Saturday, December 31, 2011

Oil hovers below $100 as US economy improves (AP)

SINGAPORE ? Oil prices hovered below $100 a barrel Friday in Asia amid encouraging signs the U.S. economy is slowly improving.

Benchmark crude for February delivery rose 12 cents to $99.77 a barrel at midday Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract added 29 cents to settle at $99.65 in New York on Thursday.

In London, Brent crude was down 6 cents at $107.95 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

Crude has traded near $100 since mid-November after jumping from $75 in October as investors eye growing evidence the U.S. economy could avoid a recession next year. The government reported Thursday that claims for jobless benefits fell to a four-week average of 375,000, the lowest level in three and a half years.

The National Association of Realtors also reported that contracts to buy U.S. homes rose last month to the highest level in a year and a half.

Some analysts worry Europe's debt crisis will drag the continent into recession next year and undermine global crude demand.

"From a longer term perspective, we continue to zero in on the euro zone as the primary driver of oil pricing during the first quarter of 2012," energy consultant Ritterbusch and Associates said in a report. "We still view the euro zone debt issues as intractable."

Traders are also closely watching tensions between Iran and Western powers over Tehran's nuclear power program. Iran threatened this week to close the key oil export passage of the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf if the U.S. and other nations tighten sanctions. The U.S. Navy said it would not tolerate any move to limit the strait's traffic.

Energy trader Blue Ocean Brokerage said oil prices would likely eventually jump by about $50 if Iran, OPEC's second-biggest crude exporter, tried to close the strait.

"Let's start with an easy $20 spike, then add in a risk premium for insurance costs, delays, costs to push oil through alternative routes and the obvious loss of 3.5 million barrels a day from Iran," energy trader Blue Ocean Brokerage said in a report.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil rose 0.7 cent to $2.93 per gallon and gasoline futures slid 0.3 cent at $2.67 per gallon. Natural gas futures were down 2.3 cents to $3.00 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_re_as/oil_prices

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Odd notes, mad-dash trips mark Iowa closing sprint (AP)

DES MOINES, Iowa ? Iowa's GOP presidential contest remains deeply unsettled, if not downright strange, five days before the Jan. 3 caucus.

Rep. Ron Paul, drawing big crowds, got a surprise endorsement Wednesday night from Rep. Michele Bachmann's now-former state chairman.

Former Sen. Rick Santorum, who has languished for months, suddenly seems to have momentum, just as former House Speaker Newt Gingrich may be losing his.

And Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who began the campaign by de-emphasizing Iowa, might be poised to finish on top, according to some new polls.

Romney now is making an unabashed push in Iowa. His rivals are scrambling to deny him huge momentum heading into the Jan. 10 primary in New Hampshire, his second home.

Paul, the 76-year-old libertarian-leaning Texan, drew about 500 people at the Iowa State fairgrounds in Ames late Wednesday. A group of Occupy activists tried to interrupt the rally, but that wasn't the main surprise.

State Sen. Kent Sorenson, who had campaigned a few hours earlier with Bachmann as a state chairman of her bid, announced he would support Paul instead.

Paul's anti-government appeal appears to tap into the desire of a frustrated electorate for profound change in an era of high unemployment and an economy that has only slowly recovered from the recession.

"In the last couple of weeks I fell into Ron Paul's camp," said Bob Colby of Newton, who spent 21 years in the military and is a former employee of a now-shuttered Maytag plant in town.

Paul, who is airing TV ads hitting Romney and Gingrich, planned a town hall meeting Thursday in Perry, Iowa, plus stops in Atlantic and Council Bluffs.

There were other odd campaign notes Wednesday.

Two politically active pastors in Iowa's robust evangelical conservative movement disclosed an effort to persuade either Santorum or Bachmann to quit the race and endorse the other. "Otherwise, like-minded people will be divided and water down their impact," said Rev. Cary Gordon, a Sioux City minister and a leader among Iowa's social conservatives.

Neither candidate appeared interested.

Meanwhile, an ever more confident Romney scheduled stops Thursday in Cedar Falls, Mason City and Ames. He has air support: TV ads say he has the best chance to beat President Barack Obama in November.

Asked Wednesday about the prospects for back-to-back victories in Iowa and New Hampshire, Romney demurred. "I can't possibly allow myself to think in such optimistic terms," he said. "I just have to put my head down and battle as best I can."

Santorum seems to be gaining steam, according to a Time-CNN survey and some private polls. "We're very, very happy with the new numbers," he told reporters in Dubuque.

Acknowledging widespread voter anger in an age of high unemployment, Santorum told an audience Wednesday: "If you want to stick it to the man, don't vote for Ron Paul. That's not sticking it to anybody but the Republican Party."

Santorum, who planned events Thursday in the eastern Iowa towns of Coralville, Wilton, Muscatine and Davenport, says he believes his improved showing reflects voters belief that he "can be trusted" and that "we've got a record to back it up."

He said in an appearance on NBC's "Today" show Thursday that he's the only one in the Republican field who "has a track record" of winning elections in states, like Pennsylvania, where it was necessary for GOP candidates to attract independents and Democrats.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry adjusted his position on abortion for a second straight day, telling reporters he would allow abortion if a woman's life were at risk. On Tuesday, he had told a pastor that he had undergone a "transformation" on abortion rights and now opposed the procedure in cases of rape or incest after having recently met a woman who said she was conceived by a rape.

Asked if a mother's life was the only instance when he would allow abortion, he was concise as he boarded his bus Wednesday: "That's correct."

Perry planned Thursday events in Washington, Cedar Rapids and Marshalltown.

Gingrich, who has suffered a barrage of TV attack ads lately, also took aim at Paul. "I'm very uncomfortable with the idea that the commander in chief would think it was irrelevant to have an Iranian nuclear weapon," he said Wednesday.

Gingrich planned events Thursday in Sioux City, Storm Lake, Denison and Carroll.

Bachmann took aim Wednesday at her two rivals from Texas. She said Perry has spent "27 years as a political insider," and Paul would be "dangerous as president" because of his hands-off views on national security.

Bachmann scheduled events Thursday in Des Moines, Marshalltown and Nevada, Iowa.

___

Associated Press writers Thomas Beaumont, Brian Bakst, David Espo, Philip Elliott, Beth Fouhy, Mike Glover, Kasie Hunt and Shannon McCaffrey contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_el_pr/us_gop_campaign

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HBT: Rockies not interested in Ross after all

Earlier this week Buster Olney of ESPN.com reported that the Rockies were ?in contract talks? with free agent Cody Ross, which seemed odd because Colorado already has so much outfield depth that Seth Smith is on the trading block.

Olney is one of the best national reporters in the business, but Patrick Saunders of the Denver Post spoke to a Rockies source who said ?there is absolutely no truth to the Cody Ross stories? and ?we have no fit at all in our outfield.?

Obviously if the market for Ross is so poor that he has to take a modest one-year contract even the Rockies would find room for him, but in that scenario he would surely be able to at least find more playing time than Colorado could offer behind starters Carlos Gonzalez, Michael Cuddyer, and Dexter Fowler.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/28/absolutely-no-truth-to-reported-rockies-interest-in-cody-ross/related/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Winners of Caruso Affiliated?s Spirit of American Youth Scholarship to Ride City of Glendale Float in Rose Parade

GLENDALE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Two recipients of Caruso Affiliated?s Spirit of American Youth Scholarship program, Brandon Ruvalcaba and Angela Sanchez, have been selected to represent the City of Glendale and ride on this year?s float in the Tournament of Roses Parade on January 2. Brandon received his Scholarship this year and is attending UCLA and Angela, who also attends UCLA, was a 2009 scholarship recipient. The Spirit of American Youth Scholarship program provides a $10,000 scholarship to students who have shown commitment to community improvement and dedication to academic excellence in their high school career.

?Glendale?s participation in the Tournament of Roses Parade is a great tradition and a long-standing part of the city?s heritage?

?Brandon and Angela are extraordinary individuals and we are thrilled to have two winners from Caruso Affiliated?s scholarship program representing the City of Glendale on this year?s float,? says Jennifer Gordon, senior vice president, public relations and special events.

Brandon Ruvalcaba, graduated in the top one-percent of his class at Sylmar High School and is passionate about volunteering his time to help and mentor others. Brandon took on the role of volunteer coordinator for The American Cancer Society?s Relay for Life, Sylmar chapter, raising funds for cancer research, a cause close to his heart. Currently studying Neuroscience at UCLA, Brandon plans to become a doctor, a goal inspired by his mother, his biggest supporter, who is battling cancer.

Angela Sanchez overcame tremendous odds as a teen living at a homeless shelter in Pasadena for 18 months and taking the bus each day to Hoover High in Glendale to complete high school with her classmates. In addition to maintaining a 4.2+ GPA, she mentored other children in the shelter and is now a junior at UCLA where she established the very first student-run and managed School-On-Wheels and is studying to be a teacher.

Earlier this year, Caruso Affiliated CEO Rick Caruso issued a $25,000 challenge grant to help save Glendale?s float entry in the Tournament of Roses Parade, which saved the 97-year old program?the second-longest-running in the Rose Parade---from being discontinued due to budget cuts.

?Glendale?s participation in the Tournament of Roses Parade is a great tradition and a long-standing part of the city?s heritage,? says Caruso. ?We?re looking forward to seeing the float make its grand debut on January 2.?

The theme of this year?s Rose Parade is ?Just Imagine?? and will feature spirited marching bands from throughout the nation, majestic floral floats with thousands of beautiful flowers and more than 300 regal equestrian units.

Source: http://feeds.businesswire.com/click.phdo?i=72f08e22778e38f61ac06afa4485b74f

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UK & World News: Cancer patients need fuel charity

Cancer patients are becoming increasingly reliant on charity handouts to heat their homes as they struggle to pay rising fuel bills, newly-published figures have shown.

Macmillan Cancer Support said it had made one-off payments totalling ?2,548,563 to 12,669 cancer patients to help with fuel costs during 2011, a sharp increase on the 7,369 patients needing similar help just five years ago.

The charity, which issued fuel grants of around ?1.4 million in 2006, is calling for an ongoing independent review of fuel poverty - which was commissioned by the Government - to prioritise cancer patients for help.

Commenting on the rise in charity payments announced by Macmillan, its campaign manager, Laura Keely, said: "To feel too scared to put the heating on because of soaring energy bills is an unacceptable reality for thousands of vulnerable cancer patients who feel the cold more and spend long periods of time at home.

"When the charity was established 100 years ago, founder Douglas Macmillan helped cancer patients by handing out sacks of coal to keep them warm.

"It is shocking that a century on, people who are diagnosed with this devastating disease are still relying on charity help to heat their freezing homes."

Studies have shown that seven in 10 cancer patients aged under 55 lose income after being diagnosed, often because they are too ill to work.

However, their bills often rise because they need to spend more time at home and feel the chill more because of their treatment.

Research conducted for Macmillan into fuel poverty has also established that certain groups of cancer patients are particularly vulnerable to fuel poverty, including those on housing benefit and council tax benefit or with a low annual household income.

Source: http://www.sundaysun.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/2011/12/27/cancer-patients-need-fuel-charity-84229-30016501/

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

OpposingViews: Pictures: 'The Amazing Spider-Man' Movie: Sony/Columbia has re... http://t.co/k7i0zSuF

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Cricket-Australia v India - first test scoreboard

Mon Dec 26, 2011 1:38am GMT

 MELBOURNE, Dec 26 (Reuters) - Scoreboard at lunch on the opening day of the first test between Australia and India at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Monday.	
 Australia first innings 	  E. Cowan not out                       14  	  D. Warner c Dhoni b Yadav              37	  S. Marsh c Kohli b Yadav                0	  R. Ponting not out                     15	
 Extras (lb-2)                        2	
 Total (two wickets, 23.5 overs)     68	   (To bat:  M. Clarke, M. Hussey, B. Haddin, P. Siddle, J. Pattinson, B. Hilfenhaus, N. Lyon)	  Fall of wickets: 46-1, 46-2  	   Bowling (to date): Z. Khan 8.5-3-21-0, I. Sharma 	 8-3-19-0, U. Yadav 6-2-25-2	
 (Compiled by Ian Ransom; Editing by Peter Rutherford)      	

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/UKCricketNews/~3/Hh60T5wxY_o/cricket-india-scoreboard-idUKL3E7NQ00G20111226

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U-T: Former Sailor Develops Green Jobs Program

Elizabeth Perez-Halperin vividly remembers Oct. 12, 2000, as ?the day that changed my life forever.? That was when terrorists blew a hole in the U.S. destroyer Cole docked off Yemen, killing 17 sailors. One of those victims was her closest friend from Navy boot camp, Lakiba Nicole Palmer of San Diego.The attack, coupled with her growing belief that America?s demand for oil helps fund terrorists and their allies, has committed Perez-Halperin to new missions since she left the Navy in 2005.Now 33, Perez-Halperin has launched a San Diego-based startup company called GC Green that secures funding from public and private sources to train and connect veterans to jobs in the green energy field. For example, filling a need for energy auditors to help homeowners save on utility bills.Palmer continues to motivate her effort.?She has to live beyond that day,? Perez-Halperin said.Perez-Halperin also champions energy security by promoting alternatives to oil. That?s what brought her to Sacramento recently to urge the California Air Resources Board to continue a controversial regulation aimed at forcing oil companies to reduce the carbon content in transportation fuels.It was brief, but riveting testimony about the loss of her friend and her own father, a veteran of the first Gulf War.?You can imagine the frustration that I and so many others felt when we learned that our addiction to oil was helping to fund the very same terrorist organization that had attacked the USS Cole,? she said, pausing to compose herself.Some veterans don?t see it that way. Willie Galvan, a retired Korean War-era veteran and state commander of the nonprofit American GI Forum of California, wrote a recent column critical of the air board, arguing that more regulations put the country?s energy security and businesses at further risk, especially with the economy so wobbly.?There are those who imply that the only threat to adequate energy supplies is reliance on imported crude. But they conveniently neglect to consider that California?s regulatory structure has increasingly been the cause of declining in-state production and rising imports,? Galvan wrote.?As for replacing fossil fuels with alternatives, the reality is they are neither sufficiently available or competitively priced,? he wrote.Perez-Halperin and others say their primary fears are imports from countries friendly to terrorists and the risk of future war for oil. The long-term solution is to slow those imports by investing in alternative sources, they argue.Perez-Halperin knows fuel. During her military service she served as an aviation logistics specialist providing combat support for U.S. and NATO forces. In Bahrain and other places she was in charge of transporting and ordering fuel supplies.?I could not understand why were purchasing fuel from countries that wish us harm. It was a gut check,? she said.After leaving the Navy, ?I was searching for change and not sure where to find it,? Perez-Halperin said.She soon discovered her calling.?I wanted to address the environment, energy and veterans,? she explained.That led to GC Green, which began to find its footing this year, securing various grants to train veterans and find work to subcontract jobs to others in San Diego and across the state.GC Green has helped train over 600 auditors statewide, most of them veterans, in collaboration with other organizations, Perez-Halperin said. About dozen or so have found jobs on projects. ?She?s certainly helped grow my business,? said Bruce Cheney, a disabled veteran who owns Anchors Aweigh Energy in San Diego. ?We would not be where we are today without working with GC Green.?Cheney, who shares Perez-Halperin?s view that the country?s security depends on weaning off imported oil, works with homeowners on energy audits, writing up recommendations that pencils out the cost and potential long-term savings.His experience indicates that the average home uses far more energy than necessary. ?That is too much fossil fuel and we get it from countries who don?t like us,? Cheney said.Green energy alternatives, he continued, ?create the jobs here that can?t be shipped overseas.?Perez-Halperin Noted that she has not been able to do it alone. She credits several groups with providing support. Among those: the San Diego offices of the Conservation Services Group and Mission Continues, which helps disabled veterans give back through public service. She also attended Entrepreneurs Bootcamp for Veterans based in Syracuse, N.Y.It?s probably not surprising that Perez-Halperin took this path. When she was just 12, she wrote an essay on freedom that touched on Operation Desert Storm to drive Saddam Hussein?s Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. The daughter of a career soldier, Perez received an A. She also ?sees through a different lens? as a Native American, part of the North Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians tribe near Yosemite, Perez-Halperin said.?Environment, sustainability, is very important to me,? she said. Some of her work has been with tribal ventures.With the last of the combat troops in Iraq now home safe for the holidays, Perez-Halperin said she is even more determined to help those returning to civilian life to find jobs.She is also driven by memories of another friend who returned home from Afghanistan deeply depressed, committing suicide not long ago.?This stuff is real. It is not TV,? she said. ?These are real issues that America needs to face and address. What do we do when they all come home??

Copyright 2011 by The San Diego Union-Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.10news.com/news/30075809/detail.html

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

At least 38 dead in Haitian shipwreck off Cuba (Reuters)

HAVANA (Reuters) ? At least 38 people died on Saturday when a boat carrying Haitian migrants sunk off the coast of Guantanamo province in far eastern Cuban, Cuban television reported.

It said 87 people, including seven women, were rescued after Cuban civil defense forces spotted the boat 100 meters off Punta Maisi, which is about 600 miles southeast of Havana.

There were no details on possible cause of the accident or the destination of the boat, but search and rescue efforts were still underway, the report said.

The dead included 21 men and 17 women, it said.

(Reporting by Nelson Acosta; editing by Jeff Franks)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111225/wl_nm/us_cuba_shipwreck

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Top-Flite Gamer V2 Golf Balls ? 24 Pack - $19.99

Go Putt Yourself

Hey buddy! Sorry you had to miss our golfing trip to Aruba, but I?m sending you a consolation prize!

I?don?t have a whole lot of time to write at the moment. My morning massage ran long ? no clocks out on the beach, ha ha ? and I?ve got to put on another layer of sunscreen before today?s tee time. But I just remembered something: I was so distracted the last few weeks planning for this trip, I totally forgot to get you anything for Christmas! And after you agreed to shovel my sidewalk and keep my pipes unfrozen while I was gone. I felt terrible.

So before the poolside mimosa buffet this morning, I slipped on my flip-flops and popped down to the pro shop to pick you up a 24-pack of Top-Flite Gamer V2 Golf Balls. Their dimple-in-dimple technology helped me shoot a 73 yesterday, and it probably would?ve been more like a 71 if I hadn?t been distracted by the bikini fashion show over on the beach. That softer, thinner cover and more resilient core should do wonders for both your distance and your short game, especially with those new clubs of yours. In five or six months, anyway, when you can finally use them.

Well, I gotta run. This whole trip has been go, go, go ? golfing, scuba diving, salsa dancing, and the second I stop to take a breather, somebody shoves a margarita in my hand and slides a platter of fajitas in front of me. I swear, I?m gonna need a vacation after this vacation, heh! It would?ve been great if you?d been able to make it down. But hey, at least you?ve got some new Top-Flite Gamer V2 Golf Balls!

Warranty: 1 Year Top-Flite

Condition: New

Features:

  • Award-winning Dimple In Dimple Aerodynamics
  • Three-piece total performance from tee to green
  • Cover has been reformulated for increased durability, longer distance and superior short-game spin for increased greenside control
  • Highly resilient core is softer for better feel off of the clubface and generates outstanding distance
  • DuPont? HPF? mantle layer increases ball speed to maximize distance
  • Soft, thin, more durable cover
Specifications:
Ball Size: 1.684
Ball Target Weight: 45.5
Core Material: Polybutadiene
Core Diameter: 1.45
Cover Material: Ionomer
Cover Thickness: 0.048
Cover Material Hardness: 59D
Number of Geometries: 332
Surface Area Coverage: 88%
Aerodynamic Pattern: Dual Circular/Seamless

?

In the box:

  • Top-Flite Gamer V2 611074712 Golf Balls ? 24 Pack

Source: http://www.woot.com/Blog/ViewEntry.aspx?Id=20855

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CoMissourian: Santa is in Vietnam right now, headed to China next. Merry Christmas, everyone! http://t.co/8s4BU0iF #christmas #norad #santa

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Santa is in Vietnam right now, headed to China next. Merry Christmas, everyone! cot.ag/vSkoez #christmas #norad #santa CoMissourian

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

KaraKennedy: RT @AP: AP INTERACTIVE: From Steve Jobs to Kim Jong Il, a look at the famous and infamous who died in 2011: http://t.co/hzoeRXXd -EC

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AP INTERACTIVE: From Steve Jobs to Kim Jong Il, a look at the famous and infamous who died in 2011: apne.ws/ugNP8Z -EC AP

The Associated Press

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TheDailySun: First Baptist Church to serve Christmas meal http://t.co/JDrH6aRL

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First Baptist Church to serve Christmas meal bit.ly/seAqkI TheDailySun

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

DA Ozanne may ask Supreme Court to rehear union lawsuit

SCOTT BAUER | Associated Press madison.com | | Posted: Thursday, December 22, 2011 2:15 pm

Dane County's district attorney, who filed a lawsuit challenging Wisconsin's law passed earlier this year effectively ending collective bargaining rights for most public workers, said Thursday he is considering asking the state Supreme Court to rehear the case.

Ismael Ozanne said he was looking at making the request after learning that Supreme Court Justice Michael Gableman had received free legal services from a firm that defended the law in that case decided in June.

Gableman was part of a four-justice majority that upheld the law, which generated massive opposition protests earlier this year and made Wisconsin the center of the national fight over union rights.

There's no guarantee the court would agree to rehear the case even if Gableman did not participate in making that decision. If no other justice changed their opinion on the case, a 3-3 deadlock would be possible and it would not be heard again.

Ozanne said he didn't have a timeline for deciding whether to make the request, but he was looking into the facts related to Gableman's involvement with the law firm that helped defend the collective bargaining law.

Whether a rehearing is sought "depends on what all the facts are," Ozanne said. "We have some of them, but not all."

Gableman retained the law firm of Michael Best and Friedrich to defend him in a 2008 ethics case that related to an ad he ran in his successful campaign for the state's highest court. Gableman signed a contingency agreement with the law firm that resulted in him paying out of pocket expenses, but required him to pay attorneys' fees only if he prevailed and could persuade the state to pay the costs.

The Supreme Court deadlocked 3-3 on the charges that Gableman violated the ethics code, which meant he did not win and could not seek reimbursement for his legal fees from the state claims board.

Michael Best also defended the state in the collective bargaining lawsuit.

Eric McLeod, a Michael Best attorney who represented Gableman and also assisted in the defense of the collective bargaining law, did not immediately return a call seeking comment Thursday.

Gableman has declined repeated requests to comment made through a court spokesman.

Madison lawyer Lester Pines, who represented state Sen. Mark Miller in the open meetings lawsuit, said Ozanne has "every right" to ask the court to rehear the case.

"(McLeod) himself was appearing before the court in that case and nobody knew" about Gableman's free legal representation by McLeod, Pines said. "That's a very big deal."

Dana Brueck, spokeswoman for the state Department of Justice, which opposed Ozanne's open meetings lawsuit in court, said DOJ would respond to the issue if something is filed in court.

Ozanne argued in the collective bargaining case that the bill should not go into effect because a Republican-controlled committee of lawmakers broke the state's open meetings law by voting on the bill without the required notice to the public.

But the court, in its 4-3 ruling, said legislative rules trumped the open meetings law and said passage of the bill was legal.

A government watchdog group, the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, as well as Democratic state Rep. Gary Hebl have asked the state Judicial Commission and the Government Accountability Board, which enforces campaign finance and ethics laws, to investigate Gableman.

Since the law firm started representing Gableman in 2008, he participated in nine cases involving Michael Best clients. Gableman ruled in those clients' favor in five of those cases, including the collective bargaining lawsuit.

There are five pending cases before the court with Michael Best clients.

On Thursday, a motion was filed seeking Gableman's recusal in another case in which Republicans are seeking to have new legislative district boundaries enacted for possible recall elections next year. Michael Best represented Republicans in the drawing of those new lines as part of the once-a-decade task of redistricting.

Attorney Jeremy Levinson argues in the motion filed on behalf of Democrats seeking to recall Republicans that given Gableman's relationship with Michael Best, he should not be allowed to participate in that case.

"Justice Gableman has put himself at the center of a constellation of profound and difficult facts and circumstances that compel him to refrain from participating," Levinson argued.

A group of Republican citizens filed the lawsuits, asking the Supreme Court to either appoint a panel of judges or hear the case directly. The Republicans argue that the new GOP-friendly boundaries should take effect for any recall elections, which would make it more difficult for Democrats to succeed.

Petitions are currently being circulated targeting four incumbent Republican state senators for recall. Under the redistricting law as passed, the new boundaries would not take effect until the November election.

Michael Best initially represented the Republicans in the pending cases, but have since withdrawn as their attorneys.

? State Journal reporter Ed Treleven contributed to this report.

Source: http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/govt-and-politics/da-ozanne-may-ask-supreme-court-to-rehear-union-lawsuit/article_dda060d4-2cba-11e1-9184-0019bb2963f4.html

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As Iraq smolders, Kurds sit on oil riches

As Iraq looks like collapsing into another sectarian free-for-all, with energy resources a key prize, the semi-autonomous Kurdish region is like an island of stability and security.

In large part, that's because it's sitting on its own energy treasure house, an estimated 60 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, more than Libya's entire reserves, and 45 billion barrels of oil, roughly the amount Britain has produced from its North Sea fields.

"Sweeping changes ? have taken place in Iraq's semi-autonomous northern region over the past decade, changes driven by the wealth that lies underneath its desolate landscape," observed the Financial Times.

"The days when Kurdistan was an economic backwater are over," Prime Minister Barham Salih told Kurdistan's first regional oil and gas conference in Irbil, the Kurdish capital, in November.

But the Kurdistan Regional Government, which runs the three northern provinces that constitute the Kurdish enclave, is locked in a bitter battle with the central government in Baghdad over oil rights and revenue-sharing as well as territory.

This seemingly intractable dispute has in recent weeks spread to other provinces that now seek more autonomy, including oil-rich Basra in the south, which contains two-thirds of Iraq's known oil reserves of 143.1 billion barrels.

With the Shiite-dominated government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki showing increasing signs of cracking down on minority Sunnis and Kurds, marginalizing them politically and concentrating all power in the hands of the majority Shiites now that U.S. forces have withdrawn, the stage seems set for major turmoil.

The KRG recently upped the stakes dramatically by signing an agreement with Exxon Mobil, the world's largest oil company, Oct. 18 to explore six blocks widely believed to be sure-fire gushers.

Exxon was the first international oil major to venture into Kurdistan, defying Maliki's government, which insists Baghdad alone can make such deals.

Exxon faces stiff reprisals by Baghdad but refuses to back down.

Meantime, as political infighting intensifies with the departure of the Americans, the Kurds and Sunnis are quitting Maliki's shaky coalition amid a wave of arrests by his security forces.

So Kurdistan, which also claims the Kirkuk oilfields in the north, is likely to be in the eye of the storm.

The Kurds' big problem is that their territory in the northeastern corner of Iraq is landlocked and to get their oil out they have to use state pipelines controlled by Baghdad.

Kurdish oil is pumped northward through twin pipelines to neighboring Turkey's Ceyhan terminal on the Mediterranean, so any break with Baghdad means no outlet for Kurdish crude.

But the Kurds have found a possible ally in Turkey, even though Ankara's a bitter opponent of the Kurds' burning ambition for an independent state.

The Turks fear an independent Kurdistan will encourage their own Kurdish rebels in their 20-year separatist war, as well as the wider region's 20 million Kurds.

Even so, Ankara may find Iraqi Kurds' support for the Turkish rebels might be dampened if Turkey gives the KRG separate access to Ceyhan.

Turkey, with no energy resources of its own, is particularly eager to import natural gas to fuel its power stations, possibly via a new pipeline from Kurdistan.

"The large deposits of natural gas in Iraqi Kurdistan and a booming bilateral trade -- together with a better mutual security understanding -- have led to much-improved relations," the Financial Times' Commodities Editor Javier Blas reported.

The presence of senior Turkish officials at the Irbil oil and gas conference testified to that.

"Turkey is even talking about connecting an export pipeline from Kurdistan to the projected Nabucco pipeline which would link the gas-rich Caucasus and Central Asia to energy-hungry European nations," said Blas.

Kurdistan is currently capable of producing 100,000 barrels of oil per day. That's scheduled to hit 175,000 bpd in 2012.

But if Exxon Mobil or any of the 40 smaller outfits that also have contracts with the KRG strike it big, KRG Natural Resources Minister Ashti Hawrami says production could reach 1 million bpd by 2015.

If Iraq starts to fragment, that could convince other oil majors to invest in Kurdistan.

Source: http://www.energy-daily.com/reports/As_Iraq_smolders_Kurds_sit_on_oil_riches_999.html

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Mayo Clinic discovery selected for Science's Top 10 Achievements of 2011

Mayo Clinic discovery selected for Science's Top 10 Achievements of 2011 [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Dec-2011
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Contact: Alaine Westra
newsbureau@mayo.edu
507-284-4005
Mayo Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn. -- The editors of the journal Science have selected a Mayo Clinic discovery as one of their top 10 "groundbreaking scientific achievements of 2011." The Mayo study --the first to eliminate the effects of aging in mice -- received worldwide attention when it was published in Nature in November. Science's international list of achievements featuring scientific breakthroughs ranging from biology to aerospace research was released Thursday afternoon.

The study showed that the onset of age-related disorders and disabilities could be delayed or prevented by eliminating senescent cells: cells that have become "deadbeat" and are no longer dividing.

"This is indeed an honor, coming from Science in particular," says Jan van Deursen, Ph.D., a Mayo Clinic molecular biologist and senior author of the study. "We're pleased for this recognition for our team and collaborators, including the Mayo Clinic Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging."

The Science editors expressed enthusiasm that "mice whose bodies were cleared of these loitering cells didn't live longer than their untreated cage-mates -- but they did seem to live better, which provided researchers with some hope that banishing senescent cells might also prolong our golden years."

"Our discovery demonstrates that, in our body, cells are accumulating that cause these age-related disorders and discomforts," says Dr. van Deursen, the Vita Valley Professor of Cellular Senescence at Mayo Clinic. "Therapeutic interventions to get rid of senescent cells or block their effects may represent an avenue to make us feel more vital, healthier, and allow us to stay independent for a much longer time."

The research is an important step in the quest to improve health-span -- not necessarily living a longer life, but a healthier, more productive one.

###

Co-authors of the article are Darren Baker, Ph.D., Tamar Tchkonia, Ph.D., Nathan LeBrasseur, Ph.D., James Kirkland, M.D., Ph.D., and Bennett Childs, all of Mayo Clinic; and Tobias Wijshake and Bart van de Sluis, Ph.D., both of Groningen University, the Netherlands. The Ellison Medical Foundation, the Noaber Foundation, the Mayo Clinic Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging and the National Institutes of Health funded the study.

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about/ and http://www.mayoclinic.org/news.



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Mayo Clinic discovery selected for Science's Top 10 Achievements of 2011 [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 22-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Alaine Westra
newsbureau@mayo.edu
507-284-4005
Mayo Clinic

ROCHESTER, Minn. -- The editors of the journal Science have selected a Mayo Clinic discovery as one of their top 10 "groundbreaking scientific achievements of 2011." The Mayo study --the first to eliminate the effects of aging in mice -- received worldwide attention when it was published in Nature in November. Science's international list of achievements featuring scientific breakthroughs ranging from biology to aerospace research was released Thursday afternoon.

The study showed that the onset of age-related disorders and disabilities could be delayed or prevented by eliminating senescent cells: cells that have become "deadbeat" and are no longer dividing.

"This is indeed an honor, coming from Science in particular," says Jan van Deursen, Ph.D., a Mayo Clinic molecular biologist and senior author of the study. "We're pleased for this recognition for our team and collaborators, including the Mayo Clinic Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging."

The Science editors expressed enthusiasm that "mice whose bodies were cleared of these loitering cells didn't live longer than their untreated cage-mates -- but they did seem to live better, which provided researchers with some hope that banishing senescent cells might also prolong our golden years."

"Our discovery demonstrates that, in our body, cells are accumulating that cause these age-related disorders and discomforts," says Dr. van Deursen, the Vita Valley Professor of Cellular Senescence at Mayo Clinic. "Therapeutic interventions to get rid of senescent cells or block their effects may represent an avenue to make us feel more vital, healthier, and allow us to stay independent for a much longer time."

The research is an important step in the quest to improve health-span -- not necessarily living a longer life, but a healthier, more productive one.

###

Co-authors of the article are Darren Baker, Ph.D., Tamar Tchkonia, Ph.D., Nathan LeBrasseur, Ph.D., James Kirkland, M.D., Ph.D., and Bennett Childs, all of Mayo Clinic; and Tobias Wijshake and Bart van de Sluis, Ph.D., both of Groningen University, the Netherlands. The Ellison Medical Foundation, the Noaber Foundation, the Mayo Clinic Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging and the National Institutes of Health funded the study.

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit http://www.mayoclinic.org/about/ and http://www.mayoclinic.org/news.



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/mc-mcd122211.php

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Mexico extradites suspect in Brownsville ICE agent's murder


A Zetas drug cartel member accused of killing a Brownsville ICE agent in Mexico is now in American custody where he faced a judge in Washington DC.

Mexican authorities have extradited Julian Espinoza-Zapata to the United States where he?s facing a four-count federal indictment.

Espinoza-Zapata,? aka ?El Piolin,? is accused of the murder of U.S. Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent Jaime Zapata.

The alleged Zetas member is also accused of the attempted murder of ICE agent Victor Avila.

The two ICE agents were attacked by gunmen in San Luis Potosi back in February.

Mexican authorities arrested Espinoza-Zapata and several other suspects as part of an ongoing investigation.

Espinoza-Zapata has now been extradited and appeared before U.S. District Chief Judge Royce Lamberth in Washington DC on Wednesday morning.

Chief Judge Lamberth unsealed the four-page indictment against Espinoza-Zapata and ordered that he be held without bail.

Espinoza-Zapata is the only person listed on the indictment. His next court appearance is scheduled for January 25th 2012.

Click here to download a PDF copy of El Piolin's indictment?

Source: http://www.valleycentral.com/news/story.aspx?id=699729

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Counterfeit ring scams Packers' fans on game day (Reuters)

MILWAUKEE (Reuters) ? The toughest ticket in Titletown has just got a little more tricky to score as a counterfeit ring is targeting eager Green Bay Packers fans outside Lambeau Field, police said on Tuesday.

During the pre-game festivities before the past two home games, six to eight individuals have used counterfeit money to buy tickets or have sold expired tickets, according to Lieutenant Jody Crocker of the Ashwaubenon Public Safety Department.

The scheme begins with a member of the ring using counterfeit cash to buy a ticket from an unsuspecting seller outside of the stadium before the game begins, according to Crocker.

After making the purchase, the buyer darts away through the crowd, meeting up with another member of the ring. The pair switches clothing and then heads back into the crowd, attempting to sell the tickets, Crocker explained.

Before the last home game, the ring also sold half a dozen expired e-tickets, originally for games in 2009, Crocker said.

"It's somewhat of a game of Pong going on outside of Lambeau Field," he added.

After winning the Super Bowl last season, Green Bay has navigated through the 2012 campaign in dominating fashion, winning 13 straight games before losing last week to the Kansas City Chiefs.

"With the popularity and the want and need for these tickets growing, the opportunity for scams and theft also grows," Crocker said.

The Packers renew their rivalry with the Chicago Bears on Christmas night at Lambeau Field. Online brokers are charging at least $200 per ticket to the game.

"It's a golden opportunity on Christmas Day to have this happen," he said. "This is a great recipe to be ripped off in."

Packers tickets have always been a hot commodity. The team has been sold out on season tickets since 1960, and a waiting list now stands at 93,000 names. Fans who received the right to buy tickets this year had been on the waiting list for 35 years.

(Editing by Tim Gaynor)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111221/us_nm/us_football_packers

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Israel says European U.N. states' criticism is wrong (Reuters)

JERUSALEM (Reuters) ? Israel Wednesday said four European U.N. Security Council members should support a resumption of stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace talks because their criticism of the Jewish state could sideline them from negotiations.

Tuesday, representatives of Britain, France, Germany and Portugal said a briefing by U.N. assistant secretary-general for political affairs Oscar Fernandez-Taranco had made clear to the 15-nation council that Israeli settlement activity was undermining attempts to restart peace talks.

An Israeli Foreign Ministry statement did not mention settlements but said that "interfering with Israel's domestic affairs, including on issues which are to be solved within the framework of direct talks, does not enhance the status they (the members) wish to be granted."

Peace talks brokered by the Quartet of Middle East negotiators - the United States, Russia, the United Nations and the European Union - collapsed a year ago over Israel's refusal to halt construction in settlements. The Palestinians have refused to resume them unless Israel stops building.

Israel says negotiations should resume without preconditions and that most of its settlement construction takes place in areas it intends to keep in any future peace deal.

Most countries consider settlements Israel has built in the West Bank illegal, although Israel disputes this, citing historical and biblical links to the land.

The Palestinians, who want to establish a state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, say settlement expansion will deny them a viable country.

Britain, France, Germany and Portugal called for an immediate halt to Israeli settlement activity, adding that they hoped the government would follow through on promises to bring settlers guilty of violence to justice.

Militant West Bank settlers have waged what they call "Price Tag" attacks against Palestinian property, including vandalizing mosques, in revenge for violence against settlers and as retribution for Israeli government curbs on settlements.

"Israel's continuing announcements to accelerate the construction of settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories, including East Jerusalem, send a devastating message," Britain's U.N. ambassador Mark Lyall Grant said, reading the four countries' joint statement Tuesday.

"One of the themes that emerged was the severely damaging effect that increased settlement construction and settler violence is having on the ground and on the prospects of a return to negotiations."

The Israeli statement said the four countries' "misreading" only added obstacles on the path toward new peace talks.

It said they must not give the Quartet plan "interpretations that contradict both the letter and the spirit" of the text.

"If ... they invest their efforts in inappropriate bickering with the one country where the independent law and justice system can handle lawbreakers of all kinds, they are bound to lose their credibility and make themselves irrelevant," the Israeli statement said.

(Writing by Ori Lewis; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111221/wl_nm/us_palestinians_israel_un

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Egypt's military clashes with protesters; 9 killed

An Egyptian protester throws a stone toward soldiers as a building burns during clashes near Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian soldiers swept into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday, chasing protesters and beating them to the ground with sticks and tossing journalists' TV cameras off of balconies in the second day of a violent crackdown on anti-military protesters that has left nine dead and hundreds injured. (AP Photo/Ahmad Hammad)

An Egyptian protester throws a stone toward soldiers as a building burns during clashes near Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian soldiers swept into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday, chasing protesters and beating them to the ground with sticks and tossing journalists' TV cameras off of balconies in the second day of a violent crackdown on anti-military protesters that has left nine dead and hundreds injured. (AP Photo/Ahmad Hammad)

Egyptian protesters run as they are chased by army soldiers over the Asr el-Nile bridge leading out of Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian soldiers swept into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday, chasing protesters and beating them to the ground with sticks and tossing journalists' TV cameras off of balconies in the second day of a violent crackdown on anti-military protesters that has left eight dead and hundreds injured. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

Egyptian army soldiers face protesters, unseen, over the Asr el-Nile bridge leading outside of Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Egypt Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian soldiers swept into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday, chasing protesters and beating them to the ground with sticks and tossing journalists' TV cameras off of balconies in the second day of a violent crackdown on anti-military protesters that has left eight dead and hundreds injured. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

Egyptian army soldiers chase a protester over the Asr el-Nile bridge leading out of Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Egypt Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian soldiers swept into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday, chasing protesters and beating them to the ground with sticks and tossing journalists' TV cameras off of balconies in the second day of a violent crackdown on anti-military protesters that has left eight dead and hundreds injured. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

An Egyptian protester uses a slingshot against soldiers, unseen, as a building burns during clashes near Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011. Hundreds of Egyptian soldiers swept into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday, chasing protesters and beating them to the ground with sticks and tossing journalists' TV cameras off of balconies in the second day of a violent crackdown on anti-military protesters that has left nine dead and hundreds injured. (AP Photo/Ahmad Hammad)

(AP) ? Hundreds of Egyptian soldiers swept into Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday, chasing protesters and beating them to the ground with sticks and tossing journalists' TV cameras off of balconies in the second day of a violent crackdown on antimilitary protesters that has left nine dead and hundreds injured.

The violent, chaotic scenes suggested that the military ? fresh after the first rounds of parliament elections that it claimed bolstered its status as the country's rulers ? was now determined to stamp out protests by activists demanding it transfer power immediately to civilians.

TV footage, pictures and eyewitnesses accounts showed a new level of force being used by the military against pro-democracy activists the past two days. Military police openly beat women protesters in the street, slap elders on the face, and pulled the shirt off of at least one veiled woman as she struggled on the pavement. Witnesses said they beat and gave electric shocks to men and women dragged into detention, many of them held in the nearby parliament or Cabinet buildings, witnesses said.

Aya Emad, a 24-year-old protester, had a broken nose, her arm in a sling, her other arm bruised. She told Associated Press that troops dragged her by her headscarf and hair into the Cabinet headquarters. She said soldiers kicked her on the ground, an officer shocked her with an electrical prod and another slapped her on the face.

With Egypt in the midst of multistage parliamentary elections, the violence threatens to spark a new cycle of fighting after deadly clashes between youth revolutionaries and security forces in November that lasted for days and left more than 40 dead. The clashes in November involved the widely disliked police force. But in a key difference, this time the police have stayed away and the crackdown is being led entirely by the military.

That could indicate a new confidence among the military that it has backing of the broader public ? after elections held under its watch that saw heavy turnout, were largely peaceful and the fairest and freest in living memory.

Ahmed Abdel-Samei, who came to check on Tahrir Square, said he opposes protests. "Elections were the first step. This was a beginning to stability," the 29-year-old said. "Now we are going 10 steps back."

Noor Noor, an activist who was beaten up trying to protect Emad, said, "Public opinion is addicted or naturally inclined to favor stability or the illusion of it. But in time, it will be hard for the army to cover everything up."

The heavy-handed crackdown could galvanize the military's opponents and even some in the public who praised the army for delivering clean elections. Among those killed Friday was an eminent 52-year-old Muslim cleric from Al-Azhar, Egypt's most respected religious institution. At the funeral Saturday of Sheik Emad Effat, who was shot in the chest, hundreds chanted "Retribution, retribution," and marched from the cemetery to Tahrir.

Tahrir and streets leading to the nearby parliament and Cabinet headquarters looked like war zones. The military set up concrete walls between the square and parliament, but clashes continued.

Flames leaped from the windows of the state geographical society, which protesters pelted with firebombs after military police on the roof rained stones and firebombs down on them. Stones, dirt and shattered glass littered the streets around parliament.

Protesters grabbed helmets, sheets of metal and even satellite dishes to protect themselves from stones from troops above.

In the afternoon, troops charged into Tahrir, swinging truncheons and long sticks, chasing out protesters and setting fire to their tents. Footage broadcast on the private Egyptian CBC television network showed soldiers beating two protesters with sticks, repeatedly stomping on the head of one, before leaving the motionless bodies on the pavement.

The troops swept into buildings from which television crews were filming from and confiscated their equipment and briefly detained journalists.

In one case, plainclothes officers charged up the stairs of a hotel from which Al-Jazeera TV was filming the turmoil below and demanded a female hotel worker tell them where the media crew was or else they would beat her up, a member of the Al-Jazeera crew said. "The woman was screaming and saying I don't know," the crew member said speaking on condition of anonymity because of security concerns. The soldiers threw the Al-Jazeera crew's equipment from the balcony, including cameras, batteries and lighting equipment to the streets, landing on a sweet potato cart whose stove started a fire.

Troops also stormed a field hospital set up protesters next to a mosque in Tahrir, throwing medicine and equipment into the street, protester Islam Mohammed said.

At least nine people have been killed and around 300 people injured in the two days of clashes, the Health Ministry said.

A journalist who was briefly detained by the military forces told Associated Press that he was beaten up with sticks and fists while being led to inside a parliament building, next to Cabinet headquarters.

"They were cursing me saying 'you media are traitors, you tarnish our image and you are biased."

He also saw a group of men and one young woman being beaten: Each was surrounded by six or seven soldiers in uniform and plainclothes beating him or her with sticks or steel bars or giving electrical shocks with prods. "Blood covered the floor, and an officer was telling the soldiers to wipe the blood," said the journalist, who asked not to be identified for security concerns.

Mona Seif, an activist who was briefly detained during violence Friday, said she saw an officer repeatedly slapping a detained old woman in the face, telling her to apologize for objecting to the mistreatment.

"It was a humiliating scene," Seif told the private TV network Al-Tahrir. "I have never seen this in my life.

Pictures posted online by activists during Friday's fighting showed military police dragging several women by the hair, including young activists wearing the religious headscarf. One photo showed soldiers beating up a woman who appeared in her 50s.

Tahrir was the epicenter of the 18-day wave of protests that ousted Mubarak. The military was welcomed by many when it took power and proclaimed itself a partner in and protector of the revolution. Since then, tensions with activists have swelled. In a statement Saturday, the military denied targeting "Egypt's revolutionaries," saying it was pursuing "thugs" who hurled firebombs at its forces at the Cabinet.

Egypt's new, military-appointed interim prime minister defended the security forces' response. He denied the military or police shot at protesters, saying gunfire came from an unidentified group that "came from the back and fired at protesters."

He accused the antimilitary protests that have been held for weeks outside the Cabinet building of being "anti-revolution."

In a potential embarrassment to the military, a civilian advisory panel it created this month suspended its work, demanding an immediate end to violence and a formal apology from the ruling military council. Eight of its members resigned in protest of the crackdown.

The latest round of violence touched off late Thursday after soldiers stormed the antimilitary protest camp outside the Cabinet building near Tahrir Square, expelling demonstrators demanding an end to military rule and an immediate transfer of power to a civilian authority. Witnesses said troops snatched a protester, taking him into the parliament building and beating him.

Mustafa Ali, a protester who was wounded by pellet shot in clashes last month, accused the ruling generals Saturday of instigating the violence to "find a justification to remain in power and divide up people into factions."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-17-ML-Egypt/id-a7fffe58635446c59577030f2e8ff51b

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Elect Norfolk School Board for accountability (hamptonroads)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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Next up for New Orleans' recovery: fighting blight (Reuters)

NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) ? A city policy involving demolitions, inspections, community meetings and Saturday morning elbow grease is reviving New Orleans neighborhoods at a faster rate than most expected after Hurricane Katrina put 80 percent of the city underwater six years ago.

"This is a total groundbreaker for the city," said Allison Plyer, chief demographer of the nonprofit Greater New Orleans Community Data Center.

"There's never been this intensive an effort previously to combat blight."

Even before the levees broke, New Orleans struggled with many of the classic elements that produce vacant homes and empty lots: systematic population loss, a troubled economy and crime.

Then Katrina accelerated blight. Some 110,000 New Orleans residents did not return to their homes in the five years since the storm, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

In October 2010, Mayor Mitch Landrieu, then just six months in office, launched a blight initiative he said was designed to turn around 10,000 properties by 2014.

By the end of this year, city officials say, nearly 4,000 properties will fit that bill, lowering the city's total number of blighted properties to less than 42,000, according to data from the United States Postal Service, which tracks such figures as vacant homes where mail is not collected.

"What happened is we got better at what we're supposed to be doing and that, by getting more aggressive, property owners know we're coming and know we mean consequences so they start to self-correct," Landrieu told Reuters.

FEDERAL BILLIONS

In the early post-Katrina years, billions of federal recovery dollars helped the city buy abandoned properties and either demolish them or sell them to neighbors, as well as encourage residents to return and rehabilitate their homes.

Then came Jeff Hebert, the city's inaugural director of blight policy and neighborhood revitalization.

He has sped up property inspections, held regular community meetings and implemented little changes like redirecting workers in a jobs program to mowing overgrown lots in devastated neighborhoods like the Lower Ninth Ward, which hadn't seen a lawnmower blade in years.

Herbert also helped the city steer away from tax sales of foreclosed properties, which can drag on for three years, to sheriff's sales, which award new property owners a clear title immediately upon purchase.

"That may be our single biggest policy shift," Hebert told Reuters. "Our goal is not necessarily to demolish houses but the end goal is to get houses back into commerce."

Landrieu said the new measures are designed to address his administration's three priorities: crime, jobs and schools.

"Blight is the thread that depends on whether or not we have success in those areas," he said. "It's a major threat to public safety and quality of life."

Despite the city's efforts, about 25 percent of New Orleans housing remained vacant in 2010, according to the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center.

Title issues, contractor fraud and rebuilding costs are saddling recovery, and some residents say the city isn't acting fast enough to prevent neighborhoods from falling behind.

EIGHT FEET OF WATER

Take Rose Johnson. Her neat, two-story home in the city's Broadmoor neighborhood took nearly 8 feet of water and she spent $130,000 to return it back to its original splendor.

Her neighbor did not. In the years that passed since the storm, the vacant Italianate home next to Johnson's receded, as if reclaimed by the earth.

Pink exterior plaster is crumbled at the ground and this month, the stairs caved in. Johnson, 65, took it upon herself to mow the grass and hired an exterminator to set baits around her house so the rats next door wouldn't infest her own.

She said she called the city several times but has seen no progress. "It's a mess. I want them to tear it down," she said of city officials. "It's not fit to live in."

Demolition creates its own challenges. Some community organizers complain the city leaves the foundation behind on houses it demolishes, preventing lots from reverting to green space and creating another version of blight. The city has demolished over 2,100 blighted properties so far this year.

"Demolitions are a mixed bag," Plyer said. "If you do a lot of demolition then you have a dumping problem. People come and dump tires and debris and trash."

Population recovery is one reason New Orleans appears to be advancing on blight. Even though the New Orleans population is 21 percent less than before the storm, the population more than doubled between 2006 and 2010, to 343,800.

Katrina helped mobilize the city's public-private web of civic and neighborhood organizations and city departments, says Margery Austin Turner, vice president for research of the Urban Institute, a nonprofit policy analysis group based in Washington, D.C.

"I don't think you would have seen that kind of capacity in New Orleans prior to Katrina," she told Reuters.

Evidence of that is a section of Broadmoor where a development corporation set up by the neighborhood association in 2006 is rehabbing homes it purchased with $5 million from the Clinton Global Initiative. On one Friday in late November, 200 volunteers built a new playground for the nearby school.

"Our residents have skin in this game," said David Winkler-Schmit, communications director for the association. "We know what we need."

(Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111215/us_nm/us_blight_neworleans

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