icebreaker, the 'Magadan', was still at the scene.

The rig, built in Finland in 1985, had been doing work on a minor gas production project in the Sea of Okhotsk for a unit of state-controlled gas export monopoly Gazprom, the company said.

Russia's prize offshore gas and oil fields lie to the northeast of Sakhalin. Two major offshore projects are already producing oil and gas off the island - Sakhalin-1, operated by Exxonmobil and Sakhalin-2, in which Gazprom has a controlling stake.

The disaster is unlikely to seriously affect oil or gas production. AMNGR said the vessel was no longer under contract when it sank.

Operating conditions in the region, explored by Soviet geologists in the 1960s and 1970s, are among the harshest for Russian energy companies.

Winter often lasts 220-240 days in the waters off Sakhalin, where the main companies operating are ExxonMobil, Gazprom, and Royal Dutch Shell. They produce oil and gas, sometimes in icebound conditions, for export largely to Asian markets.

Sakhalin-2, in which Shell and Mitsui also have stakes, produces 10 million tons per year of liquefied natural gas at Russia's only LNG plant in the port of Prigorodnoye for export to Asia, much of it to Japan.

Each tanker of crude oil produced by at the 160,000 barrels-per-day Sakhalin-1 project, operated by ExxonMobil, is escorted by two icebreakers when ice thickness reaches 60 cm (2 feet).

State-controlled Rosneft this year reached a major deal with Exxon to explore for oil and gas in the Kara Sea, to the north of the Russian mainland, a largely unexplored region estimated to hold over 100 billion barrels of oil.

A combination of poor infrastructure and chronic corner-cutting has dealt the country its share of sea disasters, notably the 2000 sinking of the nuclear submarine Kursk in the Barents Sea in August 2000, killing all 118 aboard and prompting criticism of the sluggish response.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45714698/ns/world_news-europe/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Iraq: A war of muddled goals, painful sacrifice

A US Army soldier begins his journey home during ceremonies marking the end of US military mission in Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. After nearly nine years, 4,500 American dead, 32,000 wounded and more than $800 billion, U.S. officials formally shut down the war in Iraq a conflict that U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said was worth the price in blood and money, as it set Iraq on a path to democracy. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

A US Army soldier begins his journey home during ceremonies marking the end of US military mission in Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. After nearly nine years, 4,500 American dead, 32,000 wounded and more than $800 billion, U.S. officials formally shut down the war in Iraq a conflict that U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said was worth the price in blood and money, as it set Iraq on a path to democracy. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

NATO Training officers stand during a ceremony marking the official closure of NATO training mission in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

U.S. Army soldiers from 1st Cavalry Division, based at Fort Hood, Texas react during a concert by the band Filter, who performed for troops waiting to go home after their deployment in Iraq, at Camp Virginia, Kuwait, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

U.S. Army soldiers from 1st Cavalry Division, based at Fort Hood, Texas, load their baggage as they begin their journey home after a deployment in Iraq, at Camp Virginia, Kuwait, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. After nearly nine years, 4,500 American dead and 100,000 Iraqi dead, U.S. officials formally shut down the war in Iraq - a conflict that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said was worth the American sacrifice because it set Iraq on a path to democracy. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)

(AP) ? In the beginning, it all looked simple: topple Saddam Hussein, destroy his purported weapons of mass destruction and lay the foundation for a pro-Western government in the heart of the Arab world.

Nearly 4,500 American and more than 100,000 Iraqi lives later, the objective became simply to get out ? and leave behind a country where democracy has at least a chance, where Iran does not dominate and where conditions may not be good but "good enough."

Even those modest goals may prove too ambitious after American forces leave and Iraq begins to chart its own course. How the Iraqis fare in the coming years will determine how history judges a war which became among the most politically contentious in American history.

Toppling Saddam was the easy part. Television images from the days following the March 20, 2003, start of the war made the conflict look relatively painless, like a certain type of Hollywood movie: American tanks speeding across the bleak and featureless Iraqi plains, huge blasts rattling Baghdad in the "shock and awe" bombing and the statue of the dictator tumbling down from his pedestal.

But Americans soon collided with the complex realities of an alien society few of them knew or understood. Who were the real power brokers? This ayatollah or that Sunni chief? What were the right buttons to push? America had its own ideas of the new Iraq. Did most Iraqis share them?

Places most Americans had never heard of in 2002, like Fallujah and Abu Ghraib, became household words. Saddam was captured nine months after the invasion. The war dragged on for eight more years. No WMD were ever found. And Iraq drained billions from America's treasury and diverted resources from Afghanistan, where the Taliban and al-Qaida rebounded after their defeat in the 2001 invasion.

In the early months, America's enemy was mostly Sunnis angry over the loss of power and prestige when their patron Saddam fell. In September 2007, the bloodiest year for U.S. troops, Shiite militias ? part of a community that suffered terribly under Saddam ? were responsible for three-quarters of the attacks in the Baghdad area that killed or wounded Americans, according to the then-No. 2 U.S. commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Ray Odierno.

Saddam had not tolerated al-Qaida. With Saddam gone and the country in chaos, al-Qaida in Iraq became the terror movement's largest and most dangerous franchise, drawing in fighters from North Africa to Asia for a war that lingers on through suicide bombings and assassinations, albeit at a lower intensity.

As American troops prepare to go home by Dec. 31, they leave behind a country still facing violence, with closer ties to the U.S. than Saddam had but still short of what Washington once envisioned. Iranian influence is on the rise. One of the few positive developments from the American viewpoint ? a democratic toehold ? is far from secure.

___

In 20-20 hindsight, the U.S. probably should have seen it coming. By 2003, communal rivalries and hatreds, fueled by years of Saddam's suppression of Kurds and Shiites, were brewing beneath the lid of a closed society cobbled together from the wreckage of the Ottoman Empire after World War I. Saddam's rule of terror kept all these passions in the pot. Lift the lid and the pot boils over. Remove Saddam and a new fight flares for the power that the ousted ruler and his Baath Party had monopolized for decades.

A day after Saddam's statue was hauled down in Baghdad, the U.S. arranged what was supposed to be a reconciliation meeting in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, bringing together prominent clerics from the majority Shiite sect eager for a dominant role in Iraq after the collapse of Saddam's Sunni-dominated rule.

One of them was Abdul-Majid al-Khoie, son of a revered ayatollah. Al-Khoie had fled to Britain during Saddam's crackdown against Shiites after the 1991 Gulf War. Now he and the other clerics were back in Iraq, freed from Saddam's yoke.

As al-Khoie approached a mosque, a crowd swarmed around him. He was hacked to death in an attack widely blamed on Muqtada al-Sadr, a fellow Shiite cleric.

In Baghdad, meanwhile, mobs looted and burned much of the city as bewildered U.S. soldiers stood by.

"Stuff happens," then-U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld famously said at the time. "And it's untidy, and freedom's untidy, and free people are free to make mistakes, and commit crimes and do bad things. They're also free to live their lives and do wonderful things. And that's what's going to happen here."

Within months, angry Sunnis had taken up arms to resist what they saw as a Shiite takeover on the coattails of the Americans. Their ranks were bolstered by former soldiers whose livelihood was taken away when the Americans, in a bid to appease Shiite and Kurdish leaders, abolished Saddam's military.

In August 2003, a massive truck bomb devastated the U.N. headquarters, killing the chief of mission, his deputy and 20 other people. Two months later, rockets slammed into the U.S.-occupied Rasheed Hotel in the Green Zone, killing an American lieutenant colonel and wounding 17 people. One of the architects of the war, visiting Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, barely escaped injury.

By then it was clear: America was in for a long and brutal fight. The triumphant scene of Saddam's statue falling would be replaced by new iconic images: the bodies of butchered Americans hanging from a bridge in Fallujah, military vehicles engulfed in flames, terrified hostages staring into a video camera moments before decapitation, and flag-draped caskets resting at open graves as aging parents and young widows wept for their loved ones.

___

The Americans arrived with their own agenda for the new Iraq. That didn't always mesh with what the Iraqis had in mind.

Phillip J. Dermer, a now-retired U.S. colonel who has returned to Iraq as a businessman, spent the summer of 2003 helping set up a city council in Baghdad.

The idea was to give Iraqis a quick taste of democracy while issues like a constitution and national elections were being worked out.

After months of preparation, the council was elected and got down to its first order of business: To the Americans' surprise, an al-Sadr representative came forward to change the name of the Shiite slum in eastern Baghdad from Saddam City to Sadr City in honor of the cleric's father, who was assassinated by the deposed regime. The measure passed unanimously.

Dermer and his colleagues had been expecting a vote for something like a new budget for water. For Dermer it was a signal. The Iraqis had their own priorities.

"We were so focused on getting this council together and hold their hands up to vote when the whole time something else was happening. We weren't aware of it, and we didn't catch it," he said.

The Americans would soon learn the Iraqis were primarily interested in promoting their own religious or ethnic group at the expense of others.

___

Increasingly, Sunni militants were targeting not just U.S. troops but Iraqi Shiites.

Shiites initially held their fire and did not retaliate. Their highest-ranking cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, wanted Shiites to keep focused on the main prize: majority control of the government.

All that changed with the bombing of a major Shiite shrine in Samarra in February 2006.

Newly formed Shiite militias struck back against random Sunnis, often dragging them away in the dead of night. It was now Shiites against Sunnis, neighbor against neighbor.

America was now in the middle of a civil war, partly of its own making, despite intense efforts by the Bush administration to resist that view.

The U.S. seemed overwhelmed. Just keeping count of the death tolls was a challenge, leading to a bizarre U.S. military formula where a body found on the streets was listed as a "sectarian" victim if the fatal wound was in the head. If the wound were in the torso, it was counted as random violence.

___

For Americans back home, Iraq was not a war with morale-boosting milestones that could point to progress. No Pacific islands secured, no heroic storming of the beaches at Normandy. No newsreel scenes of grateful civilians welcoming liberators with flowers.

Instead, the war became a mind-numbing litany of suicide bombings and ambushes. "Progress" was defined by grim statistics such as fewer civilians found butchered today than yesterday. Soon it all began to sound the same, a bloody, soul-killing "Ground Hog Day" of brutality after brutality seemingly without purpose. Pacify one village, move on to another, only to have violence flare again in the first place.

Sen. John McCain summed it up at a congressional hearing three years into the war: "What I worry about is we're playing a game of whack-a-mole here."

A 24-year-old platoon leader in Ramadi expressed the same sentiment in a different way. "Every time we go out, we run," he told an Associated Press reporter in 2006. "If you stand still, you WILL get shot at."

___

It was even worse for the Iraqis. Everyone was a potential target for death. Sunni militants, especially in al-Qaida, considered Shiites as much of an enemy as American soldiers. Shiite militias viewed all Sunnis as Saddam loyalists ready to bring back the old regime.

By such twisted logic, mothers shopping for food in a market were just as legitimate a target as armed, uniformed soldiers. Car bombs and suicide attacks killed thousands. Sons, fathers and brothers disappeared ? often without a trace ? abducted by death squads and presumably buried in unmarked desert graves. Nearly everyone had a relative or a close friend who died or disappeared ? more than 3,700 were slaughtered in the month of October 2006 alone, according to the United Nations.

By the end of 2006, the U.N. estimated that 100,000 Iraqis were fleeing every month for sanctuary in Jordan and Syria.

Death could come at any moment: from a bomb on a bus filled with people heading for work or from an errant shell on a home as a family enjoyed an evening meal. Or from foreigners. In September 2007, Blackwater contractors guarding a U.S. State Department convoy in Baghdad opened fire on civilian vehicles, mistakenly thinking they were under attack. Seventeen Iraqis died. A U.S. federal judge dismissed the charges two years later because the case was built on testimony in exchange for immunity.

A review by the AP in April 2009 showed that more than 110,600 Iraqis had died in violence since the U.S.-led invasion. The actual number was likely higher because many of those listed as missing were doubtless buried in the chaos of war without official records.

"They wanted Iraq to be a model for democracy to be followed by other countries in the region," a Shiite preacher, Sheik Muhannad al-Bahadli, said of the Americans in March 2007. "Look what happened in Iraq after four years of occupation: booby-trapped cars and bombs blowing up and killing Iraqis."

___

In 2007, the tide began to turn, though historians will debate the reason for years. The change was probably a result of a confluence of events. Many Sunni militants concluded that they needed the Americans for leverage against the "real enemy" ? the Shiites. Many Sunni insurgents resented al-Qaida's power grab and did not share its vision of a global jihad. Many Shiites recoiled against the brutality and gangsterism of some of their own Shiite militias. And finally the American military surge.

In January 2007, President George W. Bush announced he was sending 30,000 more troops to secure Baghdad and the provinces around it. Talk of a troop withdrawal in 2007, which had been widely expected, disappeared. With the Americans promising and paying for support, more and more Sunni insurgents switched sides and turned against al-Qaida. Eight months into the surge, Shiite militia leader al-Sadr declared a cease-fire and violence began dropping in the capital.

Fighting continued. But the commanding general, David Petraeus, was able to tell Congress by the end of the year that the "military objectives" of the surge were being met. Skeptics, including then-Sen. Barack Obama, acknowledged the trend while noting that the second goal of the surge ? to allow the Iraqis to establish a stable, effective government ? remained unfulfilled.

"The surge succeeded in those aspects where the Americans had full control, the military aspects," said Marina Ottoway, director of the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "There was no willingness to compromise. There still is no willingness to compromise."

___

With the Stars and Stripes lowered and the last of the troops on their way out, America's role in the Iraq war is over. For Iraqis, however, the war and the struggle to build a functioning democratic state continue. Bombs still explode, gunmen attack police checkpoints. Iraq's government, though far more representative than Saddam's regime, still falls short of an ideal.

Tensions between Sunnis and Shiites, Arabs and Kurds remain unresolved. It's an open question who will ultimately govern in Iraq and whether Iran will in time come to dominate its weakened neighbor.

America will not be abandoning Iraq. The U.S. will leave behind thousands of diplomats and security contractors, whose presence will influence the direction of the country for years to come. Still, the disappearance of uniformed troops will have a profound effect on Iraqis in ways that will take years to define.

For the first time in nearly nine years, Iraq's future will be entirely in the hands of Iraqis.

Less clear is whether America's mission was truly accomplished. Saad Eskander, who heads Iraq's National Library and Archives, said the Americans created as many enemies as they have allies, and are leaving with only part of the job done.

"What the Americans have accomplished in Iraq is a 50/50 project. It's not completed. The other 50 is up to us," he said. "Either we are people who deserve this country or we don't deserve it."

And what of the American legacy?

"They did get rid of the Baathist Iraq state and Saddam Hussein from power. They did succeed in bringing a proto-democracy," said Theodore Karasik, an analyst at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf. But the war also "permitted the rise of people who may not share America's point of view."

History will be the judge, but for now many observers believe the costs in dollars and blood dwarf the war's achievements.

"The U.S. and Iraqi forces scored impressive tactical victories against the insurgents in Iraq during 2005-2009, but the U.S. invasion now seems to be a de facto grand strategic failure," wrote Anthony Cordesman, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

"Its tactical victories ? if they last ? did little more than put an end to a conflict it helped create."

___

Reid, who reported from Cairo, Egypt, covered the Iraq war from 2003 until 2009.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-17-ML-Iraq-War-America's-Legacy/id-42403c09f687477dbf8366f6ea9e2e48

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Video: People, Planet, Profit: Generac Generates Profits

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45701212/

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As Greece slashes costs, the deaf left unaided

(AP) ? Evanthia Plakoura's life recently became a lot more complicated.

Conversations with her boss switched to email only. Visits to the doctor require additional planning. She feels helpless in Greece's bureaucratic labyrinth.

"It's like someone flicked a switch and turned off your voice," said Plakoura, a deaf woman who works at the Education Ministry.

Plakoura joined some 2,000 disabled demonstrators at a rally in central Athens this week to protest sweeping benefit cuts imposed in Greece's economic crisis that have deprived her of sign-language translation.

In August, a five-year-old program providing deaf people with interpreters was suspended after the government abruptly cut its funding to less than half. Overnight, 15,000 deaf people around Greece were left without help to report a crime to the police, rent a house or go to a job interview.

Funding cuts have opened up gaps across welfare services, with slashed services and longer waiting times for vulnerable groups including the blind, recovering organ-transplant patients, autistic children, and paraplegics in need of physiotherapy.

"This program is very important to us. It's our bridge to the outside world and it's vital for our education," Plakoura said in sign language, her speech relayed by one of the very translators whose help is being cut off.

"People have gone back to writing things down, or taking a relative, but it's not the same thing," she said. "It makes things very difficult for us, and especially for elderly deaf people."

The axed program is the latest casualty of Greece's draconian austerity measures that have battered social services as demand for help by the recession-hit public increases.

Independent welfare programs that rely on grants from the state offer a tempting target to a government fighting the threat of bankruptcy. Unlike state-run programs, which enjoy strong legal protections, the government can simply turn off the money taps.

As a result, independent programs to assist the disabled, the elderly, psychiatric patients and recovering drug users have all suffered steep cuts, occasionally with dramatic consequences.

An alarming rise in HIV infections in 2011 has been blamed in part on problems with needle exchange programs for drug users. Between January and October this year, 190 new infections of the deadly virus were reported among intravenous drug users, compared with 14 in the first 10 months in 2010, according to the Health Ministry.

Groups representing the disabled and other vulnerable Greeks have held several demonstrations outside the Finance Ministry, on Athens' main Syntagma Square, but getting attention is difficult in a city where between four and five protests are held every day.

At his suburban headquarters, Costas Gargalis, who heads the National Association of the Deaf in Greece, is struggling to keep his 60-member network of interpreters together, hoping to restart the program sometime next year.

"Since the program was suspended, it's been really chaotic," he said. "Some people can pay for interpreters on occasion, but others have simply postponed their tasks forever."

Gargalis, who is deaf, spends his working day in hectic silence: swiftly thumbing text messages on his cell phone, poring over fax requests from around Greece, and making video calls over the Internet.

His interpreters program started with an annual state grant of euro250,000 ($333,200) in 2006; that was steadily reduced to euro180,000 ($240,000) this year, before being suddenly slashed to euro80,000 ($106,600) in August.

"We were immediately over-budget and had to suspend the program. And even then, interpreters were left unpaid for two months of work," said Gargalis.

At previous funding levels, deaf people were offered 25 hours a year with interpreters. If the program is restarted next year, they will receive no more than 10 hours, Gargalis said.

"The amount of money we are asking for is laughable," he said, speaking through an interpreter. "This is a matter of survival for us."

Interpreters for the deaf need six years of training to get their license, and are paid below-minimum wage to crisscross Greek cities daily and provide help communicating.

"People generally become interpreters because they are interested in the subject," registered interpreter Costas Christodoulakos said.

"Now they are obliged to look for other work and take on other commitments, often unrelated to their interpreting jobs," he said. "What else can they do?"

Greece's debt-shackled economy has been kept alive by international rescue loans for the past 19 months, and creditors are pressing for more aggressive spending cuts, as the Socialist government continues to miss deficit-cutting targets and heads into a fourth year of recession in 2012.

Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos promised this week to submit protesters' demands to the country's new prime minister, and invite disabled groups to join negotiations on a major new tax code due to take effect next year.

Health care is facing major cuts this year ? down from euro7 billion originally planned to euro5.6 billion ($9.4 billion to $7.5 billion), excluding state insurance subsidies.

Since the debt crisis started in late 2009, store closures have exceeded 20 percent in some commercial parts of Athens, while more than 275,000 people have lost their jobs nationwide, the vast majority in the private sector, pushing the unemployment rate to more than 16 percent.

"The unemployment rate among disabled people is normally more than double the national average ... so there is an urgent need for disabled people to be protected (from the cuts)," Yiannis Vardakastanis, leader of the National Confederation of Disabled People, said in an interview.

"The effects of the initial (government spending) cuts were not immediately obvious. But the cuts being made now have brought parts of the care system to a state of near-collapse."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-16-EU-Greece-Deaf-in-Crisis/id-901b6516f21b4b369d9dfea7fdc14bc9

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

US rolling back most sanctions on Libya (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The Obama administration said Friday it had lifted sanctions on more than $30 billion in assets it had issued against Libya's banks earlier this year ahead of a historic visit to Tripoli by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

The United States froze assets of the Libyan government and then-leader Moammar Gadhafi and four of his children in February, shortly after shuttering the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli and evacuating staff. The move came amid escalating violence in Libya as Gadhafi sought to crush a rebellion against his rule.

White House press secretary Jay Carney said in a statement that Friday's action would unfreeze all government and Central Bank funds within U.S. jurisdiction. Assets in the U.S. of the Gadhafi family and former Gadhafi regime members remain frozen.

The move will let the Libyan government access most of its worldwide holdings and help with the new government's transition, the White House said.

Panetta is expected to visit the Libyan capital on Saturday. He told reporters it will give him a better sense of the situation in the North African nation while allowing him to pay tribute to the people for bringing down Gadhafi and trying to create a democratic government.

Carney said the U.S. looked forward "to a continued close partnership with the new government of Libya during this transitional period and beyond, and believe that these assets can be an important resource for the Libyan people."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111217/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_white_house_libya

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3 dead, 2 wounded in California office shooting

Map locates office shooting in Irwindale, Calif.

Map locates office shooting in Irwindale, Calif.

(AP) ? Three people were killed and two more injured Friday in a California office complex shooting, police said.

The suspected gunman was among the dead, Baldwin Park police Capt. Michael Taylor said.

The people were shot around 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Southern California Edison office building in Irwindale.

One of the dead was discovered inside the building. Another died en route to a hospital.

Two others have unspecified injuries and their conditions are not known.

The building was quickly locked down and dozens of people were seen streaming out with their hands raised. Two nearby schools also were locked down but no one on the campuses was hurt.

There was no immediate word on what prompted the gunfire.

Multiple media reports said the gunman was an Edison employee and his two victims were believed to be company managers. Police said they could not confirm that.

The utility's office is in a complex of buildings that also includes a business called California Lighting Sales.

Cindy Gutierrez, the controller for that company, said employees there didn't hear any shots fired and didn't realize anything was amiss until building management announced over the intercom that everyone should stay indoors.

"At that point we knew something was wrong, then 5 to 10 minutes later that's when we hear the police," she said, adding that she and her 20 colleagues have been locked in their office ever since.

"I'm fine, kind of nervous," she said.

Both of the schools ended the lockdowns about two hours after the shooting and began releasing students.

Irwindale is a small industrial city of about 1,400 residents in the San Gabriel Valley, 22 miles east of downtown Los Angeles.

It is home to the popular Irwindale Speedway auto racetrack. It is also home to the annual Southern California Renaissance Pleasure Faire as well as sprawling rock and gravel quarries.

Southern California Edison is one of its largest companies, employing 2,100 people.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-16-Office%20Shooting-California/id-0142f5c1f9504d6d9226777a7a33fa9e

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On the Legal System of the Intensive Management of the Urban ...

home > Management > On the Legal System of the Intensive Management of the Urban Land

?Abstract? The land is the foundation of the country,the base of the development. China is a developing nation of many people and little land,the land issues are the overall and strategic major issues which related to china?s economic,social healthy development.At present,China is in the rapid development period of the industrialization and urbanization,the urban blind expansion has led to the use structure of the urban land is irrational, and the extensive management of the land resources is inefficient,initiates a series of problems.How to completely reverse the disadvantageous condition of the extensive low efficiency use of the urban land,realizes the urban land resource to transform from the extensive management to the intensive management,the fundamental way out is through the construction of the legal system to overcome the existing system deficiencies.The research has used the method of the legal science with other disciplines overlapping,the theory and the practice combining and the comparative study,mainly focused on the status,the problem,the perfection and the innovation of the legal system of the intensive management of the urban land to launch gradually.the land-intensive management are compared with the land in terms of extensive management,the legal system of the intensive management of the urban land is the general term of the legal norms to adjust the social relations of the land conservation?intensive management within the urban region;It is an organic constituent of the legal system of the urban land utilization,is a system consisting of a variety of systems,the different system separately adjusts the specific social relations of the intensive management of the urban land;the legal system of the intensive management of the urban land includes the transfer system of the property right?the allocation system of the market?the control system of the economy?the regulation system of the administration?the participation system of the society for the intensive management of the urban land.At present,our country still did not have a specialized laws and regulations of the intensive management of the urban land,also have not the direct provisions of laws and regulations for the intensive management of the urban land.the legal vacancy was obvious,the related stipulation mainly concentrated in the national and local policy documents.Therefore,the intensive management of the urban land lacks the powerful support and the safeguard of the legal system,there are many problems in the present legal system of the intensive management of the urban land,and its the construction direction is to combin with the transformation of the mode of economic growth?the reform of the allocation way of the market?the positive transformation of the government functions and the enhanced participation of the society public.the construction for the legal system of the intensive management of the urban land include:(1) the transfer system of the property right for the intensive management of the urban land:reforms the extensive,low-cost land requisition system;innovates the transfer system of the collective construction land,and promotes the collective construction land to transfer.(2)the allocation system of the market for the intensive management of the urban land;perfects the allocation system of the market for the urban storage quantity land,perfects the reserve system of the market for the urban storage quantity land.(3) the control system of the economy for the intensive management of the urban land:improves the land system of the finance,reforms the land tax system,innovates the land financial system.(4) the regulation system of the administration for the intensive management of the urban land:strengthens the administrative regulation system of the land utilization,seeks the best way of the land utilization;perfect the administrative regulation system of the land market, and promotes the smooth operation of the land markets;improves the administrative regulation system of the income distribution,promotes the income distribution to be reasonable and sound.(5) the participation system of the society for the intensive management of the urban land:perfects the participation system of the social organization and the social public, expands the public participation in the ways and means,promote the governmental information of the land utilization to open,enhance the public participation in the procedure construction.Through the perfection and innovation of the above system,tries hard to construct one highly effective,comprehensive,scientific and rational legal system of the intensive management of the urban land,to perfect the legal system of the urban land utilization,transforms the utilization way of the urban land effectively,establishes the city of the resource conservation,and promotes the economic?social and environmental sustainable development.

Title: On the Legal System of the Intensive Management of the Urban Land
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Source: http://www.economics-papers.com/?p=76862

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Liz Taylor couture sells at auction for $2.6M

One of actress Elizabeth Taylor's Dior evening gowns sold for $362,500, boosting the total for the auction of her haute couture to $2.6 million at Christie's.

The silver encrusted brocade gown from 1968, with matching bag, had been estimated at about $5,000, but a protracted bidding war among several determined would-be buyers drove the price to about 70 times that, including commission.

The Wednesday sale, the third in a weeks' worth of auctions of Taylor's storied jewels, clothes, memorabilia and other items, was not marked by the freewheeling frenzy that prevailed on Tuesday, when her finest jewelry took in nearly $116 million.

Story: Elizabeth Taylor's jewelry sells for $115 million
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But the $2.6 million was still about 10 times the pre-sale estimate, owing to the Taylor cachet and also driven by competitive online bidding from around the globe.

Christie's said the sale set a record for a couture auction, although the evening's top lot was actually an Andy Warhol lithograph of Taylor which fetched $662,500.

The painting was included in Christie's auction house sale Wednesday of jewelry and other items from the collection of the late actress, who starred in "National Velvet" and "Cleopatra." A wedding dress worn at her second marriage to Richard Burton sold for over $62,000.

Story: Vamp it up! ?Twilight? wedding gown copy already for sale

"The couture was an extremely successful auction," said Andrea Fiuczynski, president of Christie's Los Angeles, who served as auctioneer.

The results, she said, were a testament to Taylor's iconic status, which she said is unmatched today.

"There isn't any celebrity now who does everything she did," Fiuczynski told Reuters, speaking to Taylor's work as an actress, activist, humanitarian, savvy businesswoman and style icon.

Taylor died of congestive heart failure in March at age 79.

Slideshow: Elizabeth Taylor: Legend (on this page)

Two other offerings soared past $100,000 ? a Chanel ball gown and cape with shoes and matching bag, which fetched $134,500; and a Versace beaded bolero jacket emblazoned with images of Taylor in her film roles, which sold for $128,500.

A few pieces of jewelry included in the sale also commanded strong prices, notably a fish charm necklace estimated at $500 which sold for $30,000 and a pair of rock crystal and gold Gucci ear pendants, which went for $74,500 against an estimate of $1,500.

The jewelry portion of the auction fetched over $137 million. Highlights were $11.8 million for a pearl necklace and more than $8.8 million for a diamond ring given to her by Burton. Prices include the buyer's premium.

The Taylor auctions continue on Thursday with a memorabilia and fine arts sale. Online auctions of some 1,000 lower-priced items from Taylor's estate are running concurrently, and end Saturday.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45681107/ns/today-entertainment/

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Nissan Leaf to get inductive charging, lose its stem in 2013 (video)

Nissan has big plans for the still-budding Leaf. The Japanese automaker lit up its impressive Leaf-powered Smart House at the Tokyo Motor Show last week, but also demoed its wireless charging solution for a much smaller crowd at the company's Oppama factory. The device uses electromagnetic induction to transfer power between a charging pad and a receiver on the bottom of the car, with an efficiency level between 80 and 90 percent -- simply park your EV directly above the system to begin charging, and monitor progress on the ground transmission unit's control panel. The pad is expected to become available as soon as 2013, but will only be compatible with new vehicles, so you won't be able to use it with an older Leaf, unfortunately. There's a silent demo video waiting for you just past the break.

Continue reading Nissan Leaf to get inductive charging, lose its stem in 2013 (video)

Nissan Leaf to get inductive charging, lose its stem in 2013 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 20:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/05/nissan-leaf-to-get-inductive-charging-lose-its-stem-in-2013-vi/

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