Saturday, October 29, 2011

PetroChina 3Q profit up 7.8 pct on strong output

(AP) ? PetroChina Ltd., China's biggest oil and gas company, saw its third-quarter profit jump 7.8 percent as higher crude oil prices and output helped to offset losses in its refining business.

The Beijing-based company reported Thursday a profit of 37.4 billion yuan ($5.9 billion) in July-September, compared with 34.7 billion yuan a year earlier.

PetroChina reported a refining loss of 41.5 billion yuan ($6.5 billion) as higher costs for imported crude oil outpaced the gains in prices for its products.

But weakness in the refining sector was offset by a 45 percent increase in crude oil prices over the same period a year earlier, to $103.78 per barrel. The company's output in the first nine months of the year rose 5.1 percent, to 959.3 million barrels of oil equivalent.

Like other Chinese energy and resource companies, it has actively sought access to resources overseas to help diversify its risks and ensure a steady supply of oil and gas needed to power China's fast-growing economy.

PetroChina increased its refining by 10 percent in January-September, or about 2.7 million barrels a day. But it derives a larger share of its revenues from oil and gas production than rival Sinopec, which is mainly a refiner, helping to shield it from losses due to government controls on fuel prices.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-27-AS-China-Earns-PetroChina/id-cfc9d31bfeb341448325bf091fd3b74a

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Judge challenges $285M Citigroup settlement

A federal judge in New York is casting doubt on the fairness of a $285 million settlement that Citigroup reached with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Judge Jed Rakoff in Manhattan scheduled a Nov. 9 hearing on the deal announced earlier this month.

He challenged lawyers to explain why he should approve a settlement of serious securities fraud allegations when Citigroup Inc. neither admits nor denies wrongdoing.

Among his questions: "How can a securities fraud of this nature and magnitude be the result simply of negligence?" and "What reason is there to believe this proposed penalty will have a meaningful deterrent effect?"

He also questioned whether there is an overriding public interest in determining whether the SEC's charges are true.

He wants to know how a $95 million penalty will have a meaningful deterrent effect. He noted the penalty was one-fifth the amount imposed in a case against Goldman Sachs Group Inc. last year.

A Citigroup spokeswoman declined to comment Thursday.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45064640/ns/business-us_business/

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Summary Box: Stocks slide as Europe deal falters (AP)

EUROPE: Stocks slid after a key meeting between financial ministers scheduled for Wednesday was canceled. The abrupt notice led some investors to believe that a deal to solve Europe's debt crisis may not be as close as originally thought.

EARNINGS: Manufacturing conglomerate 3M cut its 2011 earnings forecast, and U.S. Steel warned that demand for its products could slow. Netflix Inc. plunged 35 percent after the company cut its profit forecast.

RISK OFF: Small company stocks fell far more than the broader market, a sign that investors were shunning assets perceived as being risky. The Russell 2000, an index of small companies, plunged 3 percent, reversing a gain of 3.3 percent Monday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_bi_ge/us_wall_street_summary_box

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Group: Last Javan rhino in Vietnam killed for horn (AP)

HANOI, Vietnam ? Vietnam has lost its fight to save its rare Javan rhinoceros population after poachers apparently killed the country's last animal for its horn, pushing one of the world's most endangered species closer to extinction, a conservation group said Tuesday.

Vietnam's Cat Tien National Park has had no sightings, footprints or dung from live rhinos since the last known animal living there was found dead last April, shot through the leg with its horn chopped off, the WWF said. Genetic analysis of rhino feces had confirmed in 2004 that at least two rhinos were living in the park, raising hopes that Vietnam's population might survive.

Only 40 to 60 Javan rhinos now remain in Ujung Kulon National Park in Indonesia. They are the last known living members of the species, with none in captivity.

Vietnam's Javan rhino population had been shrinking for decades as land conversion and a rising local population threatened the animal's habitat, but poaching and a lack of effective park management and patrols hastened the decline, said Christy Williams, coordinator of WWF's Asian Elephant and Rhino Program.

"It appears that protection is not being given a high priority by the Vietnamese government," he said.

Park director Tran Van Thanh said that while some of his rangers failed to fulfill their duties, it is impossible for them to stop all of the estimated 100,000 people living near the park from hunting exotic animals when the average farmer there earns around 150,000 dong ($7.50) per day.

"We're not trying to avoid our responsibility in the death of the rhinos, but we've done our best to protect them," Thanh said.

Demand for rhino horn has surged in recent years among Vietnamese and Chinese who believe it can cure an array of ailments. Horns can now fetch up to $50,000 per pound (about $100,000 per kilogram), the WWF report said Tuesday. A small amount of ground-up powder can bring hundreds of dollars on the black market. Global demand has also increased in the last four to five years as some people have begun to consider rhino horn a remedy for cancer, Williams said.

WWF, along with the International Rhino Foundation, confirmed that the last rhino had died in Vietnam by collecting and analyzing its feces. Twenty-two of the rhino's dung piles were found in Cat Tien from October 2009 to February 5, 2010, but no dung piles or fresh rhino footprints were seen in the subsequent nine weeks, the 44-page report said.

Before 1988, the Javan rhino was believed to be extinct from mainland Asia. A small population was then discovered in Vietnam's park, and for the past 20 years, a number of wildlife conservationists have worked closely with the government to try to prevent the species from dying out in Vietnam.

But the rhino's habitat has been cut in half since 1988 to about 74,000 acres (30,000 hectares) today.

South Africa is a prime source country for rhino horns. According to the South African government, a record 333 rhinos were poached in 2010 ? a nearly threefold increase from 2009.

In September, Vietnamese officials traveled to South Africa to address the problem, three years after Hanoi recalled a diplomat from its embassy there after she was caught on tape receiving illegal rhino horns. Ha Cong Tuan, an environmental affairs official, called on Vietnamese medical researchers to study what he called the "rumor" that rhino horn cures cancer and then publicize their findings.

The WWF report said Vietnam is on the verge of an "extinction crisis" with several other species ? including the saola and the Tonkin snub-nosed monkey ? threatened by deforestation, widespread poaching and a "largely uncontrolled" illegal wildlife trade.

Cat Tien was established in 1998 as a composite of three existing protected areas. From 1998 to 2004 WWF invested $6.3 million in the park, with up to $600,000 earmarked for rhino conservation work.

In Hanoi, the Vietnamese capital, 100 grams (about 7 ounces) of crushed rhino horn retail for about 43 million dong ($2,150), with the average prescription costing 200,000 dong ($10), a rhino horn vendor in the city's bustling old quarter said Monday, requesting anonymity because the practice is illegal here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/pets/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_as/as_vietnam_rhino_lost

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Herpes Virus Could Kill Aggressive Breast Cancer (LiveScience.com)

A genetically engineered version of the virus that causes herpes shows promise as a treatment for a particularly aggressive type of breast cancer, according to a new study in animals.

The virus targeted and killed triple-negative breast cancer cells in mice. Triple-negative breast cancer is a form of breast cancer that cannot be treated with hormone therapies, such as tamoxifen and Herceptin.

The results are preliminary, and it's not clear whether the therapy will have the same effect on tumors growing in people. Much more research is needed to determine this. If a treatment is developed, it will likely be used in conjunction with other cancer therapies, including chemotherapy and radiation, the researchers said.

The study will be presented today (Oct. 24) at the meeting of the American College of Surgeons in San Francisco.

Herpes therapy

Triple-negative breast cancer accounts for about 20 percent of all breast cancer cases. It disproportionally effects young, African-American women and is usually treated with chemotherapy. (Triple-negative breast cancers are not fueled by the hormone estrogen, so they do no respond to treatments designed to block the hormone.)

Study researcher Dr. Sepideh Gholami, a research fellow in the at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. and colleagues infected breast cancer cells in a dish with a herpes virus called NV1066. Within a week, the virus killed up to 90 percent of the tumor cells.

The researchers then injected breast cancer cells into mice. After treating the mice with the virus for 20 days, they saw the tumors had largely disappeared, Gholami said.

The dramatic response may be due to the fact that triple-negative breast cancer cells have high levels of a protein called p-MAPK. The herpes virus specifically targets cells with high levels of this protein, the researchers said.

The therapy is just one of many in recent years to explore the use of viruses as a means to target and destroy cancer cells. The herpes virus has been tested in people as a treatment for head and neck cancer, but not for breast cancer, the researchers said.

More research

The study is an "extremely exciting step" in the pursuit of a cancer therapy that uses the herpes virus, said Dr. Stefan Gluck, a medical oncologist at the University of Miami's Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center.

However, the researchers still need to show that this herpes virus is safe to use in patients. After all, the herpes virus is known to cause infection in humans, including infections in the brain. Proving the therapy's safety will likely be a lengthy process, and will involve testing it on other animals first, such as dogs and primates, Gluck said.

The researchers plan to figure out exactly how the virus works to kill the breast cancer cells, and try to bolster its effect.

Pass it on: The herpes virus can infect and kill breast cancer cells in a dish and in mice.

This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily staff writer Rachael Rettner on Twitter @RachaelRettner. Find us on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111026/sc_livescience/herpesviruscouldkillaggressivebreastcancer

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Celebrity pets and their owners | Simprograms

People Magazine has published a number of pics of famous celebrities as Sims along with their own Pets. Take a look if you have a minute and see for yourself which ones are resembled the best.

http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6232/6274504816_6c8b35df9b.jpg

Of course, I have Black Scorpion to thank for this one as I?ve been out of the loop all weekend helping a friend move :)

About the author

I'm a hip old granny who can hip-hop, bebop, dance til ya drop and yo yo, make a wicked cup of cocoa....actually, I think that's Mrs. Doubtfire. ???????????????????????????????????? Nothing spectacular about myself - I'm the webmaster of this site. Just your ordinary average nerd who loves EA/Maxis Sim games, Ghostbusters, Doctor Who, Back to the Future along with a slight touch of redneck-ness by raising/owning mules and a Dukes of Hazzard fan. Hee-haw and yee-haw :)

Source: http://www.simprograms.com/36121/celebrity-pets-and-their-owners/

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PFT: Urban Meyer not a Dolphins candidate yet

Urban Meyer, Tim TebowAP

I don?t believe what I just saw.

The Broncos? 18-15 overtime win against the Dolphins defied all logic. It defied belief for anyone like myself that watched the complete game. It?s almost as if a higher power was involved. ?(Yes, that?s sarcasm.)

?Denver and Tebow have won!? CBS announcer Kevin Harlan cried as the Broncos game-winning field goal went through the upright.

Uh, no.

This game was about a lot more than Tebow, who looked incompetent for 55 minutes and brilliant for five. It was about a Dolphins organization imploding on itself. ?It was about Tebow and his Broncos teammates playing their best when they absolutely had to. It was about an onside kick.

Let us count the ridiculousness:

1. Tony Sparano went for a two-point conversion to open the fourth quarter in an effort to go up 14-0. ?Totally unnecessary. ?I said it in our newsroom at that moment: That moment will come back to haunt them.

The Dolphins threw a low percentage fade pass to Brandon Marshall. ?They later kicked a field goal to make it 15-0.

2. When Tim Tebow got the ball with just over five minutes left, the Broncos had all of 13 passing yards on the day. Tebow had four completions at the time. He had been sacked six times.

The previous six Broncos drives had combined to gain one first down.

When Tebow missed throws, he often missed them by 10-15 yards. ?The Broncos wouldn?t let him throw on third down. It was one of the worst 55 minutes of quarterback play I?ve ever seen. At one point, the crowd chanted ?Tebow sucks.? ?He didn?t remotely look like an NFL quarterback.

And then the Broncos rose from the ashes.

3. The Dolphins under Tony Sparano always seem to find a way to lose. ?It wouldn?t be a surprise if owner Stephen Ross let Sparano go after this one. Miami so often outplays its opponents, and finds a way to lose.

This loss, on a day the Dolphins celebrated the Florida championship team, marks one of the lowest points in Miami?s franchise history.

4. The Broncos won the game with back-to-back touchdown drives sandwiched by a successful onside kick. Tebow was accurate on those drives and made good decisions. His receivers ? Demaryius Thomas, Matt Willis, and Daniel Fells made fabulous catches for him.

5. The Broncos needed a two-point conversion to force overtime. The entire stadium knew the Broncos would spread out Miami and run Tebow up the middle. Except the Dolphins.

It was like Tebow and his offensive teammates flipped a stretch in the final five minutes. ?They closed. But let?s not make this all about Tebow.

6. Tebow?s teammates made huge plays, no bigger than Broncos linebacker D.J. Williams strip-sacking Matt Moore in overtime.

Even after all this magic, Broncos coach John Fox was still desperate to not let Tebow make a mistake. ?Denver went three-and-out on their first drive of overtime, including the seventh sack of Tebow.

After the Williams sack, Fox called three straight runs which gained two yards to set up a 52?yard field goal. ?It was a terrible decision by Fox that worked. ?Prater had missed two field goals on the day, but you knew this one was going through the uprights.

After all, it was Tim Tebow Florida Gator appreciation day in Miami.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/23/report-urban-meyer-not-a-candidate-in-miami-yet/related

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Woman faces trial in disputed 2001 killing in Iowa

ADVANCE FOR USE SUNDAY, OCT. 23, 2011 AND THEREAFTER - This photo released July 27, 2011, by the Iowa Department of Public Safety shows Tracey Ann Richter-Roberts. In 2001, Roberts fired 9 shots from two guns into Dustin Wehde, a 20-year-old neighbor who died on the floor of her bedroom. A jury will be asked to decide if she was a heroic mother who used self-defense to protect herself and her three young children from Wehde and another man who she says invaded the home, or was she a master manipulator who planned the killing and an elaborate cover story. (AP Photo/Iowa Department of Public Safety)

ADVANCE FOR USE SUNDAY, OCT. 23, 2011 AND THEREAFTER - This photo released July 27, 2011, by the Iowa Department of Public Safety shows Tracey Ann Richter-Roberts. In 2001, Roberts fired 9 shots from two guns into Dustin Wehde, a 20-year-old neighbor who died on the floor of her bedroom. A jury will be asked to decide if she was a heroic mother who used self-defense to protect herself and her three young children from Wehde and another man who she says invaded the home, or was she a master manipulator who planned the killing and an elaborate cover story. (AP Photo/Iowa Department of Public Safety)

(AP) ? An Iowa mother who told police she shot a 20-year-old neighbor to death while trying to protect her family from intruders goes on trial for murder Tuesday in a case authorities say boils down to the woman's attempt to frame her first husband for a crime.

Tracey Richter fatally shot Dustin Wehde on Dec. 13, 2001, at the home where she lived with her second husband and three children in the 500-resident town of Early. Prosecutors say Richter, hailed at the time as a hero who acted in self-defense, killed Wehde and planted a notebook in his car suggesting he was a hitman hired by an ex-husband she had feuded with for years.

Richter says two men broke into her home and assaulted her before she was able to get guns from a safe and shoot Wehde nine times with two weapons, leaving him dead on her bedroom floor as the second man fled. She said she acted to protect her children, ages 11, 3 and 1 and was applauded when she shared her story on the "Montel Williams Show" in 2002.

But prosecutors who say she has repeatedly changed the details of her account charged her this year with first degree murder after the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation re-examined the case. Among the evidence cited in court records is the conclusion of a forensic expert hired by an investigator who said the final three shots came when Wehde was face down on the floor.

Richter, who was arrested in July in Omaha, where she had moved and was living with a fianc?, has pleaded not guilty. She faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison if she is convicted at the trial, which gets under way Tuesday with jury selection in Fort Dodge.

The trial was moved from the county where Early is located after the defense argued Richter could not get a fair trial there in part because the Chicago native and her second husband Michael Roberts, an Australia native who she has since divorced, were viewed as outsiders after moving to the rural area in the late 1990s.

Many Early residents noted after the shooting that Wehde had been friendly with Richter's family and said they did not believe he had broken into her home. Wehde's parents divorced after his death and his father, Brett Wehde, committed suicide on Thanksgiving Day 2002 at his son's gravesite.

Michael Roberts wrote in an email to The Associated Press that he thinks Wehde was "simply a prop" used by Richter.

"Thankfully for her victims past, present and future, her make believe house of cards is about to fall," Roberts wrote in the email from California, where he has been living with their children since Richter's arrest. "I don't rejoice in her downfall, but I cannot deny the relief."

Richter's attorney, Scott Bandstra, has said he will argue investigators failed to follow leads that could have identified the alleged second intruder. He also has argued that the forensic expert's findings bolster his client's case because they show the shots could have come from the angles she described.

The notebook found in the front seat of Wehde's car after his death also will be a point of contention. In it, Wehde wrote he was hired by a "mysterious fellow" named John Pitman, a plastic surgeon who divorced Richter in 1996, to kill Richter and her 11-year-old son, Bert. At the time of the shooting, Richter and Pitman were in a custody dispute over the boy.

Investigators have said while the entry was in Wehde's handwriting, they never believed it was credible or that Wehde was actually a hitman, and they kept the existence of the notebook and its contents a secret.

An old acquaintance of Richter's later came forward and said the woman had told her about the notebook days after the shooting, and said that her ex-husband would soon be arrested in connection with the home invasion.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-10-25-Hero%20Mom%20or%20Killer?/id-ae0956dc1a11407d897c05ca47069490

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Bangkok governor to city: Prepare for floods (AP)

BANGKOK ? The governor of Bangkok issued a dramatic warning to residents of the Thai capital to prepare for floodwaters to roll deeper into the city from suburban areas already choking under the deluge.

In live televised remarks late Sunday, Gov. Sukhumbhand Paribatra said a massive amount of water has moved faster than anticipated and was expected to flood the Don Muang area just north of the city proper ? where Bangkok's old airport is located and now being used as headquarters for the anti-flood effort and a shelter for evacuees.

On Monday, water flooded traffic lanes near Don Muang airport, though one lane was still passable. Thai television showed residents in the area leaving their houses with luggage. Air operations were normal there, however, as well as at Bangkok's main international airport on the other side of the city.

Sukhumbhand said the water would threaten five other districts as well as it barrels toward the city's more developed areas. On the warning list was the Chatuchak district, popular with tourists and locals both for its "Weekend Market" of handicrafts and myriad other wares.

"Now all indications point to only one conclusion: a critical problem will happen," Sukhumbhand said. He said residents of the six districts should move their belongings to higher ground, and the sick and elderly should be evacuated to shelters set up by the city. There was no indication that the capital's inner city residential and business districts were yet at risk.

Sukhumbhand's warning stood in stark contrast to general reassurances given earlier in the day by the Flood Relief Operations Center of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's government. It announced that the situation was under control and could be expected to improve.

However, less than an hour after Sukhumbhand's warning, the center's chief, Justice Minister Pracha Promnok, came on the air to read a brief statement saying it would support the city's relief efforts.

Sukhumbhand has consistently issued more pessimistic assessments than the center, and has been in conflict with their plans for flood relief, saying his primary duty is to protect Bangkok's residents. The dispute has a political tinge since he is a prominent member of the opposition Democrat Party, ousted from power by Yingluck just a few months ago.

The anti-flood agency had said earlier Sunday that the threat that floodwaters will inundate Thailand's capital could ease by early November as record-high levels in the river carrying torrents of water downstream from the country's north begin to decline.

But with the authorities battling the waters north, east and west of the city proper, it was clear that Bangkok's immediate prospects remained uncertain. The relatively rosy longer term projection from the Flood Relief Operations Center came just a day after reports that Bangkok's main Chao Phraya river was overflowing its banks and at its highest levels in seven years.

Off a highway heading north of the city, Associated Press reporters found people scrambling Sunday for safety in flooded streets.

The Thai military used boats to help rescue stranded residents near Don Muang airport.

Mothers walked in hip-high water with children strapped to their backs, while other people waded through the murky water holding belongings in plastic bags atop their heads.

In Nonthaburi province, just north of Bangkok, a 7-foot (2-meter) crocodile was captured while resting on dry land outside a restaurant, presumably after pulling itself out of the surrounding floodwaters. Thai television showed the beast, which had reportedly escaped from a farm, with its snout taped shut and its scaly body covering most of a boat that was carrying it away.

An Associated Press photographer saw two crocodiles that had been killed in Nonthaburi, and unconfirmed recent reports have claimed up to 100 crocodiles may have escaped from farms in the region.

Yingluck said Saturday the waters may take up to six weeks to recede to manageable proportions around Bangkok. In the city and its environs, residents have settled into a routine of waiting and worrying.

Many are hoarding supplies, and supermarket shelves have emptied faster than they can be restocked. Bottled water, batteries and canned food were among the first items to go.

At a supermarket in central Bangkok's business district ? which is not under immediate threat ? sandbags lined both entrances Sunday, forcing shoppers to step over to go inside. Many of the shelves were bare, with the handful of shoppers inside grabbing the few snacks that were left. Cat food and toilet paper were gone.

While larger stores in Bangkok have kept their prices fixed, smaller merchants were raising theirs in the flooded zones north of the city. A Rangsit resident, Taweetit Hongsang, complained that the price of a papaya, 10 baht (33 cents) a week ago, had shot up to 30 baht ($1).

The desperate battle to route the water away from the city has led to several conflicts in which people have used force to try to protect their own neighborhoods by removing flood barriers.

Sukhumbhand said earlier Sunday that one crew of city workers was unable to carry out reinforcement of one barrier because of "a group of people opposing the mission and harassing" them. He said it was necessary to withdraw them "since they are not trained to deal with unruly and armed outsiders."

In evident response, Yingluck said she had delegated high-ranking police officers to protect workers carrying out anti-flood duties.

The flooding that began in August in northern Thailand has killed 356 people in the country and delivered an economic body blow to industry and agriculture, with estimates that the $6 billion in damage could double if Bangkok is badly hit.

The flooding is the worst to hit the country since 1942 and is proving a major test for Yingluck's nascent government, which took power in July after heated elections and has come under fire for not acting quickly or decisively enough to prevent major towns north of the capital from being ravaged by floodwaters.

A Sunday night report on state television in Myanmar, Thailand's western neighbor, said heavy rains and flash floods killed 106 as several villages were inundated in the country's northwest last week.

Cambodia, Thailand's eastern neighbor, has also suffered from flooding, with more than 240 people killed.

___

Associated Press writers Todd Pitman and Grant Peck contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_as/as_thailand_floods

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Chinese leader urges North Korea to better US ties (AP)

BEIJING ? A Chinese leader is urging ally North Korea to improve its strained ties with the United States as U.S. and North Korean diplomats prepare to talk about restarting nuclear disarmament negotiations.

A report early Monday from China's official Xinhua News Agency says Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang told North Korean Premier Choe Yong Rim that improving ties with the U.S. and South Korea would promote stability in the region.

Made at the start of a three-day visit to North Korea, Li's plea comes as U.S. and North Korean diplomats gather in Geneva to see about resuming six-nation talks on North Korea's nuclear program. North Korea walked out on the talks but now wants to re-engage.

Li says China supports restarting the talks quickly.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/nkorea/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_re_as/as_china_koreas_nuclear

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Horror, resignation at killing of Ohio animals (AP)

ZANESVILLE, Ohio ? Amid expressions of horror and revulsion at the killing of dozens of wild animals in Ohio ? and photographs of their bloody carcasses ? animal rights advocates agreed there was little local authorities could have done to save the dangerous creatures once they began roaming the countryside after their owner released them before taking his own life.

Sheriff's deputies shot 48 animals ? including 18 rare Bengal tigers and 17 lions ? after Terry Thompson, owner of the private Muskingum County Animal Farm near Zanesville, threw their cages open Tuesday and then committed suicide.

Thompson died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound and also had a bite wound on the head that appeared to have come from a large cat, such as a Bengal tiger, county Sheriff Matt Lutz said Thursday morning.

It appeared the bite occurred quickly after Thompson shot himself and that his body had been dragged a short distance, Lutz said.

"What a tragedy," said veterinarian Barb Wolfe, of The Wilds animal preserve sponsored by the Columbus Zoo. "We knew that ... there were so many dangerous animals at this place that eventually something bad would happen, but I don't think anybody really knew it would be this bad."

The sheriff would not speculate why Thompson took his own life. "We don't know what he was thinking," said Lutz, who added that finding out the reasons why wasn't the focus on his investigation.

Neighbors made it clear that Thompson loved the animals and would not have wanted them hurt.

"He liked animals more than he did people. He really did," said Fred Polk, whose farm is within sight of Thompson's home.

As the hunt winded down on Wednesday, a photo showing the remains of tigers, bears and lions lined up and scattered in an open field went viral provoking visceral reactions among viewers, some of whom expressed their anger and sadness on social networking sites.

Some local townspeople also were saddened by the deaths. At a nearby Moose Lodge, Bill Weiser said: "It's breaking my heart, them shooting those animals."

Authorities said the slain animals would be buried on Thompson's farm.

Will Travers, chief executive of the California-based Born Free USA animal welfare and wildlife conservation organization, said police had no choice but to take the action they did.

"It's a tragedy for these particular animals, for no fault of their own they've been shot, and I can see how difficult that decision was for the police," he said.

The sheriff said he spoke with Thompson's wife and that she was distraught over the loss of her husband and the animals.

"You have to understand these animals were like kids to her," Lutz said. "She probably spent more time with these animals than some parents do spend with their kids."

Jack Hanna, TV personality and former director of the Columbus Zoo, also defended the sheriff's decision to kill the animals, calling deaths of the endangered Bengal tigers especially tragic.

The animals destroyed also included six black bears, two grizzlies, a baboon, a wolf and three mountain lions. "It's like Noah's Ark wrecking right here in Zanesville, Ohio," Hanna said.

Six ? three leopards, a grizzly bear and two monkeys ? were captured and taken to the Columbus Zoo. "We are happy to report they all seem to be doing very well," zoo spokeswoman Patti Peters said in a statement Thursday.

A wolf was later found dead, leaving a monkey as the only animal possibly still unaccounted for in the mostly rural community of farms, widely spaced homes and wooded areas about 55 miles east of Columbus.

While the sheriff's office said early Thursday that the search for the monkey was still active, Lutz said the animal may no longer be a concern. It's highly likely the monkey was killed by one of the big cats, Lutz said.

Officers were ordered to kill the animals instead of trying to bring them down with tranquilizers for fear that those hit with darts would escape in the darkness before they dropped and would later regain consciousness.

Veterinarian Wolfe had tried to save a tiger in a heavy bramble by using a tranquilizer dart, but the animal charged her then tried to flee. It had to be shot and killed by sheriff's deputies.

"I was about 15 feet from him and took a shot, and it didn't respond too much, and I thought we were OK, but within about 10 seconds he roared and started toward me," she said.

Sheriff's Deputy Jonathan Merry, among the first to respond on Tuesday, said he shot a number of animals, including a gray wolf and a black bear who charged him from 7 feet away. He said he's an animal lover and only took pride in knowing he was protecting the community.

"All these animals have the ability to take a human out in the length of a second," he said.

The Humane Society of the United States criticized Gov. John Kasich for allowing a statewide ban on the buying and selling of exotic pets to expire in April and called for an emergency rule to crack down on exotic animals until the state comes up with a permanent legal solution.

"Every month brings a new, bizarre, almost surreal incident involving privately-held, dangerous wild animals," Wayne Pacelle, president and chief executive of the Humane Society, said in a statement. "In recent years, Ohioans have died and suffered injuries. ... Owners of large, exotic animals are a menace to society, and it's time for the delaying on the rulemaking to end."

Activist group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals also called for emergency regulations and pointed the finger at Gov. John Kasich, saying the incident should serve as his "wake-up call."

"Surely, after this latest incident, enough blood has been shed for the state to take action," the group said in a statement.

Ohio has some of the nation's weakest restrictions on exotic pets and among the highest number of injuries and deaths caused by them.

Born Free USA says it has tracked 1,500 attacks on humans or other animals, and escapes by exotic animals since 1990, with 86 being in Ohio. Travers said there's an urgent need for legislation that addresses the competency of Ohioans seeking to own exotic pets and owners' ability to provide for the animals' welfare as well as public safety.

"Legislation should be there to protect the animals from the people and to protect the people from the animals," he said.

Kasich spokesman Rob Nichols said Wednesday the governor had called on Lutz to commend the job he had done and to ask him to be part of the process of putting into law what the executive order failed to do.

"Clearly, we need tougher laws. We haven't had them in this state. Nobody's dealt with this, and we will. And we'll deal with it in a comprehensive way," Kasich said earlier in the day at a meeting of Dix Communications editors at which The Associated Press was present.

Thompson, 62, had had repeated run-ins with the law and his neighbors. Lutz said that the sheriff's office had received numerous complaints since 2004 about animals escaping onto neighbors' property. The sheriff's office also said that Thompson had been charged over the years with animal cruelty, animal neglect and allowing animals to roam.

The sheriff recalled being on the property once in the last three years to inspect the pens. "I never had a confrontational situation with Mr. Thompson," Lutz said.

Thompson had gotten out of federal prison just last month after serving a year for possessing unregistered guns.

He had rescued some of the animals at his preserve and purchased many others, said Columbus Zoo spokeswoman Patty Peters.

It was not immediately clear how Thompson managed to support the preserve and for what purpose it was operated, since it was not open to the public. But Thompson had appeared on the "Rachael Ray Show" in 2008 as an animal handler for a zoologist guest, said show spokeswoman Lauren Nowell.

___

Associated Press writers Andrew-Welsh Huggins in Zanesville and Ann Sanner, Julie Carr Smyth, JoAnne Viviano and Doug Whiteman in Columbus contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/pets/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111020/ap_on_re_us/us_exotic_animals_loose

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9-9-9 will get you...eventually

Sales taxes apply to all income, because it will be spent, eventually.

Re: Herm Cain?s 9-9-9 tax plan, a number of commenters (very reasonably) question why you would assign the full 9% of the sales tax to people who don?t consume all of their income.

Skip to next paragraph Jared Bernstein

?

Before joining the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities as a senior fellow, Jared was chief economist to Vice President Joseph Biden and executive director of the White House Task Force on the Middle Class. He is a contributor to MSNBC and CNBC and has written numerous books, including 'Crunch: Why Do I Feel So Squeezed?'

Recent posts

Perhaps the easiest answer is to just think of the sales taxes you face today, if you live in a city or state that has one. If it?s X%, you probably don?t think of it as <X just because you don?t spend every penny. You correctly think of it as X, because eventually, you (or your progeny) will spend what you?re not spending today, and at that point you?ll face the tax.

If you don?t consume your income today, you will tomorrow, and it amounts to the same thing in ?present value? terms (?present value? is just the value of future income streams in today?s dollars).

Ed Kleinbard explains it here, but I grant you it?s not exactly intuitive:

Imagine, for example, that an employee has $500?available to spend on consumption goods. When she spends that, she will incur a sales tax bill on her purchases. If the sales tax rate is 9 percent?she will incur a sales tax bill of $45?

But what if she doesn?t spend all the money today?

One way of seeing what happens in the deferred consumption case is to imagine that the employee sets aside $45 today into a little fund to pay her eventual sales tax bills attributable to spending $500. If the employee spends all her available money ($455) on consumption goods tomorrow, the money just immediately goes out of the little set-aside fund. If by contrast the employee defers consumption for a few years, then her budget for consumption (her $455 of cash, net of her mental sales tax set-aside fund) goes up by the time value of money [meaning she invests it, for example, so it grows--JB]?, but so does her $45 set-aside fund. When she does consume she will consume more in absolute terms, but the same in original present value terms?

The net consequence is that the sales tax is equivalent to another 9 percent payroll tax?

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on jaredbernsteinblog.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/m7oUQ03mtm0/9-9-9-will-get-you-eventually

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar ? Behind the gaming bill

* This is from yesterday?s coverage of Gov. Pat Quinn?s gaming expansion press conference?

The five new ones would operate in Chicago, South Cook County, North Suburban Lake County, Rockford and Danville. The governor said the ultimate locations should be determined by the Illinois Gaming Board, not by the General Assembly.

As a commenter pointed out last night, how can the governor insist that the Gaming Board should be the one to pick all the new locations and in the same breath say he wants to specifically name Danville and Rockford in the expansion legislation? And, of course, he?s OK with naming Chicago in the bill, too. There was no specification of the location of the south suburban casino, other than it had to be in the south suburbs, so there?d be no change if a Quinn-approved bill actually became law.

That just leaves the proposed Park City casino in Lake County, which is specified in the bill. Is the governor being hypocritical here? Or, maybe he?s just taking a not so subtle shot at Sen. Terry Link, who has been tied to a potential Park City casino owner. I?m betting he?s taking the shot while hoping nobody notices the hypocrisy.

* The Illinois Radio Network has a story about Gov. Quinn?s top priorities for the veto session. Number one is killing the legislative scholarship program, two is addressing the Smart Grid issue and here?s number three?

Quinn said lawmakers must come up with a gambling expansion plan. While there is legislation to expand gambling that passed in the House and the Senate, Quinn says if it makes it to his desk in its current form, he?ll veto it.

It literally took the General Assembly decade to devise the current plan, which Quinn has vowed to veto. Crafting and then finding the votes to pass a new plan without slots at tracks, that requires local ?opt-in? for video gaming, bans campaign contributions from the gaming industry, etc. all within the next three weeks is gonna require a legislative miracle.

* The strain is really starting to show?

What Link and Lang may end up doing in the alternative is to write a ?trailer bill? that would address some of Quinn?s concerns of about industry oversight, while keeping intact the slots-at-the-tracks provisions, and pass that along to Quinn. (Or, as Lang put it just now, ?ram it down his throat.? Yes, things are getting a little tense here.)

A more polite approach?

[State Sen. Dave Koehler, D-Peoria] said he also is concerned that Quinn had not fully engaged with lawmakers to find an acceptable compromise bill that could be passed.

That alone could mean that things are ?back to square one,? said state Rep. David Leitch, R-Peoria.

* Meanwhile, Quinn?s action produced a sigh of relief in Iowa?

[Tim Bollman, general manager of Wild Rose Casino and Resort] had some good news to report. Illinois Governor Pat Quinn announced he would not support a bill that would expand gambling in Illinois without significant changes. Quinn said that certain bill provisions, such as allowing slot machines at race venues, would have to be removed under threat of veto.

Bollman said that adding slot machines to race tracks in border cities could potentially lure a percentage of the Wild Rose?s client base away.

* But the Illinois attorney general is supportive?

Attorney General Lisa Madigan said she was concerned from the beginning about the ?enormous expansion? of gambling in Illinois.

?In order to expand gaming at any point you have to make sure you have the resources and the structure in place to ensure that you?re not ending up with a greater criminal element involved and that?s always been a priority of mine and I?m glad the governor took the time to look at this,? Madigan said.

* If Illinois ever could get its act together, then Indiana would have a right to be worried?

Indiana?s reliance on casino gambling might not be so apparent in northeast Indiana, but it goes far beyond the service-sector jobs in communities where Indiana?s 13 casinos are found. Casinos generated more than $860 million in tax revenue last year, about 5 percent of all state tax revenue.

Five percent of all state revenues? That?s huge. By contrast, Illinois casinos comprise a little over 1 percent of state revenues. And a very big percentage of that Indiana money is coming across state lines from Illinois.

* Illinois wouldn?t keep all that money home, however, even if it somehow does manage to build Chicago and south suburban casinos. Gamblers like to smoke. Look at what happened in Illinois after the smoking ban took effect compared to surrounding states?

Phil Kadner quotes COGFA?

?In the Chicago region, Illinois? four riverboats (aggregate gross revenue) totals have fallen a combined $472.5 million,? or a minus 35.5 percent since the state passed a ban on cigarette smoking, ?while Indiana?s four Chicago-area riverboats have actually increased by $6.6 million or 0.6 percent during this same time frame,? according to the report.

Source: http://capitolfax.com/2011/10/20/behind-the-gaming-bill/

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

With Romney vs. Perry, immigration debate intensifies in GOP presidential contest (Star Tribune)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/150621952?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Facebook popularity predicted by brain regions

To friend or not to friend? It might depend on your brain. Researchers have discovered that the number of Facebook friends you have coincides with the size of certain brain regions.

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Those brain regions are associated with creating memories of names and faces as well as how we interpret social cues such as gaze and body movements. Slightly different regions were pinpointed when the researchers compared brain sizes in relation to real-life social networks, indicating online and real-world interactions could be using different sets of social skills.

"Social networks exist in many forms ? in the real world, in cyberspace and in many other forms," study researcher Geraint Rees, of the University College London, said during a press conference Oct. 17. "They are a particular aspect of human behavior that surrounds and affects many aspects of how we live our daily lives."

Your brain on Facebook

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging to create brain scans of 125 healthy college students. They compared the sizes of various brain regions with each participant?s number of Facebook friends and real-life friends. They repeated the study on a separate group of 40 students.

When people had high numbers of Facebook friends, the researchers noted certain brain regions were larger than they were for students with few Facebook friends. Those regions included the superior temporal sulcus and the middle temporal gyrus, both of which process and interpret basic social signals; the entorhinal cortex, which pairs up names and faces; and the amygdalae, which help us recognize emotional facial expressions.

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The researchers also compared the brain data with the analysis of the students' real-life social networks. Surprisingly, the researchers saw different patterns in brain changes. While they also found larger amygdalae in people who had large real-life social networks, they didn't see any differences in the sulcus, gyrus and cortex between "loners" and gregarious types.

Third factor?

One limitation of the study was that researchers couldn?t say which came first? ?? whether large social networks cause thickening of certain brain areas, or larger areas of certain brain regions cause one to have larger social networks. The idea that an action can change the brain has been shown in past research; for instance, studies suggest physical training can actually bulk up regions of the brain's motor cortex.

There also could be a separate change leading to both higher friend number and larger brain areas, Eric Nelson, a researcher at the National Institute of Mental Health, told LiveScience. " Something like intelligence, perhaps, or liking to be on a computer," said Nelson, who wasn't involved in the study.

Rees agreed and noted these are preliminary studies. He advised caution in interpreting the study's conclusions.

"It is also possible, as it is with any correlation, that there's a third factor that's driving it, that's driving the changes in brain structure and the number of friends," Rees said. "The significance isn't so much that it tells the whole story, but it gives us a way to answer important questions."

Friends versus connections

Sam Roberts, a researcher at England's University of Chester, near Liverpool, said the findings are interesting, but he observed that the sheer number of any student's Facebook friends doesn't tell you much about how the student interacts with people on the site.

Analysis of anonymous user data by the Facebook data team has shown that most users mutually communicate with only about 10 to 20 of their friends every month, even if they have 500 on the site. Women interact with between four (if they have 50 friends) and 16 (if they have 500) friends on Facebook; the numbers are slightly lower for men (three to 10).

"You can look at the number of friends people have on Facebook, but to really understand what that means you have to look at what they are doing on Facebook with their friends," Roberts, who wasn't involved in the study, told LiveScience. "The majority of their friends they won't be in contact with."

The study was published today (Oct. 18) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44953228/ns/health-behavior/

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Genetic study of cave millipedes reveals isolated populations and ancient divergence between species

ScienceDaily (Oct. 17, 2011) ? The International Journal of Myriapodology recently published the first population genetic study of cave millipedes. This research highlights an important challenge in the conservation of cave biodiversity -- that for many species caves are 'islands' of habitat that support isolated and genetically distinct populations.

The southern Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee and Alabama, USA is known for its high cave density. In addition, it has the highest cave biodiversity of any region in North America. Millipedes of the genus Tetracion range across this biodiversity hotspot. These millipedes, which can grow up to 8 cm in length, are common scavengers in cave communities. Like many cave animals, Tetracion millipedes have reduced pigmentation and non-functional eyes.

The authors used genetic techniques to compare Tetracion populations and species. They found that Tetracion populations were generally isolated from one another. In addition, divergence between Tetracion species was high, suggesting that members of the genus diverged several million years ago.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by Pensoft Publishers, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Journal Reference:

  1. Stephanie Loria, Kirk Zigler, Julian Lewis. Molecular phylogeography of the troglobiotic millipede Tetracion Hoffman, 1956 (Diplopoda, Callipodida, Abacionidae). International Journal of Myriapodology, 2011; 5 (0): 35 DOI: 10.3897/ijm.5.1891

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111017102547.htm

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Letter 'G' goes missin at Scrabble championship

(AP) ? Two competitors at the World Scrabble Championships were asked to empty their pockets when a letter "G'' went missing.

An official said Tuesday that the disappearance of a "G'' tile occurred during the international event, which was held in the Polish capital from Oct. 12-16.

Brian Dede, the event coordinator, said a referee had to intervene when opponents Edward Martin from Britain and Chollapat Itthi-Aree from Thailand noticed a missing tile during the last draw of their match.

He said that led to a search on and under the table, and that both players "were asked to show the contents of their pockets."

The missing letter was nowhere to be found, so the referee added another "G'' to the letters to create a complete set.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-18-EU-Poland-Missing-Scrabble-Letter/id-a3066e85abac4491a35980d0db5fa0b8

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Monday, October 17, 2011

G-20 considers boosting IMF role in eurozone (AP)

PARIS ? The finance chiefs of the world's leading economies opened the door Saturday for the International Monetary Fund to play a bigger role in fighting the eurozone's escalating debt troubles.

The Group of 20 rich and developing nations asked the IMF to propose ways that it could help stop countries under severe market pressure from toppling into a full-blown crisis with potential global repercussions.

The move appeared aimed at Italy and Spain, the eurozone's third and fourth largest economies, which have seen their funding costs spike amid growing worries over the currency union's stability. The rest of Europe cannot afford to bail out Spain or Italy should they run out of money.

Until now, the IMF has funded about a third of the bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal, but helping the eurozone to stem contagion beyond those countries would require a broader use of resources that would go far beyond the fund's traditional role of providing rescue loans to cash-strapped governments.

But while acknowledging that the IMF has a role to play in containing the continent's debt problems, G-20 ministers made clear Saturday that Europe must first come up with its own solutions.

"Of course, even though the world has a big stake in Europe doing this effectively, Europe itself has the strongest interest," U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told reporters after a two-day meeting of G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors in Paris.

"I think they've come to recognize that, if you underdo it, it's going to be more expensive."

Eurozone ministers sketched out a plan to their counterparts on Saturday and have promised that it will restore confidence in Europe and its banks when they unveil it next weekend.

At their Oct. 23 summit in Brussels, European leaders are expected to sign off on a scheme to maximize the impact of their euro440 billion ($600 billion) bailout fund, a plan to recapitalize banks across the continent to ensure they can withstand worsening market turmoil, and a second bailout for Greece.

Part of an effort to shore up shaky countries on the continent may include a bigger role for the IMF, too.

"What has been asked of us is instruments that are more flexible, more short term, that allow countries in good economic health but in difficulty to resist," the IMF's managing director Christine Lagarde said.

She said G-20 leaders would consider the new tools at their summit in Cannes, France, early next month.

The IMF's investigation of new instruments reflects the extent to which the eurozone's debt crisis has affected the rest of the global economy.

"We heard loud and clear that the emerging markets in particular were very concerned about the risk of contagion from advanced economies to emerging markets and to low-income countries," Lagarde said.

The G-20 also committed to making sure that the IMF has the resources it needs to stabilize the world economy, indicating that an increase in its funding was possible. But there is resistance to such a move.

Geithner, for instance, stressed that the IMF, with $390 billion on hand, didn't need any more funding, although he said the IMF should continue to play its important role in containing the turmoil.

"That is a very, very substantial amount of financial firepower," he said. After Europe unveils its plan, "if there's a case for more use of the IMF's existing resources, we'd be supportive of that."

In discussing the requested list of tools, Lagarde said the IMF's efforts would focus on "short-term liquidity instruments available to what we call the 'non-consenting' victims of the economic crisis."

She gave the example of precautionary credit lines the IMF offered to several countries after the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008, and said the new tools could go in a similar direction.

Precautionary credit lines are linked to fewer conditions than traditional IMF rescue loans that come only in return for radical economic reforms and painful budget cuts. That's why they would be aimed at countries that are fundamentally in decent health, but suffering from increased risk-adversity among investors.

Such flexible short-term loans could help Italy and Spain if they had to come up with billions of euros to recapitalize their banks, also reassuring private investors that they will get their money back.

___

AP Business Writer Greg Keller contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111015/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_g20_finance

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Time zone database has new home after lawsuit (AP)

NEW YORK ? The organization in charge of the Internet's address system is taking over a database widely used by computers and websites to keep track of time zones around the world.

The transition to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN, comes a week after the database was abruptly removed from a U.S. government server because of a federal lawsuit claiming copyright infringement.

Without this database and others like it, computers would display Greenwich Mean Time, or the time in London when it isn't on summer time. People would have to manually calculate local time when they schedule meetings or book flights.

The Time Zone Database allows people to set clocks simply by choosing a city. Select New York, for example, and the computer will know that it is normally five hours behind London, but four hours during a brief period when the U.S. is still on summer time and Britain is not.

The database is updated more than a dozen times a year and is used by a range of computer operating systems including Apple Inc.'s Mac OS X, Oracle Corp., Unix and Linux, but not Microsoft Corp.'s Windows.

It's also used by several websites that tell people what the current time is around the world, or what time it will be in Sydney or Moscow next Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Los Angeles. Some non-Internet functions, such as calendar software, also incorporate the database.

Although those functions continued to work after the database disappeared from the government's server, computer systems couldn't get updates to reflect changes in time zones and in the duration of summer time.

Kim Davies, a technical manager at ICANN, said that because much of the Internet depends on the database, its management by ICANN is consistent with the organization's mission to maintain a stable Internet.

One of ICANN's main functions is to coordinate Internet domain names ? the suffixes such as ".com" and ".org" in Internet addresses. Those are key for allowing computers to find websites and route email.

ICANN has been in discussions for months about taking over the database with the impending retirement of its longtime coordinator. Arthur David Olson, an employee of the National Institutes of Health who volunteered as coordinator as a side project, began looking for a new home for the database in 2009.

ICANN accelerated those discussions and took over management Friday after the database was removed from NIH's server on Oct. 6, following a lawsuit over historical data used.

Astrology software company Astrolabe Inc. argues that Olson and another volunteer at University of California, Los Angeles should have paid royalties for including data from its software. The defendants have insisted that the data are in the public domain and not subject to copyright. Their employers were not named as defendants.

The federal lawsuit, filed Sept. 30 in Boston, does not affect current time zone information, which comes from tips sent by volunteers through an email list.

However, ICANN is keeping the historical information in the database.

"We are aware of the lawsuit," Davies said. "We believe it's important to continue the operation of the database. We'll deal with any legal matters as they arise."

___

Time zone database: http://www.iana.org/time-zones

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111016/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_time_zone_database

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Sunday, October 16, 2011

Point, Throw, and Shoot: The Panoramic Ball Cam [Video]

No longer will the flies and insects of the world mock humanity for lacking awesome compound eyes. Researchers at the Technische Universit?t in Berlin have leveled the playing field with a multi-sensor throwable camera that's able to snap a single 360 degree panoramic photo when it reaches its apogee. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/XXODD_YYSyQ/

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Saturday, October 15, 2011

House panel approves bill to slash UN funds (AP)

WASHINGTON ? A deeply divided House panel on Thursday approved a Republican bill that would slash U.S. contributions to the United Nations, rejecting Democratic complaints that the measure would end American involvement in the world peacekeeping body and deliver a devastating financial blow.

One week after cutting $50 million for a U.N. organization that helps women and children in developing countries, the House Foreign Affairs Committee targeted the billions of dollars the United States contributes to the United Nations. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., the committee chairwoman and a fierce critic of the United Nations, argued that the legislation would give the United States leverage in pushing for change at the U.N.

"We will never achieve lasting, sweeping reforms if the U.S. keeps paying in full what the U.N. dictates to us, with no consequences for the U.N.'s failures," Ros-Lehtinen said. "We need a game-changer."

The panel approved the bill on a party-line 23-15 vote. The action came despite Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton's opposition and her vow to recommend to President Barack Obama that he veto the legislation. That may not be necessary, however, as it's unclear when the full House will consider the measure and it has little chance in the Democratic-led Senate.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg also opposes the legislation, according to Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y.

Clinton sent a strongly worded letter to the committee this week warning that the legislation would severely limit U.S. participation in the world body, undercut U.S. interests and damage the security of Americans at home and abroad.

"This bill would effectively cede American leadership, creating a void for our adversaries to fill," Clinton wrote.

Nevertheless, the panel pressed ahead with the measure, with Republicans taking swipes at the U.N.

"They're really our buddy," Rep. Dan Burton, R-Ind., said sarcastically. "They vote with us almost never."

GOP members said the U.N. Human Rights Council includes "gross human rights violators" such as China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Cuba. A recent conference on nuclear disarmament was chaired by North Korea, and Iran is a member of the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women.

"They're appointing every crackpot regime to leadership positions," Burton said.

Responding to the complaints, Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y., said the United Nations "is not supposed to be our pal. We don't own it. ... If we agreed on everything, we wouldn't need it."

"Hope rests with the U.N. with all its flaws," Ackerman added.

The legislation would pressure the U.N. to adopt a voluntary funding system by withholding 50 percent of the U.S. non-voluntary regular budget contributions if, after two years, 80 percent of the U.N. regular budget is not funded on a voluntary rather than assessed basis.

In the 2010 budget year, the U.S. provided $7.7 billion to the U.N. for its regular budget, peacekeeping and other programs, up from $6.1 billion the previous year. The U.S. assessment is 22 percent of the total U.N. operating budget. By comparison, China pays 3 percent.

The bill also would block U.S. funds for any United Nations entity that supports giving Palestine an elevated status at the U.N. and prohibit U.S. contributions to the U.N. Human Rights Council and an anti-racism conference seen as a platform for anti-Israel rhetoric.

Rep. Howard Berman of California, the top Democrat on the committee, accused the Republicans of casting the bill as a means to stop the Palestinians from gaining statehood in the United Nations and a way to challenge the biases against the United States and Israel.

"That's nothing more than false advertising," he said. "The true purpose of the bill is to end U.S. participation in the U.N. and in the process, deal a fatal financial blow to the world body."

The committee, on a voice vote, turned back a substitute amendment from Berman that would strengthen the Obama administration's ability to push for reforms at the U.N., which has faced criticism for scandal and mismanagement.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111013/ap_on_go_co/us_congress_united_nations

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