Saturday, December 31, 2011

W.Va. tops most-competitive governors races (Politico)

Wisconsin is rising and North Carolina is in free fall in POLITICO?s final 2011 gubernatorial rankings of the year.

In the top eight races, Republicans hold distinct advantages in four contests, while Democrats can only be fairly considered a favorite in Missouri. The top three on the list ? West Virginia, Wisconsin and Montana ? are genuine toss-ups.

Continue Reading

1. West Virginia

Earl Ray Tomblin earned his first significant policy victory as an elected governor with the passage of the Marcellus Shale drilling bill ? an issue that had stymied lawmakers. Tomblin won plaudits for deftly ?laying the groundwork, negotiating and ultimately, finding the votes.? He?ll need that cachet next year, facing a likely rematch with Bill Maloney, who came within 3 percentage points of Tomblin in the October special and has already filed his 2012 paperwork.

Who won the year: Tomblin

No recent public polling

2. Wisconsin (Up 2 spots)

Even Scott Walker?s allies concede it?s exceeding likely the first-term Republican governor will be on the ballot next year. Recall petitioners have already netted more than a half a million signatures ? and still have until Jan. 17 to net the required 540,208. Walker has shifted into campaign mode, airing multiple television ads, raising $5 million since July and attempting to cast a cloud over the ?unusual? process. But ousting him won?t be as easy as initiating the recall. Democrats privately admit Walker isn?t as radioactive as Ohio?s John Kasich or Florida?s Rick Scott and there?s no consensus yet on the best candidate to upend him.

Who won the year: Wisconsin Democrats

No recent public polling

3. Montana (Down 1 spot)

A Republican poll released this week underscores the main challenge facing the front-runners in both parties: They?re largely unknown and undefined. A plurality of voters haven?t formed an opinion on state Attorney General Steve Bullock or former Rep. Rick Hill. But retired Navy SEAL Cmdr. Neil Livingstone reminded Hill this week that he first must steer through a muddled 10-person GOP primary. Hill, Livingstone said, has had ?two years to put it away and hasn?t done it.? That?s music to Bullock?s ears.

Who won the year: Bullock

Latest poll: Hill 39 percent, Bullock 38 percent (Public Policy Polling, 1,625 voters, Nov. 28-30)

4. Washington (Up 1 spot)

The Evergreen State?s gubernatorial contest once topped the list, but has tumbled from ?most competitive? status due to the strength of Republican Attorney General Rob McKenna?s campaign. Rep. Jay Inslee is shouldering two distinct burdens: discontent with outgoing Democratic Gov. Christine Gregoire and the trappings of Washington. Inslee, who has never waged a statewide campaign, has trailed in every recent poll and faces an opponent with a genuine moderate sheen that fits the state and the moment. Another telling indicator that Inslee?s behind: He was first to raise the debate question, calling for a half a dozen showdowns next year.

Who won the year: McKenna

Latest poll: McKenna 44 percent, Inslee 38 percent (SurveyUSA, 549 likely voters, Nov. 21-23)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/politico_rss/rss_politico_mostpop/http___www_politico_com_news_stories1211_70964_html/44036845/SIG=11mvfb4qs/*http%3A//www.politico.com/news/stories/1211/70964.html

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GTA III modifications appearing in Android version

Android Central

The anniversary edition of Grand Theft Auto III is quite simply magnificent. It truly is a mark of how far technology has advanced in the last ten years. And in true Android fashion, GTA III can be customised with just a tiny little bit of work.

It turns out that modifying the Android version of the game is in fact as simple as modifying the PC version. By adding files to the directory on the SD card. As an added bonus, it turns out the PC and Android versions of the game are so similar, that many PC modifications actually work on the Android version so you can soup up your cars and add custom textures to your heart's content. 

Hit the source link for more information if you fancy a go, and check out one happy modifiers video after the break.

Source: Droid Gamers

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/aex33kywVqo/story01.htm

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Friday, December 30, 2011

When Pres. Obama goes on vacation, plays golf, or uses a teleprompter, how angry do you get?

Summertime Answered:
Doesn't bother me.

Shirley Answered:
Yes, berry angry hun. STRAWBERRY angry?

Cricket Answered:
It's okay, Hussein will be dethroned

rmack Answered:
While millions of Americans are losing their jobs and homes ?he goes on lavish trips?THAT pisses me off.

RJC Answered:
Not at all?.however I do like the questions because they bring 0bamas hypocrisy to light.
You know,,,"Americans need to eat their peas."

Daniel Answered:
not at all

Lear 45 Continued II Answered:
F**K' him and feed him fishheads! Elitist Bastard!

Butch Answered:
u mean u get angry when da Prez ackts white?

The Solution Answered:
I get $4.1 MILLION Dollars Angry!!!

Don't you?I'm sure 99% of us can't afford a $4.1 MILLION Dollar Vacation.

And how many people make less PER YEAR than the $10,000/NIGHT Room at the The Four Seasons in Hawaii on her vacation?(I know it's not tax money, but doesn't she stand as one of those that the OWS Hates?)

I find it appalling, obscene and just plain wrong that these people are paying this much, and yet are representing me.They don't represent me, they know NOTHING about me and my needs and my life.

You should be offended.

Answered:
Doesn't bother me at all. He is, after all, a politician and that's what they do ? Self first, party second, country after that. I've gotten use to the politician mind-set and very little of what they do surprises me. I try to vote them out of office but they have bamboozled enough people to vote for them so remain on the public dole for life.

Eve Answered:
On a scale of 1-10, 10 being "I detest the use of the teleprompter, vacations and golf" I'd give it a 0 on the "angry scale."

mr joe cool Answered:
Yes because he is on vacation while countrie is turning to ****

Source: http://golfsway.com/when-pres-obama-goes-on-vacation-plays-golf-or-uses-a-teleprompter-how-angry-do-you-get/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Privacy rights and a thinning Canada-U.S. border

By Peter McKenna

Commentary

Recently, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and U.S. President Barack Obama launched the Beyond the Border pact in Washington to make trade and travel easier between the two countries. That was the easy part. Now the hard work begins on determining what it means for Canadians.

Besides dealing with economic competitiveness and regulatory reform to dilute a thickening border, the accord also deals with contentious issues around perimeter security. This is obviously the key part of the agreement for Washington and, most significantly, the Department of Homeland Security, which is now largely shaping the Canada-U.S. relationship.

Accordingly, the arrangement makes reference to an entry-exit tracking system (which comes with a price tag of almost $1 billion) for purposes of allaying U.S fears (real or imagined) about securing the border. The Americans have been pressing the Canadian government hard for some time now to collect such data and to turn it over to them for security reasons.

The accompanying "action plan" refers to a joint commitment in this way: "Share relevant, reliable, and accurate information within the legal and privacy regimes of both countries, such as information contained in biographic and biometric national-security watch lists, certain traveller criminal-history records and immigration violations."

The document then goes on to state the intent of the two countries: "To establish coordinated entry and exit systems at the common border, we commit to develop a system to exchange biographical information on the entry of travellers, including citizens, permanent residents and third-country nationals, such that a record of entry into one country could be considered as a record of an exit from the other."

More controversially perhaps is the reference to air travel provisions (as well as common land border ports of entry) to be in place by June 2014: "Canada will develop a system to establish exit, similar to that in the United States, under which airlines will be required to submit their passenger manifest information on outbound international flights. Exploratory work will be conducted for future integration of entry and exit information systems for the marine and rail modes."

So what exactly does this all mean for ordinary Canadians? What sorts of information - and how much - will Canada provide to our American friends? Furthermore, how can we ensure that this data is properly (and legally) used and protected?

More to the point: what happens to Canadian travellers who are wrongly accused of posing a security threat to the U.S. homeland? Most Canadians know what happened to one of our citizens, Maher Arar, when mistaken information that was shared with American intelligence officials resulted in him being shipped off to a grim Syrian prison cell, where he was subsequently tortured for 10 months.

There are a slew of other pertinent questions too: How do you get your name off the watch or no-fly list once it has been erroneously placed there? If you were picked up by police at a G-20 protest or an Occupy movement event, would that information be turned over? What if someone has travelled to Cuba recently?

What's to say that all this information - once collected - will remain solely in the Department of Homeland Security? And once you start opening the information tap, how do you say no to further requests by the U.S. for additional information? What if U.S. officials wanted access to the names of all those who emigrated to Canada in a certain year?

Canada's Privacy Commission Jennifer Stoddard has already raised a red flag about the potential pitfalls of sharing information about Canadians with U.S. border officials in the absence of stringent safeguards against abuse. "Any mistake can have grave consequences, including stranding travellers at airports or branding them as terrorists," she told CBC News.

No one is quite sure what safeguards have been put into place to protect Canadians' privacy or what exactly happens to that same information once U.S authorities get their hands on it. The Canadian Civil Liberties Association has also raised concerns about a shared watch list of travellers and whether there exists a clear appeals procedure for whenever mistakes are made.

There is so much that is not known about this personal information-sharing arrangement. There also seems to be a lot of unanswered questions. Perhaps there are simple explanations for all of them.

However, I would certainly feel more comfortable if there was some parliamentary oversight committee, an ombudsperson or an independent office to ensure that the privacy of Canadians is being well protected. But I doubt that that is going to happen.

Peter McKenna is professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

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Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5667103462

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Port St. Joe's Calvin Pryor will be in the starting lineup for the University of...

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=280555145327528&set=a.258533787529664.60962.160582583991452&type=1

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

The 10 Best Android Games of 2011 (Mashable)

Apple's iOS isn't the only platform that lets you have fun on the go! For those with Android phones and tablets, choose from many fun games that span the gaming spectrum.

SEE ALSO: 10 Best Cross-Platform Multiplayer Mobile Games

[More from Mashable: How 9 Retailers Successfully Leveraged Game Mechanics]

The above 10 games were 2011's cream of the crop Android releases. Which one is your favorite?

[More from Mashable: So You Got an iPhone 4S? Here?s How to Accessorize]

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111227/tc_mashable/the_10_best_android_games_of2011

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Japan hopes Europe will boost rescue mechanism: sources

TOKYO | Mon Dec 26, 2011 7:37am EST

TOKYO (Reuters) - Europe should boost the total firepower of its rescue fund and frontload its funding to send a positive signal to investors and international partners that it is determined to solve its debt crisis, Japanese officials said on Monday.

Japan has repeatedly expressed its willingness to help Europe contain its debt crisis, but has also stressed it wanted to see a convincing action plan before making any firm commitments.

"Japan like other non-euro countries is prepared to do something, but unless European countries take decisive action it is hard to make those steps effective," a senior Japanese government official said.

Lifting the combined size of the current bailout fund (EFSF) and the new permanent European Stability Mechanism (ESM) beyond the current 500 billion euros would be a major step and an encouraging signal.

"We expect European countries will review the combined ceiling of 500 billion euro of EFSF (European Financial Stability Fund) and ESM in a very positive manner," the official told Reuters.

European leaders agreed in Brussels earlier this month to accelerate the launch of the ESM by a year to mid-2012 with an effective lending capacity of 500 billion euros ($650 billion), but questions have arisen about the size and timing of contributions.

Japanese officials said that while bringing forward the launch of the fund was positive, a more ambitious ceiling might be needed given that Europe had little success in bringing in outside investors to boost the firepower of the EFSF fund.

"The leveraging of EFSF money by investors' money doesn't look like materializing very well. That's why they are frontloading the ESM and the review of the ceiling of 500 billion euro is very important," said the official, who declined to be named.

"European countries may think what they've already decided is a major step forward, but markets want Europe to act more decisively."

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble signaled over the weekend that Europe's biggest economy and its main paymaster could boost its contribution to the fund and support its swift launch, although any decisions would have to be made in January.

Since the beginning of the crisis more than two years ago, European leaders have orchestrated bailouts of Greece, Ireland and Portugal, set up a euro zone rescue fund and earlier this month agreed to boost the International Monetary Fund's resources by 150 billion euros.

Still, throughout the crisis that has also shaken Italy and Spain, investors have repeatedly been left with the impression that whatever was agreed in Brussels was too little, too late.

Japan, the United States, Canada and others have voiced their frustration with Europe's piecemeal progress and repeatedly called for bold steps that would create effective "firewalls" around the euro zone's weaker, heavily indebted economies.

Another Japanese government official reiterated on Monday that Tokyo, which led an international effort to boost the IMF's coffers after the Lehman crisis, was open to contributing more but that its decision depended on Europe's actions.

Officials in Tokyo said markets needed to see both effective defenses in the form of funds sufficient enough to cover the crisis-hit nations' financing needs and commitments to fiscal discipline.

"Fiscal discipline is very important. Even if we provide firewalls we need fiscal discipline," the official said.

While Tokyo has repeatedly voiced concern about developments in Europe, its plans to buy Chinese government debt did not reflect lack of confidence in the euro or U.S. dollar assets, another official said.

He said the plans, discussed during Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's visit to Beijing, aimed at strengthening economic ties between the two nations rather than diversifying Japan's exchange reserves, mostly made up of dollar and euro assets.

"The idea is not to depart from the dollar or U.S. government bonds or the euro, so it should not be interpreted as diversification of our portfolio," the official said.

"I don't have any doubts about creditworthiness of the dollar or U.S. government bonds. The dollar will remain the most important currency for the foreseeable future."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/v58cJB2crCs/us-japan-eurozone-idUSTRE7BP0BD20111226

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China and Japan Strengthen Finance Ties

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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Monday, December 26, 2011
Chinese and Japanese leaders have unveiled initiatives to tighten financial links between East Asia?s economic giants ? measures that could expand use of China?s tightly controlled currency abroad. ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2011/12/25/business/AP-AS-China-Japan-Finance-Deals.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Japan says it, India close to deciding dollar swap pact (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? Japan and India are in the final stages of deciding on a dollar swap agreement and expect to reach agreement during Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's visit to India this week, Japan's finance minister said on Tuesday.

An earlier $3 billion arrangement came into force in 2008 but expired in June. The Nikkei business newspaper reported on Sunday that the new one would be set at $10 billion.

Further financial cooperation as well as Japanese support for infrastructure in India will be a key focus at talks between the leaders of the two countries, Finance Minister Jun Azumi told a news conference.

Azumi also said he expects Japan's exports will pick up early next year if the European economy stabilizes and currency levels reflect Japan's economic fundamentals.

(Reporting by Kaori Kaneko; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/bs_nm/us_japan_economy_azumi

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Mexican army: Ally's arrest is blow to 'El Chapo' (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? Mexican authorities said Monday that they had dealt a blow to the country's most powerful drug cartel with the capture of a top lieutenant ? but didn't say if they were any closer to capturing the gang's elusive leader.

Felipe Cabrera Sarabia, known as "The Engineer," allegedly ran operations for the Sinaloa drug cartel, Mexico's most powerful, in the northern state of Durango and in part of the northern state of Chihuahua, Chief Army spokesman Gen. Ricardo Trevilla told a news conference. Cabrera, wearing a bulletproof vest, was paraded before the news media in what has become a common practice for law enforcement authorities following major arrests.

Many experts and law-enforcement officials believe the reputed leader of the Sinaloa cartel, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, has been hiding in the mountains of Durango. Authorities say Guzman is Mexico's top drug lord, while Forbes magazine has included him on its list of the world's richest men, reportedly worth more than $1 billion. He has eluded authorities since his 2001 escape from prison in a laundry truck, and has a $7 million bounty on his head. Trevilla offered no information about the hunt for Guzman. He only said that Cabrera's capture "will affect the structure and leadership of the Sinaloa cartel."

At the time of Cabrera's arrest, army special forces also seized documents and computer equipment, he said.

Cabrera was nabbed without a shot being fired Friday in the capital of Sinaloa state, headquarters of the cartel, army officials first announced Sunday night.

He will be held for at least 40 days on suspicion of participating in organized crime and drug trafficking. Mexican law allows organized-crime suspects to be held that long before prosecutors bring formal charges before a judge.

Trevilla said Cabrera and three of his brothers began as marijuana growers and that Cabrera rose through the Sinaloa ranks by using violence against his rivals.

In recent months, Cabrera waged war against a rival faction of the Sinaloa cartel known as the "Ms", leading to a surge in violence around Durango, he said.

Federal forces have found 14 mass graves containing 287 bodies in Durango state since April.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_drug_war_mexico

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Brazil fines Chevron $7m over oil spill reaction

Teen victim's last message

Hours before she was killed with her sister in a Christmas Day crash, a girl posted a moving message to her late grandmother and talked about the fun she was having with her family. The girls, aged 13 and 14, died when?

Source: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=10775420&ref=rss

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12/20/11 - Union HVAC Technician - Anchorage, Ak -


Union HVAC Technician

Job Number: 531060
Location: Anchorage, UNITED STATES
Business Unit : Trane Commercial

Ingersoll Rand is uniquely qualified to create?and sustain safe, comfortable and efficient environments.? Our people and our market leading brands, including Club Car?, Ingersoll Rand?, Schlage?, Thermo King?, and Trane?, work together to inspire progress for our customers. For more information about Ingersoll Rand visit www.ingersollrand.com.

?

Ingersoll Rand?s Climate Solutions sector delivers energy-efficient HVACR solutions for customers globally. Its world class brands include Hussmann, a manufacturer of refrigeration and food merchandising solutions, Thermo King, the leader in transport temperature control and Trane, provider? of energy efficient heating, ventilating and air conditioning systems, building and contracting services, parts support and advanced controls for homes and commercial buildings.

**Union Membership Required**

SUMMARY:
The HVAC Field Technician is responsible for retrofit and repair of environmental-comfort systems, utilizing knowledge of air conditioning theory, pipe fitting, and mechanical layouts. Typically requires an Associate?s Degree or equivalent from a Technical / Trade School with a certificate in Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning and five (5) years related experience; or seven (7) years related experience; or equivalent combination of education and experience.

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS AND RESPONSIBILITIES include the following. Other functions may be assigned.
? Responsible for servicing products and equipment on assigned projects and ensuring customer satisfaction
? Uses a variety of hand-tools, following blueprints or engineering specifications, to diagnose and repair units.
? Identifies, analyzes, diagnoses, and repairs systems and products at customer?s location.
? Performs preventative maintenance, site surveys, replacement, and modifications as need or requested by customers.
? Prepares for on-site installation and repairs by examining building layout, anticipating difficulties, gathering materials and coordinating on-site work, as necessary.
? Inspects vehicles by checking vehicle condition and literature supplies
? Maintains vehicles by keeping records of service manuals, scheduling, and complete repairs and maintenance service
? Maintains equipment by inspecting for signs of ware. Notifies customer and/or Project Manager of findings.
? Documents work by completing paperwork on each job and maintaining files
? Represents company by serving as a direct customer contact.
? Provides re-training and follow-up training at customer site.
? Determines parts to order for repairs and timeliness of need
? Documents work by completing paperwork on each job, including daily time, progress, and duration; and maintaining files.
? Records parts, material, labor, subs and other cost data per assignment and returns unused resources.
? Turns in all required paperwork and reports in a timely manner.
? Keeps current on all Trane products concerning installation, operation, maintenance, service and repair
? Read and interpret product specifications and experience in working with building specifications, drawings and designs
? Provides technical support to customers
? Flexibility to work overtime/weekends as necessary
? Regular travel requirements with some overnight travel
//-----------//

EDUCATION and/or EXPERIENCE:
Associate?s Degree or equivalent from a Technical / Trade School with a certificate in Heating, Ventilation, & Air Conditioning and five years related experience; or seven years related experience; or equivalent combination of education and experience. Knowledge of Microsoft Office software.

MATHEMATICAL SKILLS:
Ability to add, subtract, multiply, and divide in all unites of measure, using whole number, common fractions, and decimals. Ability to compute rate, ratio, and percent and to draw and interpret bar graphs.

CERTIFICATES, LICENSES, REGISTRATIONS:
Valid Driver?s License, EPA Certification, License Preferred

PHYSICAL DEMANDS: The physical demands described here are representative of those that must be met by an employee to successfully perform the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.

While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly required to stand, use hands to finger, handle or feel, and talk or hear. The employee frequently is required to walk; reach with hands and arms; and stoop, kneel, crouch or craw. The employee is occasionally required to sit. The employee must regularly lift and/or move up to 10 pounds, frequently lift and/or move up to 50 pounds. On occasion lift and/or move more than 50 pounds with assistance. Specific vision abilities required by this job include close vision, distance vision, color vision, peripheral vision, depth perception, and ability to adjust focus.

WORK ENVIRONMENT: The work environment characteristics described here are representative of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.

This position requires working outdoors, in mechanical/equipment rooms and possible extreme weather conditions. While performing the duties of this job, the employee is regularly exposed to moving mechanical parts and heavy equipment. The employee is frequently exposed to wet and/or humid conditions; high, precarious places; fumes or airborne particles; outside weather conditions; risk of electrical shock (high voltage); and vibration. The employee is occasionally exposed to toxic or caustic chemicals, extreme cold, and extreme heat. The noise level in the work environment is usually loud.

If you share our passion for inspiring progress?for bringing about bold shifts in how people, economies and societies operate?then you belong with Ingersoll Rand. Progress begins with you.

?

Ingersoll Rand is committed to helping you reach your professional, personal and financial goals.? We offer competitive compensation that aligns with our business strategies and comprehensive benefits to help you live your healthiest. We are committed to building an inclusive and diverse culture that engages as well as values the different backgrounds and experiences of our employees, which, in turn, spurs innovation, generates creative solutions and enhances our customer relations. ?

?

Ingersoll Rand is committed to a diverse workforce and is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

? Vew Job Cart ? ? Ingersoll Rand Job Agent ? ?

Source: http://ingersollrand.hodesiq.com/job_detail.asp?JobID=2790580

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jkrssfeed: 2012 Virginia Travel Guide released | Washington Examiner http://t.co/DhsnvK6k

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Monday, December 26, 2011

So You Got an iPad 2? Try These 10 Hip Accessories (Mashable)

So, Santa dropped an iPad 2 down your chimney? Lucky you. One of the great things about buying into the Apple craze is the rich and diverse range of accessories available for all iProducts. The iPad is no exception. You can choose from a bewildering array of cases, stands, speakers, dock, and other peripherals available for the Apple tablet. If you're looking to accessorize your shiny new iPad 2, we're here to help. We've hand-picked a selection of 10 companion products we think stand out from the crowd.

[More from Mashable: How Do Co-Founders Meet? 17 Startups Tell All]

SEE ALSO: 28 Cases For Your New iPad 2 [PICS]

Take a look through our image gallery of worthy great accessories. Let us know in the comments if any of these tempt you, and link us to anything else you've seen that has caught your eye.

[More from Mashable: Got an iPhone 4S for Christmas? Have Some Fun With Siri [PICS]]

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111225/tc_mashable/so_you_got_an_ipad_2_try_these_10_hip_accessories

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Download the 13WMAZ iPhone App

Keep in touch with 13WMAZ on-the-go with our new iPhone app!?Download it in the App Store by searching for "wmaz".

Use the app to see breaking news VIDEO as well as the printed word. Look for "Video" in the menu on the homescreen.

Watch the demonstration of our new App in this video.

Source: http://macon.13wmaz.com/news/news/63152-download-13wmaz-iphone-app

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Head of Darfur's JEM dead, Sudan says (Reuters)

KHARTOUM (Reuters) ? Sudan's armed forces have killed the leader of Darfur's most powerful rebel group, state media said on Sunday, dealing a severe blow to insurgents in the remote western region in their nearly decade-long war with Khartoum.

The Darfur conflict has rumbled on since mainly non-Arab insurgents took up arms in 2003, saying the central government had left them out of the political and economic power structure and was favoring local Arab tribes.

Khalil Ibrahim, head of the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), emerged as one of the most powerful rebel commanders. In 2008, his group launched a shock attack on Khartoum that killed more than 200 people.

Sudan's authorities have long hunted the leader, who had taken refuge in neighboring Libya under Muammar Gaddafi until the leader's overthrow deprived him of his safe haven.

Al-Sawarmi Khalid, Sudan's armed forces spokesman, said Ibrahim had been killed early on Sunday morning while trying to cross into South Sudan, which seceded in July under a 2005 peace deal that ended a separate, decades-long civil war.

"The armed forces clashed in a direct confrontation with Khalil Ibrahim's rebel forces, and were able to eliminate Khalil Ibrahim," Khalid told state television.

JEM's spokesman could not immediately be reached for comment on Sunday, but Al Jazeera television quoted Ibrahim's brother as confirming the death, saying he died in an air raid on his military convoy.

The death of Ibrahim - often described as commanding and charismatic - could be a major blow to JEM, although tightly restricted access to Sudan's conflict zones has made it hard to gauge the actual strength and internal unity of insurgents.

In November, JEM said it had formed an alliance with other insurgents in Darfur and in two of Sudan's conflict-stricken border states where fighting broke out around the time of South Sudan's secession.

Analysts have questioned how effective the alliance would be, given that Darfur's various rebel factions have rarely been able to sustain long-term military and political coordination.

LIBYAN REFUGE

The United Nations has said as many as 300,000 people may have died in Darfur, where Khartoum mobilized troops and mostly Arab militias to crush the uprising. Khartoum puts the death toll at 10,000.

The International Criminal Court has charged Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir with masterminding genocide and other crimes in the region, a charge Khartoum dismisses as political.

While violence has died down since the mass killings reported in the early days of the conflict, law and order have collapsed and the area has been hit by attacks by bandits, militias, soldiers and tribal groups in recent years.

Various rebel groups, including two factions of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), have fought on, even as Qatar brokered a peace deal which Sudan signed with the Liberation and Justice Movement (LJM), an umbrella association of smaller groups.

The major rebel groups, including JEM, have refused to sign the document, dampening hopes the region will soon see peace.

JEM said on Saturday its fighters had clashed with government militias in parts of the North Kordofan state and were planning to advance on the capital Khartoum to overthrow Bashir's government.

(Writing by Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Jon Hemming)

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

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

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Source: http://www.apnijobs.com/jobs-with-j-telemarketing-islamabad.html

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Video: Money in Motion, December 23, 2011

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LibertyHill: 2012?s Rose Parade features the first HIV/AIDS awareness float ever. Sponsored by AHF and dedicated to Elizabeth Taylor....

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North Korea to loom large in Japan-China summit

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda heads to Beijing on Sunday as the first foreign leader to meet the Chinese leadership after the death of North Korean strongman Kim Jong-Il.

President Hu Jintao could use the occasion to assure the international community that Beijing was working to ensure a stable transition of power in its reclusive and impoverished partner, Japanese experts said.

"It is unlikely that China will reveal everything it knows. It is more likely that Chinese leaders will give assurances that they are calling on Pyongyang to ensure stability and order," said Shin Kawashima, associate professor at the University of Tokyo.

Noda's overnight visit was set for December 12 and 13 but rescheduled to Sunday and Monday at China's request, apparently for domestic reasons, which some suggested were to do with its falling on the Nanjing Massacre anniversary.

Noda, who came to power in September, will welcome the chance of more face time with Chinese leaders, as Beijing readies to promote younger leaders, with Vice President Xi Jinping seen as the most likely replacement for Hu.

Noda met with Hu in November on the sidelines of the APEC meeting in Honolulu and agreed to make "reciprocal efforts" to enhance ties, often dogged by economic and territorial disputes.

But Kim's death has shifted the agenda from bilateral issues to global worries about nuclear-armed North Korea, where Kim's untested young son Kim Jong-Un appears to be taking the reins of the Stalinist state.

Almost nothing is known about him, including his grasp on the North's military and how he might respond to global calls to open up the country.

"China holds the key for assuring stability in North Korea," said Takehiko Yamamoto, professor at Waseda University.

Japan, having no ties with the North, can do little other than support China's engagement with Pyongyang, he said.

"You might call it an achievement if Japan and China only confirm their joint resolve to work together to protect peace and stability in northeast Asia including on the Korean peninsula," he said.

On the bilateral front, the two Asian giants will go over a list of touchy issues, including territorial and energy field disputes in the East China Sea as well as China's increasingly assertive naval posture in the region.

Japan will urge China towards a framework dialogue to set rules for the development of gas fields in the East China Sea, near disputed islands called Senkaku in Japanese and Diaoyu in Chinese.

The two are still trying to heal diplomatic wounds inflicted a year ago when China reacted in fury over the arrest of one of its fishermen near the islands after he rammed his ship into Japanese coastguard vessels.

An irate Beijing cut or seriously reduced trade, diplomatic and cultural exchanges until Japan climbed down and released the trawlerman.

The leaders are expected to agree to hold periodic meetings of senior diplomats and defence officials in a bid to avoid similar confrontations.

China is expected to be fairly placatory ahead of the 40th anniversary of the normalisation of diplomatic ties in September, an event it wants to pass off smoothly.

"China wants the celebration to end with no troubles. Perhaps China will not offer anything new, but it should be seen as a reflection of their caution," Kawashima said.

Noda and Hu will likely agree on a plan for Japan to purchase Chinese government bonds, a first for an industrial power, in a move that would strengthen financial ties and diversify Tokyo's forex holdings.

From Tokyo's point of view, this will help hedge against exposure to the dollar at a time the yen has remained stubbornly high.

It will also mark a victory for Beijing as it seeks to internationalise its currency.

Noda is also expected to outline his decision to join negotiations on the US-led trans-Pacific partnership (TPP), a potential rival to China's push for a trade pact with ASEAN states and their neighbors, including Japan.

Japan, whose biggest trade partners are China followed by the US, is trying to keep its feet in both camps and maintain access to all key markets in the greater Asia-Pacific region.

Among diplomatic niceties, Noda is also expected to thank China for its assistance in the aftermath of the march earthquake and tsunami, and to ask that Beijing send a pair of pandas to hard-hit Sendai to boost morale.

Source: http://www.spacewar.com/reports/North_Korea_to_loom_large_in_Japan-China_summit_999.html

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Earth has two 'moons' right now, theorists say

Earth has two moons, a group of scientists argues. One is that waxing and waning nightlight we all know and love. The other is a tiny asteroid, no bigger than a Smart Car, making huge doughnuts around Earth for a while before it zips off into the distance.

That's the scenario posited by the scientists in a paper published Dec. 20 in the planetary science journal ICARUS. The researchers say there is a space rock at least 1 meter (3.3 feet) wide orbiting Earth at any given time. They're not always the same rock, but rather an ever-changing cast of "temporary moons."

In the scientists' theoretical model, our planet's gravity captures these asteroids as they pass near us on their way around the sun. When one is drawn in, it typically makes three irregularly shaped swings around Earth ? sticking with us for about nine months ? before hurtling on its way.

According to the researchers, surprisingly little attention has been paid to Earth's natural satellites other than the moon, despite the fact that they're sure to exist. "There are lots of asteroids in the solar system, so chances for the Earth to capture one at any time is, in a sense, not surprising," said co-author Jeremie Vauballion, an astronomer at the Paris Observatory in France.

The group claims that its paper is the first effort to theoretically model the orbits and sizes of Earth's temporary second moons. The researchers' results are consistent with observations of one such "temporarily-captured asteroid" that is believed to have orbited Earth for about a year starting in June 2006. The object, labeled 2006 RH120, was discovered by the Catalina Sky Survey in Arizona; estimated to be between 10 and 20 feet (3 and 6 meters) wide, it appeared to be orbiting Earth from two moon-distances away. [ What Would Earth Be Like with Two Suns? ]

Mikael Gravnik, a physicist at the University of Helsinki and lead author of the new paper, says 2006 RH120 was probably discovered because it was slightly larger than most of the other "temporary moons" that come traipsing through our planetary system. Most of the hobo moons are only about 1 meter wide.

"Objects of this size are too faint to be detected when being at a distance of, say, a few lunar distances from the Earth," Gravnik told Life's Little Mysteries."When coming closer in during their orbit, they are moving too fast to be detected, because the limited amount of photons is spread over too many pixels."

These limitations mean we don't currently have a way of finding our second moons. But an observatory called the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST), planned to open in Chile in 2015, could change that.

"We hope that LSST will do something about this, but dedicated programs will without doubt be even better," Vauballion said. "Statistic study is still needed to see where and how to look for them."

NASA's Spaceguard Survey tracks the paths of all near-Earth objects (NEOs) in Earth's neighborhood that are larger than 0.6 miles (1 kilometer) in diameter, but the scientists are less concerned with bodies that are too small to pose a threat to Earth ? as is the case when they're just 1 meter wide.

But if our distant, noncommittal moons don't threaten Earth, and are much too dim to act as nightlights, does it matter that they're there at all?

According to astronomers, it does. Some researchers say it might be possible to go and get one of these temporary moons and bring it back to Earth for analysis.

"When found, such an asteroid will immediately raise the question whether or not we should go, and I'm ready to bet that many astronomers will argue that we definitely have to go!" Vaubaillon said in an email. "The reason is simple: What astronomers would not want to have a full and intact (unaltered by any physical process) piece of space rock? Meteorites are all altered because they go through our atmosphere. The only piece of asteroid we have comes from the Japanese Hayabusa mission (a few grams at the very most). The comet grains the Stardust mission got back from comet Wild 2 were all altered."

Clark Chapman, senior scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., said a lot could be learned from the retrieval of a temporary satellite. "No doubt it is true that temporarily captured NEOs would be comparatively easy to get to and get back from ? it wouldn't take an especially powerful rocket, and round-trip times would be short," said Chapman, who is an expert on asteroid impact hazards.

Gravnik said, "We certainly hope that a space mission to a natural Earth satellite would someday materialize, and have actually already started a collaboration with experts in spacecraft orbital mechanics to find out how a mission from the Earth to a temporary satellite could be accomplished."

Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @ nattyover. Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @ llmysteries, then join us on Facebook.

? 2011 LifesLittleMysteries.com. All rights reserved. More from LifesLittleMysteries.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45779867/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Mass rally in Moscow raises pressure on Putin (Reuters)

MOSCOW (Reuters) ? Tens of thousands of flag-waving and chanting protesters called on Saturday for a disputed parliamentary election to be rerun, increasing pressure on Vladimir Putin as he seeks a new term as Russian president.

The protesters chanted "Russia without Putin" and "New elections, New elections" as speakers called for an end to Putin's 12-year domination of the country at the second big opposition rally in two weeks in central Moscow.

"Do you want Putin to return to the presidency?" novelist Boris Akunin asked from a large stage.

Whistling and jeering, protesters chanted: No!"

Police said at least 28,000 attended the rally on Prospekt Sakharova (Sakharov Avenue), named after Soviet-era dissident Andrei Sakharov. One opposition leader put the crowd size at up to 100,000 people.

The big turnout is likely to encourage organizers to believe they can keep up the momentum of the biggest opposition demonstrations since Putin rose to power 12 years ago, although the prime minister seems intent on riding out the protests.

Tens of thousands of people protested in Moscow on December 10 and many more demonstrated across the world's largest country the same day to complain against alleged vote-rigging in the December 4 election won by Putin's United Russia party.

The protesters were heartened by the Kremlin's human rights council saying a new election should be held, although it is only an advisory body whose recommendations are regularly ignored by Russia's leaders.

Many of the protesters wore white ribbons, the symbol of the protests, and others carried balloons and flags at the rally, which brought together liberals, nationalists, anarchists, environmentalists and urban youth on a bitterly cold day.

"The last protest made a huge impression and I want others to come and realize they can stand up for their right. We all know the election result and we all know how dishonest they were," said Andrei Chernyshov, a 22-year-old student.

PROTESTERS DISMISS CONCESSIONS

President Dmitry Medvedev, who is stepping aside next year to let Putin take his place after four years as prime minister, has promised electoral reforms to relax the Kremlin's grip on power, including restoring the election of regional governors.

But the opposition has rejected these conciliatory efforts and says Putin and Medvedev have ignored its key demand for a rerun of the parliamentary poll, which handed a slim majority to the ruling United Russia party.

The protesters say United Russia benefited from widespread voting irregularities and international monitors said the vote was slanted in the ruling party's favor.

"The party of swindlers and thieves are the only ones who benefit from the preservation of the status quo," journalist Leonid Parfyonov said on a video message shown on a screen.

Protesters held signs saying: "For Russia without Putin."

Dozens of police trucks lined the capital's main ring road nearby and the police blocked off roads around the protest site, but they did not intervene.

Putin is still expected to win the presidential election in March and return to the post he held from 2000 until 2008 but there are growing doubts that he will win outright in the first round of voting. The opposition is largely divided and has no candidate to unite it in the March presidential poll.

The former KGB spy's popularity has declined since he and Medvedev announced plans in September to swap jobs next year, a decision which many Russians said showed a disregard for democracy.

Putin, 59, has suggested that many of those taking part in the protests have been paid to turn out and accused the United States of encouraging the protests. Many people, who answered calls to protests on social networking sites, say this underlined that he is out of touch.

(Writing by Timothy Heritage and Peter Millership)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111224/wl_nm/us_russia

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Turkey slams France over genocide debate (AP)

ISTANBUL ? Turkey on Friday accused France of committing genocide during its colonial occupation of Algeria, angrily responding after French lawmakers passed a bill making it a crime to deny the mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks constitute genocide.

The deepening acrimony between two strategic allies and trading partners could have repercussions far beyond the settling of accounts over some of the bloodiest episodes of the past century.

Turkey and France worked closely together during NATO's operation against Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi, and coordinate policy on Syria and Afghanistan. Turkey was already frustrated by French opposition to its stalled European Union bid, and hopes for Western-backed rapprochement between Turkey and Armenia seem ever more distant ahead of 2015, the 100th anniversary of the Armenian killings.

The bill strikes at the heart of national honor in Turkey, which maintains there was no systematic campaign to kill Armenians and that many Turks also died during the chaotic disintegration of the Ottoman Empire.

The French bill still needs Senate approval, but after it passed the lower house Thursday, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan halted bilateral political and economic contacts, suspended military cooperation and ordered his country's ambassador home for consultations.

"What the French did in Algeria was genocide," Erdogan said Friday in a heavily personal speech, laced with criticism of French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

He alleged that beginning in 1945, about 15 percent of the population of Algeria was massacred by the French.

"They were mercilessly martyred," he said.

The bill's passage "is a clear example of how racism, discrimination and anti-Muslim sentiment have reached new heights in France and in Europe," Erdogan said. "French President Sarkozy's ambition is to win an election based on promoting animosity against Turks and Muslims."

France holds presidential elections in April.

France formally recognized the killings as genocide in 2001, but provided no penalty for anyone refuting that. The bill sets a punishment of up to one year in prison and a fine of euro45,000 ($59,000) for those who deny or "outrageously minimize" the killings, putting such action on par with denial of the Holocaust.

Most historians contend the Ottoman killings of the Armenians constituted the first genocide of the 20th century. But the issue is dicey for any government that wants a strong alliance with Turkey, a rising power. In Washington, President Barack Obama has stopped short of calling the killings genocide.

The Armenian National Committee of America said the French vote "reinforces the growing international consensus ? and the mounting pressure on Turkey ? for a truthful and just resolution of the Armenian Genocide."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111223/ap_on_re_eu/eu_turkey_france_genocide

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Physicist builds Lego Large Hadron Collider (Yahoo! News)

9,500 piece model took Copenhagen-based researcher weeks to construct

As scientists at the CERN?Large Hadron Collider in Geneva, Switzerland?continue their search for the elusive Higgs boson "God particle," one physicist has built a tribute to their work entirely out of?Lego bricks. Sascha Mehlhase, a researcher at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, Denmark, spent more than 80 hours designing and constructing a model of the supercollider's intricate?ATLAS detector.

Mehlhase, who is part of the institute's high energy physics group, spent about 48 hours modeling the ATLAS on his laptop in Lego's?Digital Designer software. He used the application's ability to generate a custom construction manual, but decided to simply eyeball most of the work after seeing the 4,500-page tome it spit out. With some help from his wife, Mehlhase spent 33 hours over the course of several weeks assembling 9,500 bricks to reproduce even the smallest details.

The final model stands nearly two feet tall and is 1:50 scale ? or actual size, if you're a little Lego person. In fact, Mehlhase even chose jumpsuit-wearing Lego minifigs to represent the CERN scientists and recreated the passageways they use to access the inner areas of the ATLAS experiment. The total cost for the project was almost $2,600 in Lego bricks, which had to be custom ordered from the Danish toymaker.

Mehlhase hopes to eventually publish a construction manual online and intends to showcase the finished model at the Niels Bohr Institute for visitors and students to marvel at. You can see more images of it at?the University of Copenhagen's site.

[Image credit:?Sascha Mehlhase]

University Post via?Geekosystem

This article was written by Randy Nelson and originally appeared on Tecca

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Quirks galore in compressed NBA schedule (AP)

Carmelo Anthony's return to Denver is delayed for another year. LeBron James and Dwyane Wade won't be visiting Sacramento anytime soon. Fans in Chicago will only be seeing Kobe Bryant on television this season.

The NBA sought competitive balance. What it got was schedule imbalance.

One of the many consequences of the lockout, besides hundreds of lost games and hundreds of millions of lost dollars, was the tradition that every team plays in every NBA city at least once per season. That's not the case this year.

While teams will visit every other team in their own conference, they will only make trips to play nine clubs from the other side of the league instead of the usual 15.

It's one of many quirks of a 66-game schedule that, in a variety of ways, is not like any other in NBA history.

"In some cases, the team business-type might complain that they didn't get (to host) the Heat or the Lakers," NBA Commissioner David Stern said. "While in the background, the coach is doing cartwheels. So it's kind of an interesting dynamic."

There's no shortage of those.

Reigning scoring king Kevin Durant dropped 66 points in New York earlier this year ? alas, at Rucker Park, the fabled outdoor court and not Madison Square Garden. He and Oklahoma City won't be going to play the Knicks this season.

The NBA champion Dallas Mavericks won't be going to Charlotte, nor will Durant's Thunder, Bryant's Lakers or the Spurs, and that will keep ticket dollars from finding Bobcats owner Michael Jordan's pockets.

Teams won't be playing the same number of divisional games, so get ready for complaining should tiebreakers come into play when determining playoff seeding. And many small market teams will be miss out on some guaranteed sellouts against some elite clubs that might hurt in the standings but help with the bottom line.

"That's what happens when you have a lockout," Durant said.

When Magic coach Stan Van Gundy heard the league was putting together a 66-game slate instead of the usual 82-game run, he figured the breakdown was simple: Play every team in your division four times, then face every other team home and away.

That seemed easy enough.

Instead, it's complicated.

"I'm not being critical of it," Van Gundy said. "They've got a short period of time to play 66 games and there were a lot of factors they had to consider and I'm sure that they did it the best way that they could."

True, but there is some zaniness.

Atlanta takes a trip that has the Hawks going north, then south, then north, then west, then east, then west and then home again, all in the span of nine days. Cleveland has a nine-game February homestand. San Antonio goes nearly four weeks without a home game. The Kings close the first half of their schedule with 20 of 28 away from Sacramento, daunting for a team desperate to keep fans engaged while trying to get a new arena. Denver plays nine in a row at home in one stretch, then immediately hits the road for seven straight.

But there's no Anthony homecoming in Denver.

"Did it bother me? Not really," said Anthony, now with the Knicks. "I mean, I would love to go back and play there. The reaction I would get, who knows? I might get some boos, I might get some claps, but it'd have been fun."

Minnesota coach Rick Adelman was thrilled to see his club opens with six of seven at home. And then he looked who those early opponents are ? the first four clubs to visit the Timberwolves are Oklahoma City, Miami, Dallas and San Antonio.

"It's a challenge for us," Adelman said. "If we come out and we're ready to go, and we can knock some of these people off, it's just going to be better for us."

The Wolves don't host Atlanta, Milwaukee, New Jersey, Orlando, Toronto and Washington, teams that perhaps don't inspire the casual fan to run down on game night to check them out, but could be winnable games. They also don't travel to Boston, Chicago, Miami or New York. From a competitive standpoint, not having to play those teams on the road is great for the Wolves. But from a player experience standpoint, the Wolves don't sound thrilled.

"I think we don't go to Miami and Chicago. ... That's a little sad," eagerly anticipated guard Ricky Rubio said.

With this kind of schedule, youth might be served. Washington is expected to open the year with 10 players on the team age 25 or younger. So on those back-to-back-to-back nights, the Wizards might have a touch more spring in their collective step than some other clubs.

"It reminds me of an AAU season ? playing five games in one day," Wizards guard John Wall said. "It can be tough at times, but I think it can help us."

In past years, playing four games in five nights would be considered the worst of the schedule grind.

It's worse this year.

Not only will every team have at least one stretch of playing three games in three nights, but there will also be times when teams play eight games in 11 days. If a key player rolls an ankle, certainly a common issue in the NBA, at a particularly busy time in the schedule, a team could find itself without a key player for maybe 20 percent of the season. And with all those games in such a short span, this much is guaranteed: There will be nights when some teams will know the odds are stacked very, very highly against them, when they're the weary-legged club against a team that's had a couple of days off to freshen up.

"There will be nights when you'll be like, `OK, well, let's just go try and see what happens,'" Wade said. "It's not going to be easy. For anyone."

___

AP Basketball Writer Brian Mahoney, AP Sports Writers Jon Krawczynski and Howard Fendrich, and AP freelance writer Murray Evans contributed to this report.

___

Follow Tim Reynolds on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/ByTimReynolds

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_sp_bk_ne/bkn_nba_quirky_schedule

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Washington Church of Christ holds toy giveaway

12/21/2011?3:35 AM


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More than 1,000 donated toys went to local families in need during Washington Church of Christ's second annual toy giveaway Saturday.

"It's just a way that we can reach out to the community and help some people with Christmas so their family can have a good holiday season," said minister David Deagel.

Church member Christopher Flickinger, who helped organize the event at the church's 700 Allison Ave. location, said the congregation expected to touch the lives of about 500 families through the program, ensuring more smiles from area children on Christmas morning.

He said within the first hour, most of the toy rooms had already been picked over, a big leap from the 250 toys given out last year.


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Current rating: "We've had exponential growth both in terms of toy inventory and community support, so this is something that we'll keep doing for years and years to come," he said.

All of the toys were donated by the congregation, of which about 75 members volunteered to greet those in attendance, hand out treats and take on the massive task of wrapping the stacks of gifts.

"We are a family ... we get together for all different functions, and we bring folks in because we just love what we do," said church secretary Patti Piatt. "It is awesome to be a part of somebody's life for just a moment."

In addition to the helping hands of church members, about 50 local businesses sponsored the giveaway, donating food, drinks and other items, which made for a rather impressive breakfast spread.

Looking beyond the presents and sweets, Flickinger explained the toy giveaway does more than just fill space under the tree.

"It puts a nice lasting impression on their heart and if they can come back and grow closer to God, so be it," he said.

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Friday, December 23, 2011

NYPD's spying programs produced mixed results

FILE - In this Sept. 17, 2009 file photo, Najibullah Zazi leaves his apartment in Aurora, Colo., for a meeting with his attorney. When New York undercover officers and informants were infiltrating a mosque in Queens in 2006, they failed to notice the increasingly radical sentiments of a young man who prayed there. Police also kept tabs on a Muslim student group at Queens College, but missed a member?s growing anti-Americanism. Those two men and friends _ Zazi at the mosque and Adis Medunjanin at the school _ would go on to be accused of plotting a subway bombing that officials have called the most serious terrorist threat to the United States since Sept. 11, 2001. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 17, 2009 file photo, Najibullah Zazi leaves his apartment in Aurora, Colo., for a meeting with his attorney. When New York undercover officers and informants were infiltrating a mosque in Queens in 2006, they failed to notice the increasingly radical sentiments of a young man who prayed there. Police also kept tabs on a Muslim student group at Queens College, but missed a member?s growing anti-Americanism. Those two men and friends _ Zazi at the mosque and Adis Medunjanin at the school _ would go on to be accused of plotting a subway bombing that officials have called the most serious terrorist threat to the United States since Sept. 11, 2001. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski, File)

In this Jan. 9, 2010, courtroom sketch, defense attorney Robert Gottlieb, left, is seated next to his client, defendant Adis Medunjanin, at the federal courthouse in New York City. When New York undercover officers and informants were infiltrating a mosque in Queens in 2006, they failed to notice the increasingly radical sentiments of a young man who prayed there. Police also kept tabs on a Muslim student group at Queens College, but missed a member?s growing anti-Americanism. Those two men and friends _ Najibullah Zazi at the mosque and Medunjanin at the school _ would go on to be accused of plotting a subway bombing that officials have called the most serious terrorist threat to the United States since Sept. 11, 2001. (AP Photo/Elizabeth Williams)

(AP) ? When New York undercover officers and informants were infiltrating a mosque in Queens in 2006, they failed to notice the increasingly radical sentiments of a young man who prayed there. Police also kept tabs on a Muslim student group at Queens College, but missed a member's growing anti-Americanism.

Ever since The Associated Press began revealing New York Police Department spying programs on mosques, student groups, Muslim businesses and communities, those activities have been stoutly defended by police and supporters as having foiled a list of planned attacks.

Recently, for instance, when three members of Congress suggested an inquiry into those programs, Republican Rep. Peter King of New York rallied to the NYPD's defense.

"Under Commissioner Ray Kelly's leadership, at least 14 attacks by Islamic terrorists have been prevented by the NYPD," King said.

But a closer review of the cases reveals a more complicated story.

The list cited by King includes plans that may never have existed as well as plots the NYPD had little or no hand in disrupting. According to AP's review of public documents, materials obtained by the AP and interviews with dozens of city and federal officials, the most controversial NYPD spying programs produced mixed results. The officials interviewed spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk publicly.

There indeed have been successes, such as the 2004 plot uncovered by the NYPD to bomb the Herald Square subway station in Manhattan.

And there have been failures, like Najibullah Zazi and Adis Medunjanin, defendants in a failed New York City subway plot who were exactly the kind of people police intended to spot when they developed the spying programs.

And there were other efforts that compiled data on innocent people but produced no meaningful results at all.

Kelly has spent hundreds of millions of dollars transforming the department into one of the nation's most aggressive domestic intelligence agencies. In a city that still hurts from 9/11 and still sees a hole in the ground near where the World Trade Center stood, people have had little interest in questioning whether that effort has been effective. City lawmakers, for instance, learned about many of the department's secretive programs from the AP.

For New Yorkers, the result is that fear of another terrorist attack is used to justify spying on entire neighborhoods. And the absence of another attack is held up as evidence that it works.

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Some of the NYPD intelligence programs were born out of fear and desperation. After 9/11, police reached for whatever might work.

One idea was to use informants to trawl local mosques and monitor imams to watch for signs of radicalization. Though the NYPD denies the term exists, several former officials said the informants were known as "mosque crawlers." They would listen in mosques and report back to their handlers.

It was the CIA that first developed that idea overseas and came up with the name. The NYPD program was a version of that effort, according to former CIA officials who were familiar with it. Like many interviewed about the NYPD, they insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss intelligence programs.

Former senior CIA officials said the mosque crawlers were ineffective.

In New York, however, the program persisted. With help from the mosque crawlers and secret NYPD squads, documents show, police intelligence analysts scrutinized every mosque in and around the city and infiltrated dozens. The monitoring of imams included even those who worked closely with police and preached against violence.

These days, however, fewer imams are under investigation, an official said.

The NYPD has pledged to do all it can to prevent terrorism. So when a new intelligence program is conceived, several current and former officials said, there is little discussion of its prospects for success.

NYPD intelligence chief David Cohen, a former top CIA official, was asked about that in September 2005 during a deposition in a lawsuit over the department's policy of randomly searching the bags of subway riders. Civil rights lawyers asked how police knew whether a program deterred terrorism.

"If it works against them, then it works for us," Cohen replied. "That is deterrent to one degree or other."

Cohen was asked, How do you know it works? Is there some police methodology?

"I never bothered to look," Cohen said. "It doesn't exist, as far as I could tell."

At times, police officials themselves have raised concerns about intelligence-gathering programs. In about 2008, for instance, police began monitoring everyone in the city who legally changed names. Anyone who might be a Muslim convert or appeared to be Americanizing his or her name was investigated and personal information was put into police databases.

Current and former officials say it produced no results. Police still receive the list of names of people who change their names, court officials said. But one official said the program is on hold while its effectiveness is evaluated.

Kelly has said the NYPD does not trawl neighborhoods and instead only pursues leads. But those leads can be ambiguous, officials say, and can be used to justify widespread surveillance programs.

For example, the NYPD began the "Moroccan Initiative," a secret program that chronicled Moroccan neighborhoods, after suicide bombings killed 45 people in the Moroccan city of Casablanca in 2003, and after Moroccan terrorists were linked to the 2005 train bombing in Madrid. New York police put people, including U.S. citizens, under surveillance and catalogued where they ate, worked and prayed.

"What we were doing is following leads," Kelly told City Council members during an October hearing when asked about that program. "The Moroccan issue that was mentioned had to do with a specific investigation."

But officials involved in the program said there was no specific threat to New York from Moroccans. The Moroccan Initiative thwarted no plots and led to no arrests, officials said.

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Much of the information in the Moroccan Initiative was gathered by a secretive squad known as the Demographics Unit. Using plainclothes officers known as "rakers," the squad infiltrated local businesses and community organizations looking for trouble or "hot spots." Their daily reports helped create searchable databases of life in New York's Muslim neighborhoods.

One NYPD official said that unit identified a Brooklyn bookstore as a hot spot. That led police to open an investigation and send in an informant and undercover detective, ultimately leading to the arrests of two men in the Herald Square case.

The work of that secret unit, the official said, helped the NYPD arrest a Pakistani immigrant named Shahawar Matin Siraj and foiled an attack.

For years, police have said publicly that the Herald Square case began with a tip but have not elaborated. Siraj's lawyer, Martin Stolar, said prosecutors provided no documents related to the Demographics Unit at trial.

Siraj was convicted and sentenced to 30 years in federal prison in 2007. But defense attorneys, and even some inside the NYPD intelligence unit, said police had coaxed the men into making incriminating statements and there was no proof Siraj ever obtained explosives.

The case is arguably the NYPD's greatest counterterrorism success. But there are others.

The NYPD played an important role in the case against Carlos Amonte and Mohammed Alessa, two New Jersey men who pleaded guilty to charges they tried to leave the country in 2010 to join the al-Qaida-linked terrorist group al-Shabaab. The FBI long had been aware of the two men but had been unable to win their trust with an informant or undercover agent, federal officials said. The NYPD, with its deep roster of Muslim officers, provided the undercover officer who ultimately succeeded in winning their confidence.

When the NYPD's effectiveness is questioned, the department's most ardent supporters frequently point to a long list of terrorist plots said to have targeted New York since 9/11. The list often is described as plots thwarted by the NYPD.

"One can't argue with results," said Peter Vallone, the New York city councilman who heads the Public Safety Committee. "The results of this gargantuan effort have been that at least 13 planned attacks on New York City have been prevented."

In reality, however, the NYPD played little or no role in preventing many of those attacks.

Some, like a cyanide plot against the subway system, were discovered among evidence obtained overseas but were never set into motion. Others, like the 2006 plot to blow up U.S.-bound airliners using liquid explosives, were thwarted by U.S. and international authorities, and plans never got off the ground.

And some, like the 2008 subway plot, went unnoticed by the NYPD despite the money and manpower devoted to monitoring Muslim communities, according to the NYPD files obtained by the AP. The files along with interviews show the NYPD was monitoring Zazi's mosque, and also the Muslim student organization Medunjanin attended. Zazi and Medunjanin were friends and had been praying together regularly since 9th grade. As the years passed, Zazi grew increasingly upset about civilians killed by the U.S. military in Afghanistan; Medunjanin was outraged by the way Muslims were treated at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, and he promoted jihad at the mosque and after basketball games with friends, according to court documents. He said his friends didn't have the "balls" to do anything.

The plot was discovered after U.S. intelligence intercepted an email revealing that Zazi was trying to make a bomb.

Those programs, meanwhile, have widened the chasm between the police and the city's Muslims, a community the Obama administration says is a crucial partner in the effort to prevent another terrorist attack. Fed up with a decade of being under scrutiny, some Muslim groups now urge against going directly to police when someone hears radical, anti-American talk.

They reason that the person is probably a police informant.

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Each morning at the NYPD, Cohen meets his senior officers to discuss the latest intelligence before he briefs Kelly. There is no bigger target for terrorists than New York, the nation's largest city and the heart of the financial and media world. Cohen repeatedly reminds his officers that, on any given day, they might be the only thing standing in the way of disaster. It's a mentality that officials say underscores the seriousness of the threat and the NYPD's commitment to the effort.

Several current and former officials point to that pressure to explain why programs rarely get scrapped, even when there are doubts about their effectiveness. Nobody wants to be the one to abandon a program, only to witness a successful attack that it might have prevented.

At the federal level, intelligence programs are reviewed by Congress, inspectors general and other watchdogs. The NYPD faces no such scrutiny from the City Council or city auditors. Federal officials, too, have been reluctant to question the effectiveness of the NYPD, despite spending more than $1.6 billion in federal money on the department since 9/11.

After House Democrats circulated a letter signed by 34 members of Congress recently asking for a federal review of the NYPD's intelligence programs, King, the New York Republican, accused them of smearing the police department.

The Justice Department under Eric Holder repeatedly has sidestepped questions about what it thinks about the NYPD programs revealed by the AP. Some Democrats in Congress have asked prosecutors to investigate. Since August, the department has said only that it is reviewing those requests.

During the Bush administration, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and senior Justice Department officials received a briefing in New York about the NYPD's capabilities, according to a former federal official who attended.

Gonzales left convinced, the official said, that the federal government could not replicate those programs. The NYPD had more manpower and operated under different rules than the federal government, the Justice Department concluded. And the mayor had accepted the political risk that came with the programs.

It was a policy briefing only, the former official said, meaning the federal government did not review the NYPD programs to determine whether they were lawful.

The NYPD's terrorist cases include ones the federal government has declined to prosecute. Last year, a grand jury declined to indict Ahmed Ferhani and Mohamed Mamdouh on the most serious charge initially brought against them, a high-level terror conspiracy count that carried the potential for life in prison without parole. They were indicted on lesser state terrorism and hate crime charges, including one punishable by up to 32 years behind bars.

Last month, NYPD detectives arrested Jose Pimentel on terrorism-related charges. A state grand jury has yet to indict him on those charges. Federal and city law enforcement officials who reviewed the case told the AP there were concerns that Pimentel lacked the mental capacity to act on his own. The NYPD informant's drug use in the case also created serious issues, the officials said.

FBI Director Robert Mueller has tried to mute criticisms of the NYPD. On a visit to the Newark, N.J., FBI office a few years ago, current and former officials recall, agents asked Mueller how the NYPD was allowed to operate undercover in the state, with no FBI coordination. Mueller replied that it was a reality the bureau would have to live with, the officials said.

There will always be some debate over the effectiveness of intelligence-gathering programs, particularly ones that butt up against civil liberties. Nearly a decade after the last terrorist suspect was waterboarded in a secret CIA prison in 2003, for instance, politicians and experts still debate whether the tactic gleaned valuable information and whether it could have been obtained without such harsh methods.

During the Bush administration, officials repeatedly pointed to the years without a successful terrorist attack to justify the most contentious programs from the war on terrorism. Vice President Dick Cheney used the years without an attack to defend the secret National Security Agency wiretapping program. Gonzales credited the USA Patriot Act and military actions abroad. And President George W. Bush said the years without an attack validated his polices.

"While there's room for honest and healthy debate about the decisions I've made ? and there's plenty of debate," Bush said in the final days of his presidency, "there can be no debate about the results in keeping America safe."

When questioned about its own programs, the NYPD has made the same arguments.

During the 2005 deposition over the subway searches, lawyers pressed Cohen to explain how the NYPD could be so sure its programs really worked.

"They haven't attacked us," he said.

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Contact the Washington investigative team at DCInvestigations(at)ap.org

Follow Apuzzo, Goldman and Sullivan at http://twitter.com/mattapuzzo and http://twitter.com/goldmandc and http://twitter.com/esullivanap

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-23-NYPD%20Intelligence/id-929e569347054e39b801366e4391c09e

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