Wednesday, October 31, 2012

ConEd prepped for big storm, got even bigger one

Streets around a Con Edison substation are flooded as the East River overflows into the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, N.Y., as Sandy moves through the area on Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Superstorm Sandy zeroed in on New York's waterfront with fierce rain and winds that shuttered most of the nation's largest city Monday, darkened the financial district and left a huge crane hanging off a luxury high-rise. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

Streets around a Con Edison substation are flooded as the East River overflows into the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, N.Y., as Sandy moves through the area on Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. Superstorm Sandy zeroed in on New York's waterfront with fierce rain and winds that shuttered most of the nation's largest city Monday, darkened the financial district and left a huge crane hanging off a luxury high-rise. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)

This photo taken Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, shows what appear to be transformers exploding after much of lower Manhattan lost power during hurricane Sandy in New York. After a gigantic wall of water defied elaborate planning and swamped underground electrical equipment at a Consolidated Edison substation in Manhattan's East Village, about 250,000 lower Manhattan customers were left without power. (AP Photo/Karly Domb Sadof)

Consolidated Edision trucks are submerged on 14th Street near the ConEd power plant, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012, in New York. Sandy knocked out power to at least 3.1 million people, and New York's main utility said large sections of Manhattan had been plunged into darkness by the storm, with 250,000 customers without power as water pressed into the island from three sides, flooding rail yards, subway tracks, tunnels and roads. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

FILE -In this Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012, file photo, workers clear debris outside the Consolidated Edison power sub-station on 14th Street. After a gigantic wall of water defied elaborate planning and swamped underground electrical equipment at a Consolidated Edison substation in Manhattan's East Village, about 250,000 lower Manhattan customers were left without power. (AP Photo/ John Minchillo, File)

(AP) ? Blame a very high tide driven by a full moon, the worst storm surge in nearly 200 years, and the placement of underground electrical equipment in flood-prone areas for the most extensive storm-related power outage in New York City's history.

It's like what happened at the Fukushima nuclear complex in Japan last year ? without the radiation. At a Consolidated Edison substation in Manhattan's East Village, a gigantic wall of water defied elaborate planning and expectations, swamped underground electrical equipment, and left about 250,000 lower Manhattan customers without power.

Last year, the surge from Hurricane Irene reached 9.5 feet at the substation. ConEd figured it had that covered.

The utility also figured the infrastructure could handle a repeat of the highest surge on record for the area ? 11 feet during a hurricane in 1821, according to the National Weather Service. After all, the substation was designed to withstand a surge of 12.5 feet.

With all the planning, and all the predictions, planning big was not big enough. Superstorm Sandy went bigger ? a surge of 14 feet.

"Nobody predicted it would be that high," said ConEd spokesman Allan Drury.

At one point, nearly 1 million ConEd customers lost electricity in and near the city ? a record number for the utility. But the signature event came when a surge of water pushed forward by the storm's winds poured over the banks of the East River near the substation on 13th Street.

As water poured into the substation Monday night, the blinding flash of an explosion lit the most famous skyline in the world. A huge section of the city that never sleeps fell into darkness.

It's exactly what a proactive ConEd hoped to avoid by shutting down three similar power networks in Manhattan and one in Brooklyn in advance of the storm surge.

However, the combination of circumstances, notably an extraordinary high tide, pushed massive amounts of water deep into the city. The underground infrastructure was suddenly vulnerable.

As the storm's predicted path zeroed in on New York City, ConEd brought on extra work crews and laid plans to shut down some underground equipment in lower Manhattan and other parts of the city.

By late Monday afternoon, the utility started to notify Manhattan customers south of 36th Street that power might be shut off if underground equipment was flooded with corrosive, destructive seawater. The company gave the same heads-up to some customers in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx.

By mid-evening, though, conditions had worsened. More than 150,000 customers in New York City and Westchester County were already off grid. The utility began turning off the power, as a precaution, to a section of lower Manhattan, including Wall Street, in an attempt to stem damage. Shortly afterward, the company began cutting electricity in parts of Brooklyn too; a total of 220,000 other customers were already in the dark.

Less than an hour later, more equipment flooded, sparks flew, and the blast boomed across the East River and throughout lower Manhattan from what ConEd believes was a circuit breaker at its flooded substation.

The flooded equipment had failed.

When live electric equipment is inundated with salt water, electricity escapes every which way, sending sparks flying and damaging equipment. "You see a huge blast just from the short circuit," says Arshad Mansoor, senior vice president for research and development at the Electric Power Research Institute, an industry-funded research group.

As day broke Tuesday, the company was busily assessing damage and fixing equipment. But downed trees and wires, as well as lingering flood waters, made it hard for repair crews to reach some areas. The utility was able to get at least 140,000 customers back on the grid within several hours.

But hundreds of thousands of others hunkered down for a longer outage. ConEd said customers served by underground equipment should be restored to service in four days. Those who get power from overhead lines are expected to wait a week. That's because there are so many fallen lines.

The most densely populated parts of the city, mostly in Manhattan and Brooklyn, are served by underground transmission wires. These offer protection from wind and falling tree limbs that plague overhead wires and make the suburbs far more vulnerable to outages.

But underground wires can flood and be more difficult to repair, especially in low-lying areas. It can be harder for workers to get to the wires because manholes flood. When water recedes, it can be harder to find problems, pull out wires and equipment, dry them, fix them, and slide them back into place.

The damage assessment could take days to complete.

To engineers like Joannes Westerink, a University of Notre Dame researcher who is working on a computer model for future New York City storm surges, this was all predictable.

"You build infrastructure too low, and you run into trouble," he said. "It's a recipe for disaster."

He said it's well known that New York City had spread to ever-lower zones in modern history. He cited Battery Park at the tip of Manhattan as a dramatic example.

ConEd could likely have shut down more networks served by the 13th Street substation before the storm arrived, but that would have meant cutting power to tens of thousands of people and critical facilities like hospitals. Even though hospitals have backup power generators, they too can fail. Generators at New York University Langone Medical Center went down Monday night, and patients were evacuated.

"You have to make the decision to shut off power to a substation very, very carefully, especially if it serves critical facilities," Mansoor said. The decision can turn into a lose-lose situation.

Despite the latest damage, Mansoor called the New York City system the most reliable in the world because it's normally well protected from weather and set up with backup equipment. That protects the city from minor disruptions and helps keep major disruptions from cascading through the city.

No system, he said, can be designed to withstand every storm, no matter how severe.

Carol J. Friedland, a Louisiana State University engineer who has studied the impact of flooding on electrical systems, said more measures should be taken to protect equipment in low-lying places. For example, sea walls can be raised, and equipment can sometimes be relocated.

"My personal opinion ... is that there should be more resilience built into these types of infrastructure, because when the power goes out, it disrupts the entire community," she said.

Massoud Amin, a University of Minnesota electrical engineering professor who has studied power outages, said the storm underscores the need to improve the nation's electric grid by stringing more high-voltage wire and using modern sensor technology to spot problems sooner, isolate damage, and speed recovery from outages.

"Our electrical infrastructure system is a marvel of engineering for the last century," Amin said. "The grid operators and the power companies are doing the best they can."

It is too soon to say if anything more could have been done to keep the New York City grid working. Under state regulations, ConEd will be required to file a report on the outage to the New York State Department of Public Service within 60 days of power restoration. That agency's staff will evaluate how problems were handled and if improvements can be made for the future, according to agency spokeswoman Pamela Carter.

___

AP writer Jeff Donn reported from Plymouth, Mass. and Dave Carpenter from Chicago. AP writers Scott Mayerowitz and David Koenig contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-30-Superstorm-Con%20Ed/id-7ab39e2fd6b4489dbd25f40118cd308f

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GM spends $3.6 billion on lump-sum pension buyouts

DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Co spent $3.6 billion on pension buyouts this year for white-collar retirees as part of a plan to cut about one-fifth of its global pension liability.

About 30 percent of 44,000 eligible salaried retirees agreed to take a lump-sum payment in lieu of monthly pension checks, the largest U.S. automaker said in its quarterly securities filing on Wednesday.

GM reported surprisingly strong quarterly earnings earlier in the day, sending its shares up 10 percent to $25.57.

The automaker paid an average of $273,000 to each of the 13,200 retirees that accepted the program. The lump-sum buyouts were paid using pension plan assets, GM said.

In June, the automaker estimated that 42,000 retirees were eligible for lump-sum payments. GM also said it would shift management of pension plans for 118,000 salaried retirees to a unit of Prudential Financial Inc.

The deal is expected to close on November 1, GM said.

The actions will cut $29 billion from GM's $134 billion global pension obligation, GM said Wednesday in a statement accompanying the third-quarter results.

That is $3 billion better than GM projected when it announced plans to shrink its large pension obligation, one of the few issues left untouched during its 2009 U.S.-financed bankruptcy restructuring.

In connection with these transactions, GM will make $2.6 billion in cash contributions to its salaried pension plan, less than the $3.5 billion to $4.5 billion it previously projected.

Additionally, GM will record a $2.9 billion pretax charge in the fourth quarter as a special item. It had earlier estimated a charge between $2.5 billion and $3.5 billion.

(Reporting by Deepa Seetharaman; editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Matthew Lewis)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gm-says-12-600-white-collar-retirees-lump-134821072--finance.html

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MONTIBUS COMMUNITAS Montibus Communitas music reviews ...

Montibus Communitas Montibus Communitas album cover 0.00 | ratings | 0 reviews | 0% 5 stars
Write a review
Studio Album, released in 2012

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Amaru (18:22)
2. El R?o Al Amanecer (6:14)
3. Salmo A Cristo (6:02)
4. Semilla (15:14)

Total Time 45:52

Lyrics

Search MONTIBUS COMMUNITAS Montibus Communitas lyrics

Music tabs (tablatures)

Search MONTIBUS COMMUNITAS Montibus Communitas tabs

Line-up / Musicians

- Sergio Zanabria / percussion
- Pedro Fukuda / guitar, percussion, pan flute, quena, voices, organ
- Carlos Vidal / bass
- Anna Cuadra / violin, percussion, voices
- Paul Saavedra / synthesizer, traverse flute, voices
- Brayan Buckt / guitar, percussion, voices, organ, pan flute, quena

Releases information

MP3 downloadable in their bandcamp (http://montibuscommunitas.bandcamp.com/)

Thanks to damoxt7942 for the addition
Edit this entry

Source: http://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=39497

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South Dakota to execute man for 1990 murder of nine-year-old girl

(Reuters) - A man convicted of raping and murdering a 9-year-old girl after kidnapping her from a convenience store in 1990 is scheduled to die by lethal injection on Tuesday night in South Dakota, the state's second execution this month.

Donald Moeller, 60, who had declared his innocence and fought for two decades to prevent his execution, admitted during a court hearing in early October that he had committed the crime and stopped appeals that would further delay his death sentence from being carried out.

His execution is scheduled for 10 p.m. Central Time on Tuesday at the state prison in Sioux Falls.

According to court records, Moeller abducted Becky O'Connell from a Sioux Falls convenience store where she had gone to buy candy and repeatedly raped and stabbed her. Her body was found in a wooded area the next morning with extensive knife wounds.

Moeller was convicted of rape and murder and sentenced to death in 1992, but was granted a new trial after the state Supreme Court ruled that testimony of previous attempted sexual assaults on three other people should not have been permitted.

Moeller was convicted and sentenced to death again in 1997. He continued appeals until recent weeks but at a federal court hearing in early October he admitted the crimes.

"If the rape and murder of Rebecca O'Connell does not deserve the death penalty, then I guess nothing does," Moeller told the judge, according to court records.

Executions have been rare in South Dakota. Before this year, the state had put to death only two inmates since 1913. On Oct 15, it executed Eric Robert on October 15 for the killing of prison guard Ron Johnson during a failed escape attempt.

If Moeller's lethal injection is carried out on Tuesday, he will be the 34th inmate executed in the United States in 2012, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

(Reporting by David Bailey; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and David Storey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-dakota-execute-man-1990-murder-nine-old-142727426.html

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Roku Adds Universal Search For Netflix, Amazon, Hulu Plus ...

Have a Roku streaming device? Cool. Now have a movie or TV show you want to watch, but don?t know whether it?s on Netflix, or Amazon, or Hulu? Well, I?ve got good news for you, as Roku has just launched a universal search feature, which will help you discover content available across some of the more popular video services available on its streaming set-top boxes.

The availability of a new, universal search option will help to solve a major problem that exists not just on Roku, but on most devices capable of streaming video from multiple channels or apps. That is, when faced with hundreds of thousands of pieces of content across multiple services, it?s nearly impossible to know where to find a single piece of content. And in the case of Roku in particular, going into one channel to search for a piece of content ? only to not find it ? can be a frustrating experience, thanks to the overall side-scrolling UI and lack of a keyboard on its remote.

Other streaming devices have solved for the search issue in a few different ways. In the case of the iPad, there are now universal search and discovery apps, like Fanhattan or Dijit?s NextGuide, which collapse multiple streaming services into one easy-to-navigate interface. And with the availability of new video services, Microsoft recently rolled out a universal search function for its Xbox Live service.

In Roku?s case, the new Roku Search channel will peer into some of the most popular apps available on the device, including Netflix, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu Plus, Crackle, VUDU, and HBO GO. In addition to searching for a movie or TV show title, users can also search for available titles that include specific actors or directors. Once you?ve found a title you?re looking for, you can see which services a piece of content is available on and choose between them.

I played around with the new Roku Search feature and found it a welcome change to the old way of finding anything on the Roku device ? i.e. endlessly poking around. But, to be honest, it?s still pretty clunky due to the general Roku UI and the way you have to scroll through and click letters to search on the screen.

Roku says that there are more than 130,000 titles searchable through the new channel, as well as nearly 100,000 actors and directors. Roku Search will work with all Roku 2, Roku LT, and new Roku HD players, as well as the Roku Streaming Stick. And users of the Roku iOS and Android mobile apps will be able to access the keyboard through those apps, eliminating some of the up-down-left-right issues scrolling through letters on the device.

Roku Search became available as part of a free update that the company will push to users over the next week. Or, if you?re impatient, just go to Settings, choose ?Software Update,? and the streaming box should update to the latest version and install Roku Search via channel code.


Roku is a consumer electronics firm which specializes in home digital media products. They?re best known for creating the first set-top streaming box for Netflix. The company was founded by ReplayTV founder Anthony Wood. ?Roku? means ?six? in Japanese, a reference to the six companies Wood has launched.

? Learn more

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2012/10/29/roku-universal-search/

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Travelers, cargo stranded as airports, rails assess damage

(Reuters) - As rail, transit, airline and port workers dug through debris, dealt with power outages and assessed damage on Tuesday, one thing became increasingly clear:

Restoring full transportation could take some time.

Hurricane Sandy's assault on the eastern United States so brutally flooded tracks and roads, felled trees and downed power lines, it could be days or weeks before travelers and cargo are moving around normally again, officials said.

The three major New York area airports, which serve the nation's busiest airspace, remained closed on Tuesday, and officials said they had no estimate for when the airports would fully reopen.

Late Tuesday, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said it was possible that there would be limited service on Wednesday at John F. Kennedy International Airport. There was no indication that LaGuardia and Newark Liberty would offer service on Wednesday. The three airports handle 300,000 passengers a day.

Nearly 16,000 flights have been canceled since Sunday as a result of the storm, including 7,791 canceled on Monday, 6,047 on Tuesday and 635 so far for Wednesday, according to flight tracking service FlightAware.com.

Airlines said they planned to restart service Tuesday at some East Coast airports, including Boston and Philadelphia. Both Dulles and Reagan National in Washington, D.C., were open during the storm and airlines are starting to bring personnel and planes back; limited operations were expected to begin Tuesday afternoon, said Kimberly Gibbs, a spokeswoman with Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority.

"New York airports are still a question," JetBlue spokeswoman Allison Steinberg said on Tuesday. "We are waiting for condition reports from the Port Authority, but we are ready to deploy our plan to resume operations to JFK, LaGuardia and Newark tomorrow afternoon."

And even if the airports reopen, travelers' itineraries are likely to be tangled throughout the week as airlines sort out getting their people, planes and passengers into position.

"If flights (in the New York area) started to resume as early as tomorrow, it could be four to five days before we start to see schedules get back to normal," said Jeanenne Tornatore, a senior editor with online travel agency Orbitz Worldwide. "I think it will be into the late weekend."

Most Amtrak service along the busy Northeast corridor remained suspended for a second day Tuesday, but officials were working to reopen some service Wednesday.

"We have crews out there right now assessing and making necessary repairs," said Christina Leeds, an Amtrak spokeswoman.

United Parcel Service, the world's largest package delivery company, said it had resumed deliveries to hospitals and clinics in Manhattan and New Jersey where roads are safe.

But delivery remained halted in Washington, D.C., Baltimore and Philadelphia. UPS is "respecting areas where government officials only want emergency responders out in Delaware, New Jersey, Philly and parts of Maryland and Virginia," spokeswoman Susan Rosenberg said.

FedEx Corp said it was working to resume service on Wednesday in affected areas, but that hub airport closures and storm debris would affect service. "If you're at a house blockaded by fallen trees, we won't be able to get to it," said Scott Fiedler, a spokesman.

In New York, workers from the Port Authority and the Federal Aviation Administration are assessing damage at major airports, including power issues, possible damage to structures and other safety checks, the FAA and the Port Authority said.

Airlines needed to bring back planes, which were flown out to avoid the storm, to resume service.

"We are focused on reopening as quickly as possible. But we will not compromise safety," said Pasquale DiFulco, a spokesman for the Port Authority. "We need to walk the runways and make sure there's no debris."

He declined to estimate when they would reopen. "Certainly we would like to within the next few days seek to resume normal operations," he said. "But a lot of things are outside our control."

The reopening of New York's transit system will play a large role in reopening the airports, because many of the workers at security checkpoints, customs and concessions, and baggage handlers and flight crews, rely on public transportation to get to work. "That's going to be a key part of the equation," DiFulco said.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said it could take four or five days to restore service on the city transit system, the nation's largest.

"The availability of public transportation will also play into the New York plan, too - so it remains very, very fluid," said JetBlue spokeswoman Steinberg.

About 220 travelers remain stranded at the airports - 100 at John F. Kennedy and 60 each at Newark Liberty and LaGuardia, DiFulco said. They were provided with cots and at least one food vendor was required to stay open 24 hours at each terminal.

"We hate to see anybody stranded," DiFulco said. "We're providing cots and water and working on food vouchers. We're doing everything we can to keep people comfortable."

Meanwhile, flights resumed Tuesday at Stewart International Airport, about 60 miles north of Manhattan, near Newburgh, New York. The first commercial flight since the storm was expected to arrive around noon Tuesday, DiFulco said.

Railway freight companies also were working to restore service. CSX Corp, the nation's second-largest publicly traded railway company, said its network remains closed from Richmond, Virginia, to Albany, New York, and that it had halted traffic originating on other lines traveling to most points between Boston and Philadelphia.

CSX said it still had a lot of its track to inspect, and that it had found flooding, downed trees and power outages along the route.

"Our engineering teams are out removing trees, making sure generators are up against power outages, and reinstalling crossing gates."

Norfolk Southern Corp said it was waiting for floodwater to subside, was clearing snow in western Virginia and West Virginia, and had a power line across tracks in Cleveland.

Airlines could lose $175 million in revenue from flights canceled because of the storm, said Michael Boyd, an aviation consultant with Boyd Group International in Evergreen, Colorado.

"None of it is life-threatening corporately, but it is significant," he said.

Boyd said Delta Air Lines, JetBlue and United would be among the carriers taking the hardest financial hit. He added that AMR Corp's American Airlines operates 25 percent of the flights at JFK.

"From the airline perspective, closing your major hubs for several days is worth of a lot of revenue," said Carter Leake, an analyst at BB&T Capital Markets in Richmond, Virginia.

Airlines have high fixed costs and the loss of revenue would likely lower profits, he added.

Philadelphia's airport did not close but Monday flights were canceled. "We had no damage to the facility, we had no flooding so we were very fortunate," airport spokeswoman Victoria Lupica said on Tuesday.

Germany's Lufthansa has an inbound and outbound flight, and cargo carriers have resumed some operations, she said.

Delta Air Lines said it resumed flights to Philadelphia on Tuesday afternoon.

Atlantic City's airport was closed except for military flights, but Spirit Airlines, the main commercial carrier there, may resume some service later on Tuesday, said Kevin Rehmann, a spokesman for the South Jersey Transportation Authority.

The area was hard hit as the hurricane came ashore Monday night. "The water is receding but it left behind lots of debris and mud and dirt," he said.

(Additional reporting by Nick Zieminksi and Emily Stephenson; Writing by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/travelers-cargo-stranded-u-airports-rails-assess-damage-204930439--sector.html

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Colin Blogs: Wines I'm Drinking: 2010 Montebaldo Garganega/Pinot ...

Tonight I tasted the 2010 Montebaldo Garganega/Pinot Grigio, an inexpensive wine I picked up at my local Grocery Outlet. It turned out to be light but tasty--just the sort of thing to go with pasta and pesto sauce. This wine, from the area around Venice, ?is 70% Garganega, 30% Pinot Grigio, the latter emphasized on the label, probably on the assumption that fewer people are familiar with Garganega than Pinot Grigio, but Garganega is the grape that makes really good Soave good, and this wine had many of the characteristics of a well made Soave.?Brief tasting notes follow.

Medium straw color. Simple grapey scents, but also with a suggestion of something nutty. Perhaps scents of candied citrus rind as well. Overall, a bit distant. Light on the palate as well, but not at all without interest. Nice balance between a ripe but delicate fruitiness and a lingering crisp acidity. Moderate to good length with the finish marked by nutty flavors and a very slight bitterness. In no way profound, but tasty wine nevertheless. Very attractively priced at $4.99 a bottle at Santa Rosa Grocery Outlet. Recommended for everyday drinking. I went back to buy a case of this. Perfect with pesto (as noted above). I bet it'd be good with other pasta dishes not using a tomato sauce (white clam sauce, perhaps?), with herbed fish, or with a simply flavored pork dish. ?

Source: http://colintalcroft.blogspot.com/2012/10/wines-im-drinking-2010-montebaldo.html

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Headbutt double knockout? Headbutt double knockout (VIDEO)

Double knockouts are already uncommon in MMA, but one happened in Poland over the weekend that is even more rare. Marcin Mencel and Mateusz Zawadzki headbutted each other, and their fight ended in a technical draw.

In case you weren't sure, that's why headbutts aren't allowed in MMA.

Thanks to MMA Fighting and MMANews.pl.

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Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/headbutt-double-knockout-headbutt-double-knockout-video-142040035--mma.html

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Two Big Commodity Themes You Should Think About

When entering the world of commodities investing, there are many things to consider. Not only are there many different commodities to choose from, but other factors such as deciding allocations and ensuring adequate liquidity must be dealt with as well. But before beginning that process, you must first have a concrete understanding of why it is you plan to enter the world of commodities. Additionally, you should have a clear understanding of those conditions that will cause you to reverse course and exit your positions. While inflation protection is often used as a reason for investing in commodities, I see two overarching themes that drive investors? desires to have portfolio exposure to commodities: future global supply/demand imbalances and currency debasement.

Prior to the 2008/2009 financial crisis, the story of global growth (specifically emerging markets growth) creating worldwide supply and demand imbalances in various commodities was at the helm of the commodities super-cycle. Then, as central banks and governments around the world ramped up the electronic printing presses and the deficit spending, the overarching theme seemed to change to that of protecting against currency debasement. This was especially true in oil (USO), gold (GLD, IAU), and silver (SLV).

If you are a commodities investor who supports the idea that global growth will create supply and demand imbalances in the near future, you need to be aware of the fact that in recent years, many investors who have moved money into commodities are simply there because they want to protect against currency debasement. Therefore, if you are investing in, say, oil, using traditional fundamentals as your guide, you may be overlooking the difficult to quantify premium that oil receives due to quantitative easing. If global growth does pick up one day by enough to allow the Fed to stop its unconventional monetary policy, that does not necessarily portend significantly higher oil prices.? After all, there are plenty of investors who have gotten long oil to protect against currency debasement that may decide to leave commodities in favor of assets they historically invested in, such as stocks.

Likewise, if you are a silver investor attempting to protect against currency debasement by getting long the precious metal, you may be overlooking silver?s potential to sell off violently in the case of a worldwide recession. While unconventional monetary policy certainly helps the price of silver, it is very difficult to say with certainty to what degree the price of silver could ignore a global downturn.

Each commodity investor is likely to have an element of both future supply/demand imbalances and currency debasement as a part of his or her investing thesis. Before choosing the commodities in which to invest, think through the effects that each of the two dominating investment themes currently has on every commodity you are considering for investment.? Moreover, think through how the future prices of those commodities may be impacted by a change in the relative importance of each of the themes.

For example, if currency debasement becomes less of a concern in the future at a time when global growth is ramping up, what will this do to the prices of various commodities?? It is also necessary to think through a scenario in which currency debasement becomes less of a concern at the same time that global growth slows or stagnates. Likewise, what if global growth accelerates and central banks don?t take their foot off the gas, continuing ahead with unconventional monetary policy?? Under that scenario, certain commodities will likely be more favored than others.

Before allocating any money to commodities, you should think through the types of scenarios outlined in the previous paragraph. That exercise will be helpful when deciding which commodities best fit today?s investing environment as well as when crafting your exit plan.

By. The Financial Lexicon

Read more from The Financial Lexicon:
The 5 Fundamentals of Building a Retirement Portfolio

Source: http://oilprice.com/Finance/investing-and-trading-reports/Two-Big-Commodity-Themes-You-Should-Think-About.html

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89% Frankenweenie

Question: Have you noticed the past few Tim Burton films are missing that quintessential essence we have grown to love over the last few decades? I can't quite put my finger as to why or what's gone awry, but I really haven't enjoyed his last few films until Frankenweenie! Yep, I saw this one and felt Tim Burton finally got back to his roots. Actually, I found out, after the fact, that this is a remake of a short film Burton did in 1984. Coincidence? Maybe. Perhaps I was able to connect to the story line in Burton's latest stop motion film. I am a huge dog lover and have unfortunately lost a couple of pets throughout my life. Actually my first dog, Auggie, died similarly to Sparky in Frankenweenie. Being the same age as Victor, I could feel his extreme pain over the loss of his best friend. Now I did not try to revive Auggie like Frankenstein's monster, but I completely empathized with the boy trying to fill the void by any means possible. This film is actually listed as horror (plus comedy and animation), and I will say for young children it would be wise for parents to heed that genre listing. Yes, it is rated PG, but for those young children who might scare easily this story is a bit on the dark side and quite intense at times. In fact, a girl and her father left during the film never to return. I noticed the stuffed animal in her hands and she was holding on to it for dear life as she briskly walked out of the theatre. My guess she was about 8 years-old. Now, my nearly 11-year old daughter had no qualms or fear of the story line and was delighted with the entire film. For the parents who see this film I imagine you will revel in some nostalgic memories that Frankenweenie will evoke. I don't want to give away too much but one character in this movie was based on and looks nearly identical to another character from one of the stop motion films from our youth. I will let you figure out which one. Also, there are others who were obviously based on classic horror film characters. I counted at least three but have a feeling there might be more. And I would probably know if their more if I knew a lot more about horror films, but sadly, I was not unlike the little 8 year-old who skedaddled out of the theatre when I was her age. All-in-all, Frankenweenie is the classic Frankenstein tale, no pun intended, so it won't win any originality awards, but there was a good message about loss, science and trying to obtain things for the wrong reasons. A good message for the youngsters out there - and perhaps for a few adults as well. My favorite part: The one character that reminded me of another character from my youth. My least favorite: That it reminded me of the loss of my first dog. Directed (original story) by Tim Burton, Walt Disney Pictures, 2012 Screenplay: Leonard Ripps, John August and Tim Burton. Starring: Martin Short, Catherine O'Hara, Winona Ryder and Martin Landau. Genre: Animation, Comedy, Horror and Sci-fi. Length: 87 minutes Rating: PG Review: 7 out of 10

October 26, 2012

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/frankenweenie_2012/

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Genetics' role in breast cancer

DNA is the genetic ?blueprint? found in the center of each cell that affects inherited traits such as hair color, eye color and height. It also can affect whether a person is likely to develop certain diseases, such as cancer.

Michael Pierce, director of the Cancer Center at the University of Georgia and the Mudter Professor in Cancer Research, believes that through genetic research and testing, doctors won?t have to treat cancers in a ?one size fits all? kind of way.

Genetic researchers continue to look at how traits are passed down from parents to children through genes in an effort to understand the hereditary link between cancer and the sequence of mutations in a persons genes.

With that information, they hope to make new medications that can block or kill cancer in the future.

?Blasting a patient with a toxic drug that kills any cells that are dividing rapidly is a sledge hammer approach that we?ve done for years, and until we identify all of these genes and make (new) drugs, (that approach is) going to continue to happen,? Pierce said.

Genetic testing shows changes, or mutations, in a person?s genes or chromosomes. If a doctor understands a patient?s cancer mutations, he or she might be able to treat the cancer with a specific drug or a combination of drugs that will attack that specific cancer.

One example Pierce sited is the drug Gleevec that?s used to treat people diagnosed with chronic myelogenous (or myeloid) leukemia (CML). CML occurs when one chromosome breaks off and attaches itself to another chromosome during normal cell division.

Each cell contains an enzyme that?s normally tightly regulated and only is ?turned on? for a short period of time in white blood cells.

When the cell overproduces the enzyme, it can lead to cancer.

Gleevec is a pill that finds the enzyme in the cells that is being overproduced and shuts it down, creating a type of cure and allowing people to live a normal life for many years.

?That?s an example of a mutation and a drug to kill that mutation. It?s an effective approach,? Pierce said. ?Patients have to take the drug for the rest of their life because it?s not curing the mutation, and it?s not fixing the chromosomal problem, but the drug keeps treating it.?

CML is an exception right now.

?The goal is to look at people?s genes when they have cancer, find the mutation and match it up with a drug that stops that mutation,? Pierce said.

Another treatment is monoclonal antibody therapy that is used to specifically attack a type of cancer cell.

Fifteen years ago, a woman diagnosed with HER2-positive breast cancer was thought to have a very aggressive breast cancer and her survival rate was less than five years.

Through genetic research, a specific molecule on the surface of the cell has been identified, and Herceptin, a targeted antibody, has been created to attack the molecule on the cell surface.

Herceptin now is a successful treatment of HER2-positive breast cancer.

Cancer vaccines, such as the one marketed to help prevent HPV, are another positive solution in the fight against cancer.

?Oral HPV is the fastest growing cancer in the U.S. right now, and it can be fought with a vaccine if people get it,? Pierce said. ?There?s promising research on the horizon (to develop vaccines for other cancers). It?s not all being done in the U.S., but there?s some promising research out there.?

The most important line of defense when it comes to cancer is early detection.

Molly Klein is the director of Piedmont Clinical Genetics and a board certified genetic counselor in Atlanta, and travels to Athens Regional Medical Center once a month to provide genetic testing and counseling to Athens-area residents.

Cancer-related genetic tests are done mostly for predictive reasons and are used to see if a person has a certain genetic mutation known to increase the risk for a certain condition or disease, such as cancer, or to confirm a suspected mutation in an individual or family.

?If a person tests positive for a mutation, we review national guidelines for medical management, which includes high-risk screening and potential surgical intervention,? Klein said. ?If they test negative, we look at the family history to determine if something hereditary is going on.?

There are a number of inherited predispositions to various cancers that are now better understood because researchers can sequence all of the mutations in a person?s genes. This is how the BRCA 1 and BRCA 2 genes related to breast and ovarian cancers were discovered.

?With sequencing, I think we?re going to find more genes that we can say are risk factors for particular kinds of cancers and be able to trace them,? Pierce said. ?Without knowing you have a familial component to cancer, people may not get tested early, and early detection is key. Almost every cancer can be treated successfully if it?s found early enough. If we get better at early diagnosis, that?s going to accelerate successful treatments that we can bring to cancers.?

In the example of breast cancer, a negative test result for the breast cancer gene rules out only two genes, so people still should check into their family history.

?The family history is the golden rule,? Klein said. ?When we look at the family history, and it looks like (there?s a hereditary link there), we talk about high-risk breast cancer screening and if they might be candidates for it. If they are a candidate, we refer them to a breast surgeon,? Klein said.

?People who are proactive about their health care benefit from knowing their family history and potential genetic testing results because they will know how to take care of themselves, and their doctors will know if they need to be managed as a high-risk patient, and also can provide predictive information for additional family members, such as children and grandchildren,? Klein said. ?It never hurts to ask questions, and I encourage people to be proactive in seeking out that information because it could impact their health.?

? Follow faith, health and Blueprint reporter April Burkhart at www.facebook.com/AprilBurkhartABH.

Source: http://onlineathens.com/health/2012-10-29/genetics-role-breast-cancer

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Monday, October 29, 2012

US seeks Algeria's support in possible Mali move

Algerian Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci, centre, greets US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, upon her arrival at Houari Boumediene Airport, in Algiers, Algeria, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. US Secretary Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is on a five-day trip overseas to increase pressure on Mali's al-Qaida-linked rebels and help Balkan nations end long-simmering ethnic and political disagreements. (AP Photo, Saul Loeb, Pool)

Algerian Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci, centre, greets US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, upon her arrival at Houari Boumediene Airport, in Algiers, Algeria, Monday, Oct. 29, 2012. US Secretary Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is on a five-day trip overseas to increase pressure on Mali's al-Qaida-linked rebels and help Balkan nations end long-simmering ethnic and political disagreements. (AP Photo, Saul Loeb, Pool)

(AP) ? U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton sought Algeria's assistance on Monday for any future military intervention in Mali, pressing the North African nation to provide intelligence ? if not boots on the ground ? to help rout the al-Qaida-linked militants across its southern border.

Clinton, on the first stop of a five-day trip overseas, met with Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika as the United States and its allies ramped up preparations to fight northern Mali's breakaway Islamist republic.

When Mali's democratically elected leader was ousted in a military coup in March, Tuareg rebels seized on the power vacuum and within weeks took control of the north, aided by an Islamist faction. The Islamists then quickly ousted the Tuaregs and took control of half the country.

The U.N. Security Council has unanimously approved the idea of an African-led military force to help the Malian army oust Islamic militants, but its details are still unclear.

One plan would see Mali's embattled government in the south and its West African neighbors taking the military lead to battle with the militants, with the United States and European countries in support.

Any military intervention would likely require Algeria, whose reforms have headed off the Arab Spring tumult experienced by neighbors such as Libya and Tunisia and left it with the strongest military and best intelligence in the region.

Clinton said she and Bouteflika spoke at length about Mali, with the Algerian leader appearing to caution against any rash action.

"I very much appreciated the president's analysis based on his long experience as to the many complicated factors that have to be addressed to deal with the internal insecurity in Mali and the terrorist and drug trafficking threat that is posed to the region and beyond," Clinton told reporters.

She said they agreed to continue discussions with the U.N. and African nations "to determine the most effective approaches that we should be taking."

Washington is keen to eliminate northern Mali as a haven for al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, which may have been involved in September's attack on the U.S. Consulate in the Libyan city of Benghazi. Mali even came up in the U.S. election campaign, with Republican challenger Mitt Romney citing the African nation's instability in a foreign policy debate with President Barack Obama.

As further evidence of the U.S. intensifying its diplomatic work in Mali, Maria Otero, an undersecretary of state for civilian security, democracy and human rights, was to travel to Mali on Monday. She is the highest-ranking Obama administration official to visit since the coup. She'll meet with Mali's prime minister, human rights activists and internal refugees.

The 15-nation West African regional bloc, the Economic Community of West African States, or ECOWAS, has discussed sending 3,000 troops to help oust the Islamist militants from the north. Many, though, question how Mali's weak military could take the lead on such an intervention and analysts believe more ECOWAS soldiers would be needed to take and hold the France-sized desert area now controlled by the militants.

While the U.S. wants to see the rebels routed, it has no interest in active involvement in the military mission, unless Mali and West African states explicitly ask for such assistance, a senior American diplomat in Africa said. The official demanded anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

From Algeria, Clinton left for three days of talks in the Balkans, arriving Monday night in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo.

She plans to join the European Union's top diplomat in meetings with the leaders of Bosnia, Serbia and Kosovo, urging those nations to make the necessary reforms to join the EU and NATO. She'll finish with meetings in Croatia and Albania, NATO's two newest members.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-29-Clinton/id-623d1db3c6c8445e900c1762f166e558

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Browns edge Chargers 7-6 in rough weather

By TOM WITHERS

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 3:41 p.m. ET Oct. 28, 2012

CLEVELAND (AP) - Trent Richardson's sore ribs didn't slow him down, and neither did the nasty weather.

Cleveland's rookie running back rushed for 122 yards and scored a touchdown, leading the Browns to a soggy, wind-whipped 7-6 win over the San Diego Chargers on Sunday.

Richardson, pulled last week at Indianapolis when he was ineffective because of a rib injury, carried 24 times as the Browns (2-6) slopped their way to a second straight home win - and first for new owner Jimmy Haslam. Richardson scored on a 26-yard run in the first quarter and the Browns were able to hang on despite not generating much offense in blustery, wet conditions.

The Chargers (3-4) dropped their third straight. San Diego had a final chance, but quarterback Philip Rivers' pass was batted away by Browns cornerback Buster Skrine with 1:24 left.

Rivers finished 18 of 34 for 154 yards but had a potential touchdown pass dropped by Robert Meachem in the third quarter.

With winds off Lake Erie gusting to more than 40 mph and a steady rain falling from the opening kick to the final whistle, neither offense could get anything going.

So the Browns turned to Richardson, their young star who had been limited in practice all week with a rib injury he sustained two weeks ago in a win over Cincinnati. But unlike last week when he was tentative hitting the hole, Richardson ran with purpose from the outset. He also had an important 12-yard reception in the fourth quarter when the Browns were backed up near their goal line.

Because of the bad weather, the Chargers, too, were forced to go to the ground and Ryan Mathews picked up 95 yards on 24 attempts.

Nick Novak kicked field goals of 43 and 31 yards for San Diego, which blew second-half leads in consecutive losses to New Orleans and Denver before its bye. But the Chargers never got ahead in this one and Meachem's huge drop will be the play that haunts coach Norv Turner this week.

Richardson's TD run gave the Browns a 7-0 lead in the first quarter.

Two plays after quarterback Brandon Weeden converted on a 4th-and-1 with a sneak to keep the drive alive, Richardson took a handoff up the middle, broke two tackles and was kept upright by right guard Shawn Lauvao, who wrapped his hands around his teammate, before scampering into the end zone for his fifth TD.

The Browns were effective getting Richardson outside with quick pitches, plays that allowed him to minimize smacked in the ribs and forced some of the Chargers defensive backs into situations where they had to try to bring down the bruising back in space - not an easy job.

San Diego's offense sputtered for much of the first half but Rivers moved the Chargers in the final two minutes, setting up Novak's 43-yard field goal as time expired that cut Cleveland's lead to 7-3.

The Chargers missed a chance to take the lead midway through the third when Meachem failed to hang on to what would have been an easy TD pass. Meachem got behind Cleveland's secondary and was wide open at about the 25-yard line when he let Rivers' toss slip through his hands.

Novak's 31-yard field goal brought the Chargers within 7-6 in the third.

Following Richardson's TD, the Browns punted on eight consecutive possessions and were in trouble backed up at their own 7. On second down, Weeden's pass was tipped at the line and nearly picked off by safety Atari Bigby. Given new life, Weeden then hit Richardson on a swing pass for a critical first down and the Browns were able to run off some time before Rivers got the ball back with 2:36 left.

But San Diego only got as far as Cleveland's 44 and Rivers threw four straight incompletions to end a frustrating day.

---

Online: http://pro32.ap.org/poll and http://twitter.com/AP-NFL

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Bears rally past Cam, Panthers

Robbie Gould hit a 41-yard field goal as time expired to hand the Carolina Panthers a crushing defeat 23-22 in a game the Panthers had dominated.

Falcons crush Eagles in battle of the birds

Matt Ryan threw touchdown passes on Atlanta's first three possessions against Philadelphia and new defensive coordinator Todd Bowles, and the Falcons remained the NFL's only unbeaten team with a 30-17 victory over the Eagles on Sunday.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/49589570/ns/sports-nfl/

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Zeller near unanimous preseason pick

The biggest man on The Associated Press' preseason All-America team got the most votes.

Seven-foot sophomore center Cody Zeller, the main reason Indiana is the preseason No. 1 for the first time in 33 years, was one vote shy of being a unanimous selection for the preseason All-America team.

Zeller, who averaged 15.6 points and 6.6 rebounds while shooting 62.3 percent from the field, received 64 votes from the national media panel which selects the weekly Top 25.

Also on the team announced Monday were junior forwards Doug McDermott of Creighton and Deshaun Thomas of Ohio State and three guards ? seniors Isaiah Canaan of Murray State and C.J. McCollum of Lehigh and sophomore Trey Burke of Michigan.

McDermott was named on 62 ballots, while Canaan was on 43 and Thomas 26. McCollum and Burke tied for the fifth spot with 16 votes each.

Zeller is one of five starters back for the Hoosiers and when a top-flight recruiting class is added in there are a lot expectations for the No. 1 team.

"I don't know that we've really set any goals as a team, but obviously, we want to win a national championship," Zeller said. "We're not going to guarantee anything. We're just going to play and see where it takes us."

McDermott, who averaged 22.9 points (third in the nation) and 8.2 rebounds while shooting 60.1 percent from the field and 48.6 percent on 3s for the Bluejays last season in earning first-team All-America honors, has the added pressure of playing for his father, Greg. The relationship is the key to Creighton trying to become the latest mid-major to possibly go deep in the NCAA tournament.

"We have a lot of expectations on ourselves," Doug McDermott said. "We know we can go far. You see Butler, VCU, teams like that that make it to the Final Four and even the national championship game. We're not thinking that far ahead, but we know we're capable of doing what those teams have done in the past."

Canaan earned second-team All-America honors last season when he led Murray State to a 23-game winning streak to start the season, top 10 ranking, the third round of the NCAA tournament and a 31-2 record. A lot of Racers fans waited breathlessly for Canaan to announce he would skip the NBA draft and return for his senior season

Canaan averaged 19.0 points, 3.5 rebounds and 3.6 assists per game while shooting 45.6 percent from 3-point range.

"Having him back is great, and he's a tremendous kid," Murray State coach Steve Prohm said. "He will go down as if not the best player, one of the best players, ever to play at Murray State. Anytime you have an elite guard as a coach that makes you feel really good."

Thomas averaged 16 points and 5.5 rebounds a game last season playing in the same frontcourt with first-team All-America Jared Sullinger. While Sullinger left for the NBA, Thomas decided to come back and join two other returning starters in trying to get the Buckeyes past the national semifinals where they lost to Kansas.

"I knew one more year would be good for me," the 6-7 Thomas said. "I came back just for one reason ? to also go to the national championship and to win the Big Ten."

McCollum grabbed headlines last season in earning Patriot League Player of the Year honors and plenty of attention from NBA scouts. The 6-3 McCollum averaged 21.9 points, 6.5 rebounds and 3.5 assists last season, leading the Mountain Hawks in all three categories. He really opened eyes when he scored 30 points in Lehigh's NCAA tournament upset of Duke.

"C.J. has been a very reliable performer on the floor and has grown as a leader over the course of his career," Lehigh coach Brett Reed said. "Our team has a great deal of confidence because C.J. exudes confidence in his performance and that ultimately transfers to his teammates. They feel more confident in their ability because he handles pressure situations and adversity very well."

The 6-foot Burke averaged 14.8 points, 3.5 rebounds and 4.6 assists in a freshman season that saw the Wolverines crack the top 10 and share the Big Ten title.

"I'm pumped," Burke said of the upcoming season. "I'm really excited. The level of talent we have, I'm excited to see how far we can go."

Zeller, McCollum and Burke all were honorable mention selections last season.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zeller-near-unanimous-preseason-pick-161504396--spt.html

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Russian opposition leaders detained in Moscow

MOSCOW (AP) ? Moscow police on Saturday briefly detained several opposition leaders as well as a dozen other activists while they were protesting against the intensifying crackdown on Russian opposition.

Hundreds of people gathered Saturday afternoon outside the headquarters of Russian security agency FSB, a successor to the KGB, and the office of the Investigative Committee ?sometimes called the Russian FBI ? to protest the crackdown on the opposition as well as the treatment of leftist activist Leonid Razvozzhayev.

Investigators earlier this week said that Razvozzhayev had turned himself in and confessed to plotting riots. But days later, he disavowed his confession and filed a complaint over what he said was his abduction from Ukraine. Rights activists who visited Razvozzhayev in jail say he had been tortured into confessing.

Anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny as well as leftist firebrand Sergei Udaltsov and liberal Ilya Yashin were detained while they were standing in the vicinity of the FSB headquarters with posters saying "I'm against torture and repression". They were released several hours later after they were charged with staging an unsanctioned protest, which carries a fine.

Several dozen activists stood alone at various points along the route between the FSB building and the Investigative Committee headquarters, holding signs in "one-man pickets," the only legally allowed form of protest without prior approval. A few of them were detained outside the police station where the three men were kept while calling for their release.

Navalny said he thought the charges against him were fabricated and expected protesters who witnessed his arrest to support his account in court.

Elsewhere in Moscow, the owner of the Brooklyn Nets professional basketball team and former Russian presidential candidate, Mikhail Prokhorov, announced that he's leaving business to focus full-time on politics, returning to the political arena after remaining silent through a five-month Kremlin crackdown on the opposition.

Prokhorov told reporters after the conference that he wants to lead "a third power" in the country, competing both with the Kremlin and the opposition.

The 47-year-old Prokhorov, who is believed to be worth about $13 billion, finished third in Russia's presidential election in March amid speculation that his candidacy was orchestrated by the Kremlin. Though he denied the claim, he was nowhere to be seen as the government launched a crackdown on the opposition this spring, arresting activists and introducing new harsh legislation.

Prokhorov appeared Saturday at the first conference of the party he set up several months ago, announcing that he would put his money in a trust fund and let his partners at the investment vehicle Onexim manage it.

____

Nataliya Vasilyeva contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/russian-opposition-leaders-detained-moscow-142955428--finance.html

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Anonymous Is Going After Zynga For Mistreating Employees, It Has Leaked Confidential Documents And Games

6250260580_4d03ff9f5c_zAs you know, gaming company Zynga laid off employees last week and shut down a few of its offices right before its quarterly earnings call. Well, Zynga has pissed off the online group Anonymous, and it's quite serious. Here's a video just released by them, discussing exactly what it plans to do and why. CNet is also reporting on this story, and we're actively checking to see if this is a legitimate maneuver. According to BusinessInsider, the group is threatening to take down both Zynga and Facebook on November 5th. The offensive has been dubbed "#OP MaZynga"

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

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Benghazi: A Reader Assesses the Evidence (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/258736372?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Dixie Delights: The Deen Team

Paula Deen is adding to the Deen Team of bloggers this fall and I?m plum giddy to be throwing my name in the hat!? For my entry submission, I?m going to share a little bit about little ol me and then I?m going to throw out why I think I?ve got what it takes to join the team.
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All About Amanda
I?m a so-Southern girl that loves delightful d?cor, perfect parties and being queen bee in a home full of boys! I've spent my whole life living in the South. Originally from Savannah, I eventually stepped out from behind the moss curtain and made the move to Atlanta for college (Go TECH!). I always intended to go back home but two degrees, one husband, two homes and two boys later I'm here for the foreseeable future.

I love fabulous home decor, drinking sweet tea on the porch, the ballet, seersucker, monograms, Coca-Cola, reading, everything Southern, bow ties, smocked outfits and knee socks on the littles, grits, throwing parties, cooking, the beach, red apple martinis and, most of all, my family.

Amanda, Whit (almost 4 years) aka ?The Baby? and ?Cookie?,
John (almost 7 years) aka ?The PCP? (precious cutie pie) and Honey

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Top 10 Reasons Why I?ve Got What it Takes
1.? I Love Paula
As evidenced by this post last year, I LOVE Paula! I love her show, I adore her magazine, I swoon over her book (Savannah Style), I crave the buffet at The Lady and Sons, I am an unashamed rubber-necker when driving past her house on the way to my parents? home, and I admire her motivation, determination, humor and self-made success.

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2. It?s Genetic
Apparently, loving The Lady is genetic. As a child I remember Daddy-O coming home from work and telling us about the divine lunches he?d pick up from ?The Bag Lady? in one of the squares in downtown Savannah. Thirty-some odd years later and my parents live just around the bend from Paula. I?ve gotten a few excitedly hushed calls from Mother (I can all too well envision her hiding behind the co-cola end cap) telling me she's just seen Paula on aisle 3. And, on occasion, I am thrilled to open my inbox and see something like Paula?s gates decorated for Halloween (Mother is constantly on Daddy-O for careening around the bend in a manner that impedes her drive-by photography.)
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3. I?m a Mommy and a Wife
As y?all well know, Honey and I have the supreme honor of being parents to two precious littles. I adore rambling on about the good, the bad, the ugly, the unbelievable and the unforgettable of raising up two Southern Gentleman in the best way a self-professed girly-girly knows how to do. Lord knows I never ever in my wildest dreams EVER thought I?d be catching fiddlers in the marsh or dreaming up a gazillion ways to make a baseball snack look cute. (Let?s face it, I thought I?d be a unicorn-riding princess...or at the very least that I?d have a couple of unicorn-riding-princess-dreamers of my own.)
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4. I?m a Party Person
There?s nothing I love more than throwing a good party. Whether it?s a birthday party for the littles, a supper club gathering for our friends or a back to school bash for the neighbors, I take the planning, crafting, designing and cooking that goes into throwing a party super seriously.
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5. I?m an Eater
Allright y?all, confession time?this ?reason why I?ve got what it takes? originally started out as a place where I was going to flaunt my cooking skills. But I wouldn?t be fooling anyone?least of all The Queen of Southern Cuisine?with that sort of nonsense. While I do enjoy cooking, what I really love is eating. And I really super duper love making a fun family meal with recipes that don?t require a degree from the culinary institute, or ingredients that I can?t pronounce, to pull it off.
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6. I Love to Decorate
Over the last three years, Honey and I have teamed up to overhaul our 1968 forever home ? trading out the navy carpets with gold bows and the dark walls and trim for coastal accents and colors reminiscent of the rivers and marshes that we love so much. As y?all know, he finished our entire basement himself by watching YouTube videos and reading how-tos while I was teaching myself to sew drapes, skirt tables and upholster chairs. It?s been no small task to balance my love of shiny, beautiful over-the-top things with durable, down-to-earth, utterly invincible elements necessary for a house with two active (for lack of a better word) boys. This has led to crazy sounding things like mixing crystal chandeliers with outdoor rugs and family antiques with Ikea finds.
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7. I?m So-Southern
I love the South: the people of the South, the manners of the South, the ?come on over for a spell and sit on my back porch with a sweet tea while the littles catch lightening bugs in the bare feet? demeanor of the South. ?Y?all? is a sight word around these parts (I added it right to the top of the list after ?you? and ?all?) and in this house co-cola solves everything from a tummy ache to a pot roast.
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8. I?m a DIYer
The shower is a dangerous place for me. It?s the five minutes of my day (or every other day to be more exact) that I have to myself. And my mind tends to run wild thinking of things to do, things to make, things to decorate?you get the picture. So, usually with the baby as my second in command, we craft up all sorts of fun things, from d?cor to party favors to printable files for Dixie Delights? readers to download for free!
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9. I Celebrate
I celebrate holidays, birthday, accomplishments and sometimes just Mondays. There is really nothing I love more than making merry! I?m not choosy about what we celebrate, just as long as we do! I mean, it could be the last day of school, the first day our holiday elf comes for the season, a new episode of Scooby Doo, St. Patrick's Day or a spelling test. Not to get all serious on y?all, but I look at every.single.day we have together as an immense blessing and I just can?t think of a good reason not to make the most of it!
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10. I WANT IT!
As I worked on writing this ?why I?ve got what it takes? narrative (it admittedly got very long?I sure hope there wasn?t a word limit!?!?), I realized just how much I want to join the Deen Team. Y?all know I?ve got no shortage of things to rattle on about and I?d love the opportunity to share thoughts, stories, ideas and even those free printables with Paula?s readers each month. Paula, as a member of your Deen Team, I will make you proud!

With Paula?s likeness August 2008


I suspect Paula?s people will be checking in over here soon, so I?d be as pleased as punch if y?all would weigh in? Do you think I have what it takes? I would literally squeal with delight while doing a jig in my front yard if I were to be picked!
xoxo

Source: http://dixiedelights.blogspot.com/2012/10/the-deen-team.html

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Iraq bombings, house raids leave 40 dead

People gather at the scene of a bomb attack in the neighborhood of Bawiya in eastern Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. A bombing near a playground and other insurgent attacks killed 18 people including several children in Iraq on Saturday, police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

People gather at the scene of a bomb attack in the neighborhood of Bawiya in eastern Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. A bombing near a playground and other insurgent attacks killed 18 people including several children in Iraq on Saturday, police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

Iraqi children play during Eid al-Adha celebrations in Baghdad's Fadhil neighborhood, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. A bombing near a playground and other insurgent attacks killed 18 people including several children in Iraq on Saturday, police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

Iraqi children play during Eid al-Adha celebrations in Baghdad's Fadhil neighborhood, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. A bombing near a playground and other insurgent attacks killed 18 people including several children in Iraq on Saturday, police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

Children ride a donkey cart in Baghdad's Fadhil neighborhood, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012, as the nation marks the Eid al-Adha festival. A bombing near a playground and other insurgent attacks killed 18 people including several children in Iraq on Saturday, police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

Iraqi children play during Eid al-Adha celebrations in Baghdad's Fadhil neighborhood, Iraq, Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. A bombing near a playground and other insurgent attacks killed 18 people including several children in Iraq on Saturday, police said. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

(AP) ? Iraqi insurgents unleashed a string of bombings and other attacks primarily targeting the country's Shiite community on Saturday, leaving at least 40 dead in a challenge to government efforts to promote a sense of stability by preventing attacks during a major Muslim holiday.

The bloodshed appeared to be the worst in Iraq since Sept. 9, when insurgents launched a wave of bombings and other attacks that left at least 92 dead in one of the country's bloodiest days this year.

The attacks underscored the difficulties facing the country's leadership as it struggles to keep its citizens safe. Authorities had increased security in hopes of preventing attacks during the four-day Eid al-Adha celebrations, when people are off work and families gather in public places.

The deadliest attacks struck in the evening in the Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City. Police said a car packed with explosives blew up near a market, killing 12 people and wounding 27. Half an hour later, a second car bomb went off in one of Sadr city's bus stations, killing 10 and injuring 31.

Earlier in the day, a bomb exploded near playground equipment that had been set up for the holiday in a market on the capital's outskirts in the eastern neighborhood of Bawiya. Police officials said eight people were killed, including four children. Another 24 people, including children, were wounded, they added.

"Nobody expected this explosion because our neighborhood has been living in peace, away from the violence hitting the rest of the capital," said Bassem Mohammed, a 35-year-old father of three in the neighborhood who was startled by the blast.

"We feel sad for the children who thought that they would spend a happy time during Eid, but instead ended up getting killed or hurt."

Elsewhere, a bomb attached to a bus carrying Iranian Shiite pilgrims killed five people and wounded nine, according to police. The bomb, hidden on the underside of the bus, detonated as the pilgrims were heading to a Shiite shrine in Baghdad to mark the holiday.

Authorities have said they planned to increase the number of checkpoints, shut some roads and deploy extra personnel during the holiday period.

They are also relying more on undercover intelligence agents, said Lt. Col. Saad Maan Ibrahim, a spokesman for the interior ministry. He emphasized that both bombings took place on the edge of the capital rather than in densely populated areas.

"The terrorists apparently weren't able to get to the heart of the city. So they chose to attack soft targets on the outskirts," he said.

In the northern city of Mosul, gunmen broke into the houses of two Shabak families, killing a boy and his parents in one and a mother and daughter in the other, according to police. A bomb exploded near the house of another Shabak family, wounding six family members.

Shabaks are ethnically Turkomen and Shiite by religion. Most Shabaks were driven out of Mosul by Sunni militants during the sectarian fighting a few years ago.

In Tuz Khormato, about 210 kilometers (130 miles) north of Baghdad, a car bomb exploded near in a neighborhood with a Turkomen Shiite majority. Mayor Shalal Abdoul said 11 people were wounded, including three children.

Medics in nearby hospitals confirmed the casualties. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Eid al-Adha, or Feast of the Sacrifice, is a major Muslim holiday that commemorates what Muslims believe was the Prophet Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son Ismail, the Biblical Ishmael, as a test of his faith from God. Christians and Jews believe another of Abraham's sons, Isaac, was the one almost sacrificed.

The holiday, which began Friday, marks the end of the hajj pilgrimage to Mecca. Muslims worldwide typically slaughter lambs and other animals to commemorate the holiday, sharing some of the meat with the poor.

Violence has ebbed across Iraq, but insurgents frequently attack security forces and civilians in an attempt to undermine the country's Shiite-led government.

Holidays are a particular time of concern for security forces. A wave of attacks shortly before another Muslim holiday in August, Eid al-Fitr, killed more than 90 people in one of the deadliest days in Iraq this year.

___

Associated Press writer Sameer N. Yacoub contributed reporting.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-10-27-ML-Iraq/id-5d8f099ee6d14da886c44d99d2670be5

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