Saturday, December 31, 2011

Steve Jobs to receive honorary Grammy

Apple

By Athima Chansanchai

Even in the afterlife, Steve Jobs continues to rack up accolades. The Recording Academy is bestowing upon him?a Trustees Award,?an honorary Grammy, that will be acknowledged at the awards ceremony in February.

The Recording Academy previously honored Jobs' company, Apple, with a Grammy in 2002 for "outstanding technical significance to the recording field," the same year Jobs won the Producers Guild of America's Vanguard Award?for Pixar Animation Studios.

Here's what the Academy wrote about Jobs in giving him this posthumous honor:

As former CEO and co-founder of Apple, Steve Jobs helped create products and technology that transformed the way we consume music, TV, movies, and books. A creative visionary, Jobs' innovations such as the iPod and its counterpart, the online iTunes store, revolutionized the industry and how music was distributed and purchased.?

The Trustees Award falls within the Academy's Special Merit Awards, which also include technical Grammy Awards and the Lifetime Achievement Awards. According to the Academy's press release, the Trustees Award "recognizes such contributions in areas other than performance" and is "determined by vote of The Recording Academy's National Board of Trustees."

More stories:

Check out Technolog on?Facebook, and on Twitter, follow?Athima Chansanchai, who is also trying to keep her head above water in the?Google+?stream.

Source: http://digitallife.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/30/9826786-steve-jobs-to-receive-honorary-grammy

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Loews Cineplex Galaxy Tickets

Does anyone know if AMC are still cross honoring Lowes Cineplex Galaxy (GX700) Tickets? I was at a AMC in NYC (Kips Bay, 2nd Ave, 32/33rd street. 4pm) today and tickets was refused, staff stated that they are no longer accepting these tickets (backed up and verified by manager on duty). They mentioned that the theatre is no longer "lowes cineplex", contradicting the huge awning on top of the concession stand and movie poster boards along the walls, all stating "lowes theatre". I currently have around 2.5 books left (approx 120 tickets). Does anyone know if these old tickets can be exchanged for newer amc tickets? It was stated that these tickets had no expiration date when I purchased them.

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Source: http://getsatisfaction.com/amc_theatres/topics/loews_cineplex_galaxy_tickets

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Australia snatch victory in first Test against India

Australia's pace attack produced a bowling display reminiscent of the side's era
of dominance as they swept India aside to secure a 122-run victory in the first
Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

The performances of Ben Hilfenhaus, James Pattinson and Peter Siddle carried shades of Jason Gillespie, Brett Lee and Glenn McGrath in their pomp, as the tourists fell some way short of the 292 they had been set to win.

The quick trio bowled with tremendous accuracy throughout a devastating 47.5-over innings that spanned all three sessions on the fourth day, with Pattinson (four for 53) narrowly shading the honours,

But despite the 21-year-old rising star taking the most wickets, it was a collective effort that saw the Baggy Green across the finish line, with the three-pronged attack showing enough to suggest they can spearhead a bid to return to the top of the Test rankings - something that was taken for granted by Australians for almost a decade.

India had occupied that position until their whitewash in England earlier this summer and Mahendra Singh Dhoni's side again showed worrying signs overseas.

The tourists were always likely to be up against it chasing what was a fourth-highest MCG winning total, but their mindset could have been so different had they not allowed Pattinson and Hilfenhaus to take them on with the bat this morning.

When Mike Hussey, who should have been given out when he edged Umesh Yadav behind, was snared by Zaheer Khan for 88, the margin was 249 but, 10 overs of improvised batting from the bowlers later, it was 43 runs greater.

Hilfenhaus fell to Ishant Sharma for 14 and then delivered with the ball in a nine-over spell before lunch, getting one to climb on Virender Sehwag who could only find Hussey in the gully.

India returned after lunch on 24 for one, but by the time they were back in the pavilion for tea, the score was 117 for six as Australia dominated a stunning middle session.

First an out-of-form Gautam Ghambir was tied in knots by Siddle - surviving twice in one over - before diverting an almost unplayable delivery from the same bowler into the hands of Ricky Ponting at second slip.

That brought Sachin Tendulkar to the crease - the master batsman still chasing an elusive 100th international ton - and even he showed signs of pressure as he narrowly avoided a run out from the arm of David Warner.

He had another elder statesman, Rahul Dravid, for company, but that did not last long as 'The Wall' misread one from Patterson and lost his middle stump for 10.

The same bowler then got rid of VVS Laxman, who failed to spot Ed Cowan lurking at square leg when he flicked one off his legs and, when Hilfenhaus (two for 39) trapped Virat Kohli in front for a golden duck, India were sinking fast at 69 for five.

That quickly became 81 for six as Siddle, with the first ball of his second spell, got one to grow on Tendulkar who gave Hussey an easy catch in the gully.

Dhoni and R Ashwin then had a swinging session leading in to tea, but the latter fell just after it for 30, gloving a climber from Siddle (three for 42) to Cowan who had come in to short square leg.

Zaheer Khan decided to have some fun and clubbed Pattinson for six but paid with the very next ball, walking across his stumps to try and hit the 21-year-old out of the ground but only serving to fudge one to the ever-alert Cowan.

Dhoni (23) then lost his off stump to Pattinson as India fell apart at nine for 142 and, although Yadav had a late slog, he perished on 21 when he took on spinner Nathan Lyon and was caught out by a sprinting Warner on the boundary to wrap things up.

PA

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/266/f/3792/s/1b5b9ce9/l/0L0Sindependent0O0Csport0Ccricket0Caustralia0Esnatch0Evictory0Ein0Efirst0Etest0Eagainst0Eindia0E62826370Bhtml/story01.htm

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No iPhone, no thanks: ungrateful Christmas gift recipients

Apparently, not getting an iPhone or iPad for Christmas is one of the biggest tragedies making the rounds on social media this year. Have some people never heard of the financial crisis? Or of Occupy??

Here are just a few mind-boggling tweets:

Incredibly, some of these kids (most appear to be under 25) got luxurious gifts like diamond earrings, but were unimpressed to be the only person in the world without the latest Apple product, in the exact colour they wanted. In addition to Apple products, quite a few gift recipients were angry they didn't get the new car they asked for this Christmas.?

It's a bit surreal reading the complaints -- rather like an extension of that famous Jimmy Kimmel video of children who received terrible Christmas gifts -- but if some of these kids get the presents they want next year, their parents will lose all credibility.?

Read on for more?ungrateful Christmas gift tweets.?

  • Talking Siriously with the iPhone 4S

Take our survey and?WIN a ski weekend?at The?Westin?Whistler and lift tickets for?Whistler?Blackcomb.

Source: http://www.vancouverobserver.com/blogs/tmi/2011/12/28/no-iphone-no-thanks-ungrateful-christmas-gift-recipients

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Russian court rejects proposed ban of Hindu text (AP)

MOSCOW ? A Russian court decided Wednesday not to ban a religious text central to the global Hare Krishna movement, rejecting claims that the text is "extremist" and ending a case that has angered Hindus around the world.

The Indian Foreign Ministry said it appreciated "this sensible resolution of a sensitive issue."

Prosecutors in the Siberian city of Tomsk had argued that the Russian translation of "Bhagavad Gita As It Is" promotes "social discord" and hatred toward nonbelievers, causing an outcry in India, where many considered the proposed ban a violation of the rights of Hindus in Russia.

The text is a combination of the Bhagavad Gita, one of Hinduism's holiest scriptures, and commentary by A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, which is often called the Hare Krishna movement.

The prosecutors had asked the court to include the book on the Federal List of Extremist Materials, which bans more than 1,000 texts, including Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" and books distributed by the Jehovah's Witness and Scientology movements.

Alexander Shakhov, a lawyer for Hare Krishna devotees in Tomsk, said the group is satisfied with the court's decision.

"This judge's decision shows that Russia is becoming a truly democratic society," Shakhov was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency. "We are very excited about this victory."

Yury Pleshakov, a spokesman for the group in Moscow, said the book in question has existed in Russia for 25 years and has never inspired violence or extremist activity.

"On the contrary, this book teaches humane attitude towards all living beings," Pleshakov said.

The trial, which began in June, followed this year's ban on the construction of a Hare Krishna village in Tomsk and was based on an assessment by professors at Tomsk University, who concluded that "Bhagavad Gita As It Is" includes strong language against nonbelievers and promotes religious hatred and discrimination on the basis of gender, race, nationality and language.

The ruling came a day after Indian External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna met with Alexander Kadakin, Russia's ambassador to India, and urged the Russian government to resolve the issue. Indian officials had last week appealed to high-level Russian authorities to intervene.

The Tomsk court had postponed the decision from Dec. 19, when protesters gathered outside the Russian consulate in Kolkata, and the speaker of India's lower house of parliament adjourned the body for several hours after members began shouting in anger over the proposed ban.

After hearing further testimony from academic experts on Wednesday, the judge ruled that the prosecutors' claims were unfounded.

The Bhagavad Gita "is not merely a religious text, but one of the defining treatises of Indian thought," said Indian Ambassador to Russia Ajai Malhotra in a statement. "The Bhagavad Gita has circulated freely across the world for centuries and there is not a single instance of it having encouraged extremism."

The Indian Foreign Ministry on Wednesday sought to soothe over any tensions.

"We appreciate this sensible resolution of a sensitive issue and are glad to put this episode behind us," ministry spokesman Vishnu Prakash said in a statement. "This demonstrates yet again that the people of India and Russia have a deep understanding of each other's cultures and will always reject any attempt to belittle our common civilizational values."

The Russian Foreign Ministry had insisted the Tomsk court was not taking issue with core Hindu scripture itself, but rather with the author's commentary and poor translation in "Bhagavad Gita As It Is."

"I would like to emphasize that this is not about 'Bhagavad Gita,' a religious philosophical poem, which forms part of the great Indian epic Mahabharata and is one of the most famous pieces of the ancient Hindu literature," ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said at a briefing in Moscow last week, adding that the book was first published in Russian in 1788.

Still, followers of the Hare Krishna movement in Russia saw the proposed ban as a result of continued intolerance of minority religions by the Russian Orthodox Church. Pleshakov estimates there are at least 150,000 Hare Krishna devotees in Russia.

"The current problem is, above all, the misuse of the law on combating extremism," Pleshakov said. "It is used to search for enemies where they can not even be defined."

In 2005, a Russian Orthodox archbishop asked the mayor of Moscow to ban the construction of a proposed Hare Krishna temple, calling the Hindu deity Krishna "an evil demon, the personified power of hell opposing God," according to Interfax. The temple was later allowed in a Moscow suburb.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_bhagavad_gita

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Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark

Pauline Kael became the voice for a new generation of film-goers.

Pauline Kael is reported to have said to Robert Altman, after the screening of his film Three Women, ?I loved the first part of the movie, Bob, but I hated the second part.?? My response was similar to Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark, Brian Kellow?s biography of the celebrated film critic.?

Skip to next paragraph

Part of this can?t be helped. It?s always more interesting to read the fortunes of a rising star, battling her way to the top, making friends and enemies along the way, surviving on a shoestring.?

Kellow offers a detailed account of Kael?s childhood at a chicken farm in the Jewish community of Petaluma, Calif., her stint at Berkley (she dropped out as a senior), and her hard-won career as a film critic ? culminating in her hire as the reviewer for The New Yorker at the age of 48. [Correction: This review originally misstated Kael's age.] Kael?s struggles and rise to fame make for a compelling read, as does the backdrop against which it is set: the evolution of the movies out of the Hollywood Production Code and Studio System (established in the 1930s and crumbling by the 1960s) as well as the broader social history, culminating in the rise of the counterculture and the anti-war movement.?

Kael, though not young herself, became a voice for the generation that reveled in films like Bonnie and Clyde and M*A*S*H, movies that an older generation of critics dismissed. Likewise, her very style of writing pushed film criticism to reflect a new voice, one that dropped the pretense of objectivity in keeping with New Journalists like Joan Didion and Norman Mailer, and leaned on the vernacular and the occasional sexual metaphor.? (Battles between Kael and genteel New Yorker editor William Shawn over her salty language were regular occurrences.)

Though she spoke for youth culture, Kael herself hailed from the Greatest Generation, and as a writer who was neither male, Gentile, nor from the East, her reflection of that generation?s belief in hard work as a means to an achievable end served her well in writing her way into the New York literary establishment.?

Her reviewing became a passionate advocacy for what the movies could and should do ? that is, ?depict American life with some degree of authenticity,? as messy as that might be ? and driven by this passion, she moved from margin to center. In this way, Kael?s is an American success story, if not quite from rags to riches, then from obscurity to prominence and influence.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/0nCjpcBvKpk/Pauline-Kael-A-Life-in-the-Dark

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

HBT:?No short-term deal for Fielder?

UPDATE: OK, maybe not.

Scott Boras told Bruce Levine of ESPNChicago.com that Prince Fielder will not consider a three-year deal:

?Not only is that inaccurate and delusional, but it seems that some people have gotten into their New Year?s Eve stash just a little bit early this year,? Boras told ESPNChicago.com on Tuesday.

?It appears some baseball people are just bored,? Boras said. ?That?s when you hear ideas like that floated.?

7:00 PM: According to what Peter Gammons of MLB Network and NESN is hearing, yes, he could:

source:  For the record, Joe Strauss of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch heard similar information a couple weeks ago. And it?s potentially a very smart strategy. There?s no clear front-runner for Fielder at the moment, but if he?s truly willing to sign a short-term deal with a high annual average salary, some interesting and unexpected teams could get involved in the bidding.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/27/could-prince-fielder-consider-a-short-term-deal/related/

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Sony sells stake in LCD venture to Samsung

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Richard Geldard: The Bain of Romney's Existence

On the eve of primary voting, we are more or less clear about Ron Paul's racist newsletters and the Gingrich sexual and financial affairs, but less clear about the relationship between Mitt Romney and Bain Capital. As in the case of Paul and Gingrich, this too is an issue of the soul.

For starters, think "Pretty Woman" -- not Julia Roberts, whose livelihood was an open book, so to speak, but rather the character of Edward Lewis, played by Richard Gere, whose job in life was to buy vulnerable companies, break them up into pieces, sell them for a huge profit and move on while workers lose their jobs in the process.

As we have learned now, Bain Capital is such a private equity company, buying struggling companies, breaking them up, laying off thousands of workers, and selling off the remaining pieces, if any. In a New York Times article, dated December 18, the relevant paragraph is this:

"Though Mr. Romney left Bain in early 1999, he received a share of the corporate buyout and investment profits enjoyed by partners from all Bain deals through February 2009: four global buyout funds and 18 other funds, more than twice as many over all as Mr. Romney had a share of the year he left."

He is still profiting from the company he help to found and then left thirteen years ago and is paying only a 15% tax rate on the millions in capital gains.

In "Pretty Woman" Edward Lewis has a change of heart and buys into a struggling business to build ships for the Navy, thus saving his soul, along with Julia Roberts, with whom he flies off to New York to live (well) happily ever after, just as Romney left Bain to save a morally bankrupt Winter Olympics and then fly off to Boston and another life.

The question of saving one's soul came up in a Time.com Romney interview (Dec. 22) with Mark Halperin, who began the interview with a direct question about state of Romney's soul. The gist of the question was this:

"David Axelrod, who, as you know, works for the President, says that presidential elections are MRIs of the soul. That over time, in the course, particularly of the general election, the country gets to know the candidates [and that] ...over time the country will know the Republican nominee? Will know the President? Their soul?"

And what was Romney's evasive reply? After questioning Obama's birth and early life, he said, "I also think that a campaign is about an MRI of the economy and the record of the incumbent." There would be no personal soul talk from Romney, and indeed, it seems clear he is incapable of engaging on that level of inquiry. When pundits accuse Romney of having no "core" it is soul they are really referring to, and it is Bain Capital that is the outward manifestation of a lack of soul.

President Obama's soul-searching book "Dreams of my Father" reveals the depth of an authentic soul and the willingness to reveal those depths to the world. Can we imagine Mitt Romney writing a book about his years at Bain Capital and the search for an authentic self? Won't happen. In his ending to "Pretty Woman," Edward Lewis pays off Julia Roberts, breaks up another company and takes off to find another to break up, just as Mitt Romney, if elected, would break up America and sell of the pieces to the ever hungry 1%.

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Follow Richard Geldard on Twitter: www.twitter.com/richgeldard

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/richard-geldard/the-bain-of-romneys-exist_b_1168733.html

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Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program aims to equip troops mentally

Reporting from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash.?

Brig. Gen. Rhonda Cornum found out what combat stress was in the back of a pickup during the first Gulf War in 1991 when one of her Iraqi captors unzipped her flight suit and, as she lay there with two broken arms and an injured eye, sexually assaulted her.

The reed-thin Army physician, whose Black Hawk helicopter had been shot down, became a symbol of everything America was worried about in sending women to war. Her successful return home ? sane and not that much the worse for her ordeal ? became a powerful argument for the irrelevance of gender in conditions of indiscriminate violence.

To Cornum, it was also an example of how a strong constitution and positive thinking can help soldiers, male and female, through unthinkable ordeals.

"As I was crashing, I knew that my only two choices were either I was going to be dead or I was going to be a prisoner, so when I became a prisoner, my first thought was how grateful I was [that] I was a prisoner," she said in an interview.

As the Army struggles to deal with an increase in suicides and combat-related stress stemming from 10 years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq, Cornum has been deployed to lead the military's new mental fitness program. It is designed to prepare soldiers for the psychic trauma of war and its aftermath.

The $125-million Comprehensive Soldier Fitness program requires soldiers to undergo the kind of mental pre-deployment tests and training that they have always had to undergo physically. Already, more than 1.1 million have had the mental assessments.

"We send people to the range to learn marksmanship, and we first teach them how to sight the weapon, then how to hit stationary targets, then pop-up targets. You learn these kind of tactical things in a progressive, sequential, intelligent way, but prior to CSF, we didn't really have a deliberate training program to build psychological competence and health," Cornum said.

"We kind of assumed everybody would do well until they didn't, and then we tried to treat it. That's not the optimal approach."

The program has won broad support from the American Psychological Assn., which devoted an entire issue of its journal to it in January. But a few independent psychologists have said the program amounts to a high-risk psychological experiment on soldiers who have no way to opt out. Further, they say, by encouraging psychological "resilience" in the face of danger, the program could actually propel troops into perilous situations.

"It is indisputably a research project of enormous size and scope, one in which a million soldiers are required to participate," Roy Eidelson, past president of Psychologists for Social Responsibility, wrote in an article this year for Psychology Today.

"Master resilience trainers ? will not encourage soldiers to empathize with the humanity of the adults and children whom they may have killed as collateral damage," Eidelson wrote, "nor to use forms of restorative justice for apology and reconciliation that have a potential for deeper healing."

Army leaders say most soldiers come home from war mentally stronger than when they left ? the challenge is how to transmit those coping skills to the 20% who don't. And even those troops who do well after combat may feel stressed after multiple deployments.

"Even though Desert Shield [the first Gulf War] was a pretty large-scale thing, it only lasted a few months. I think everybody recognized, in the military and out, that in a protracted war on terror and contingency operations, where we're going to have not just one deployment but multiple in a career, that we really didn't have a strategy of preparing people for those kinds of things," Cornum said.

"Modern military service ? in the '80s and '90s it was a pretty safe life. And then came 2001, and now it isn't."

**

Army officials say the Army's ability to continue operating in Afghanistan depends on the resilience program's success.

"The suicide rate among our soldiers is at an all-time high. The number of soldiers suffering from post-traumatic stress is also high. And the stress of long separations due to combat is felt by our family members too," Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the Army's chief of staff, wrote in an article about the program this year. "As such, we are starting not with a blank slate but rather with the challenge of having the preponderance of our force influenced in some way ? both positively and negatively ? by the effects of sustained, protracted conflict."

Where traditional military mental health programs have tended to target soldiers with known mental health or behavior problems, Comprehensive Soldier Fitness aims to take in everyone, teaching positive psychological skill-building in place of warning soldiers about what not to do.

"We don't specifically mention suicide," Cornum said. "We figure they're getting bombarded with suicide messaging. We don't mention drugs or alcohol. If you build psychological assets, people are less likely to use those maladaptive ones."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/latimes/news/nationworld/nation/~3/he_utj23IRA/la-na-military-stress-resilience-20111226,0,4608209.story

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Gingrich Approves of South Carolina's Decision To Fly Confederate Flag At Capital (Little green footballs)

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Japan to ask Myanmar to join bilateral pact: Kyodo

TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's foreign minister will suggest that Myanmar enter negotiations on a bilateral investment accord when he holds talks with the country's top officials next week, Kyodo News reported Sunday.

The talks would mark another step as Myanmar gradually reconnects with the rest of the world after decades of tight military rule.

A series of reforms have been initiated by President Thein Sein aimed at pushing for the lifting of decades of Western sanctions and attracting much-needed foreign investment in the country formerly known as Burma.

Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba is traveling to Myanmar Sunday to meet his counterpart, Wunna Maung Lwin, as well as the president next week.

In Naypyitaw, Gemba will discuss the investment accord, which would promote cross-border investment and allow trade disputes to be settled under international frameworks, Kyodo said, citing a government source.

Gemba will also meet pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and will likely invite her to visit Japan in the near future, Kyodo said.

Gemba's visit is the first by a Japanese foreign minister in nine years.

In a landmark step, U.S. President Barack Obama decided last month to open the door to expanded ties, saying he saw potential for progress in a country until recently seen as an isolated military dictatorship firmly aligned with China.

That decision was followed soon after by a visit to Myanmar by U.S. Foreign Secretary Hillary Clinton, during which Myanmar's new civilian government pledged to forge ahead with political reforms and re-engage with the global community.

(Reporting by Mari Saito)

Source: http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/kacu/news.newsmain/article/0/3/1888754/World/Japan.to.ask.Myanmar.to.join.bilateral.pact.Kyodo

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

cachemania: Just tried to buy a book from Sony Store "title not available in your territory". This is why DRM is evil!

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Just tried to buy a book from Sony Store "title not available in your territory". This is why DRM is evil! cachemania

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Western Wind Energy Corp. announces 30 MW Mesa Wind Farm Executes New PPA

Friday, Dec 23, 2011

Western Wind Energy Corp. - (Toronto Venture Exchange - "WND") (OTCQX - "WNDEF"), is pleased to announce that our producing 30 MW Mesa Wind Farm located near Palm Springs, California has executed a new Power Purchase Agreement ("PPA") with a major California Utility. Terms of the deal are confidential, but we can disclose the price received will double the revenues received from Mesa. The new PPA covers the existing equipment. The Agreement is subject to customary regulatory approvals.?

Mesa records the highest annual wind speeds for any producing wind farm in North America. The year to date wind speed is 10.7 meters per second, or almost 24 miles per hour. Mesa has produced these exceptional winds since the opening in 1984.?

Jeff Ciachurski, President of Western Wind Energy states, "We are extremely pleased about executing our new PPA at Mesa. Together with the highest wind speeds of any wind farm in North America, Mesa offers long-term viability not only in its existing form, but as a new repowered project in the near future. Western Wind is humbled by owning its sites at the most productive regions in the world. Palm Springs is home to over 4,000 wind turbines, of which 460 belong to Western Wind."?

About Western Wind Energy Corp.?

Western Wind Energy Corp. (OTCQX: WNDEF) (TSX.V: WND) trades in the United States on the OTCQX under the symbol "WNDEF" and on the Toronto Venture Exchange under "WND". Western Wind is a vertically integrated renewable energy production company that currently owns 165 MW of rated solar and wind capacity in production in the States of California and Arizona. Western Wind further owns substantial additional development assets for both solar and wind energy in California, Arizona, Ontario, Canada; and in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.?

Western Wind is in the business of owning and operating wind and solar energy generating facilities. Management of Western Wind includes individuals involved in the operations and ownership of utility scale wind energy facilities in California since 1981.?

Source:?Western Wind Energy Corp

Source: http://www.yourrenewablenews.com/western+wind+energy+corp.+announces+30+mw+mesa+wind+farm+executes+new+ppa_72431.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Iran Grabs Iraq as Jumping-Off Pad against Saudi Arabia and Israel

At least 40 killed, 100 injured twin suicide bomb car attack in Damascus Friday ? State security and intelligence buildings targeted in first such attack since anti-Assad uprising ? Thursday, Arab League team arrived to set up monitoring mission ? Baghdad death toll climbs to 67 with hundreds injured as 15 bomb explosions rip through the city during Thursday ? The extremist Hamas may finally gain admittance to the umbrella Palestinian Liberation Organization, the PLO ? This was agreed by rivals Fatah and Hamas in Cairo Thursday, clearing the way for a power-sharing deal and Hamas participation in PLO leadership vote ? Israeli Elbit falls in New York Friday after government cancelled military surveillance system sale to Turkey ? French lower house passes law imposing heavy penalties on deniers of Turkey's Armenian massacre in World War I ? Turkey recalls its ambassador from Paris in protest ?

Source: http://www.debka.com/article/21591/

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AP Enterprise: Paul's nonprofits push law's limit

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, speaks during a campaign stop in Dubuque, Iowa, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, speaks during a campaign stop in Dubuque, Iowa, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas signs autographs during a campaign stop in Dubuque, Iowa, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas has his photo taken with Alaine Olthafer-Lange and her 3-month-old daughter Heidi Lange during a campaign stop in Dubuque, Iowa, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

(AP) ? The passionate support of an eclectic group of libertarians and young people has Ron Paul in contention to win the Iowa caucus. So has the work of two well-funded nonprofits that for the past three years have kept his aides employed, his volunteers organized and his ideas afloat.

Those nonprofits, including Paul's flagship Campaign for Liberty, blur the line between his presidential campaign and issue advocacy in a way experts say runs afoul of the spirit, and perhaps the letter, of federal tax and campaign finance law.

But unlike a political campaign organization, whose finances are tightly regulated and made public, such advocacy nonprofits can raise unlimited sums of money and aren't required to disclose where it came from or all the details about how it was spent.

"It sounds like it was a way to maintain a permanent campaign," said Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a nonpartisan watchdog group. "These groups were never supposed to be political organizations, but more and more, we're seeing them used that way. All of this is leading to our elections getting more and more out of control with fewer regulations."

Paul, a 76-year-old Texas congressman, finished fifth in the 2008 Iowa caucus and abandoned his long-shot presidential campaign that summer. As he left the race, he urged his supporters to continue their fight for libertarian principles by joining his new group, the Campaign for Liberty. He called the transformation of his presidential campaign into the nonprofit a "legal formality" that would allow him to continue building his famously energetic network of volunteers, online activists and college students.

The Campaign for Liberty and Young Americans for Liberty, a separate group formed to spread his message to high school and college students, were organized as "social welfare organizations" under U.S. tax law. That means they cannot make politics and promoting candidates their primary activities.

The groups quickly found a home in the tea party movement, hosting conferences, training activists and distributing petitions asking members of Congress to support one of Paul's signature policies ? a plan to audit the Federal Reserve. The Campaign for Liberty raised more than $13 million between 2008 and 2010 that paid for direct mail, telemarketing, staff salaries and other expenses. The group claims more than 600,000 members and more than 170 chapters of Young Americans for Liberty at high schools and colleges.

Drew Ivers, who founded the Iowa chapter of Campaign for Liberty, said the nonprofit's goal was never to lay the groundwork for Paul's 2012 presidential campaign. Organizers were careful to separate political work from the work of advocating Paul's ideas, he added. But he acknowledged the organization has helped Paul in Iowa, which will hold its first-in-the-nation presidential nominating caucuses on Jan. 3.

"It kept the ideas alive. And as people who were involved in the Campaign for Liberty liked the idea of limited government, they look at the field of presidential candidates and say, 'You know, I think Ron Paul is serious about this idea,'" Ivers said.

The other candidates from 2008 who are again running in 2012 also took steps between campaigns to build their political clout. President Barack Obama formed his "Organizing for America" group at the Democratic National Committee, while Republican Mitt Romney used a political action committee to raise money, shower donations on lawmakers and pay for his travel to key states. Paul had a PAC, too.

But the finances of both the DNC and political action committees such as Romney's Free and Strong America PAC ? unlike Paul's nonprofits ? are regulated by the Federal Election Commission and subject to financial disclosure rules.

Paul's presidential campaign is thoroughly intertwined with the nonprofits. The Campaign for Liberty calls itself a lobbying group for "individual liberty, constitutional government, sound money, free markets and a noninterventionist foreign policy" ? a tidy summation of Paul's campaign platform. Young Americans for Liberty's support of Paul is even more explicit, calling itself the continuation of the Students for Ron Paul wing of his 2008 campaign, coordinating his visits to campuses and publishing a magazine in which he laid out his "agenda for a freedom president."

Between the 2008 and 2012 campaigns, both nonprofits were stocked with Paul aides and relatives. Ivers served as Paul's Iowa campaign chairman in 2008 and holds the same position again this year. The Campaign for Liberty's president, John Tate, was paid a total of $338,000 by the group in 2009 and 2010. He is now Paul's national campaign manager. The nonprofit's senior vice president was Jesse Benton, who is now Paul's campaign chairman; its vice president was Debbie Hopper, who is now Paul's assistant campaign manager.

Lori Pyeatt, Paul's daughter, served until recently as the Campaign for Liberty's part-time secretary and treasurer, earning $34,000 for her work last year. Her daughter is married to Benton. Paul's son Ronnie is the group's unpaid chairman.

In all, nine out of the 16 staff members at the Campaign for Liberty are on leaves of absence from the group to work for Paul's campaign. The nonprofit's executive director, Matthew Hawes, said the group is still able to function and is an active advocate on state and federal issues unrelated to Paul's presidential campaign.

Paul campaign spokesman Gary Howard ? who for 18 months served as the Campaign for Liberty's spokesman ? said Paul resigned as Campaign for Liberty's honorary chairman when he joined the presidential race and believes the nonprofits complied with Internal Revenue Service rules. Still, like Ivers, he acknowledged the nonprofits have indirectly aided the campaign by training activists and raising his issues.

Paul isn't the first to use such a strategy to keep his name in the public's view between bids for the White House. Democrat John Edwards did the same between the 2004 and 2008 campaigns by founding a nonprofit center dedicated to fighting poverty, his central campaign issue.

Federal investigators later issued a subpoena for information about Edwards' nonprofit, according to details previously provided to The Associated Press. An attorney for Edwards has said the nonprofit paid money to Edwards' mistress' video production firm, and the former senator from North Carolina was later indicted on campaign finance charges related to payments from wealthy donors that were used to help hide the woman.

Marcus Owens, a Washington lawyer who headed the exempt organizations division at the IRS from 1990 to 2000, questions whether such nonprofits were truly designed to serve the "social welfare purpose" as required by law.

In Paul's case, the groups also helped his son's political career. At least two aides from the Campaign for Liberty left to help Rand Paul win election to the U.S. Senate in Kentucky last year.

"Any family campaign seems to draw them out. It's not conclusive, but it tends to suggest a private, not a public, purpose behind the organization," Owens said. "It's not a social welfare purpose to keep a campaign staff together and to promote the personal ideas of one individual."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-24-Paul-Shadow%20Campaign/id-c1c897dd25044f2c9420c137dc785def

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Miron: Who's to blame for D.C. gridlock? (CNN)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178457860?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Vanessa Bryant: Gold Digger or You Go, Girl?


Gold diggers: Like mother, like daughter. That's what Vanessa Bryant's former stepfather is saying about the soon-to-be ex-wife of NBA superstar Kobe Bryant.

Stephen Laine said in the aftermath of Kobe Bryant's divorce announcement that Vanessa, his spouse of 10 years, is acting just like her money-grubbing mom.

"Her mother taught her well to wait for the ten-year mark [before divorcing]," he said. "In California ... it's considered a long term marriage and then she gets paid for life or until [Vanessa] remarries ... just like her mother is doing to me."

Is that really fair, though?

Kobe Bryant, Wife Vanessa Bryant

First off, Kobe was reportedly caught cheating after the wives of some of his teammates told Vanessa Bryant of the player's increasingly frequent infidelities.

Second, 10 years is a long ass time, and two kids are a lot of work. Yes, having kids to "trap" the dad is a baby mama staple, but this doesn't seem like that.

They married young, before Kobe was that rich (she stands to receive at least $75 million now), and despite whatever rep she has, she never seeks attention.

Finally, she stood by Kobe after he was accused of RAPING someone. Enduring public humiliation isn't part of the gold-digging handbook ... $4 million ring or not.

What do you think? Is Vanessa Bryant a gold digger?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/vanessa-bryant-gold-digger-or-you-go-girl/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Video: Little dresses bring big hopes to Malawi

We'll focus on?efforts to help veterans find?jobs and deal with health and family problems. "One of the great blessings in my life has been the exposure I've received to the military?active duty, in the field and veterans,"?says Brian Williams. "They are America?s genuine heroes, and it's a privilege to use our platforms at NBC News to honor all that they have done."

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40153870/vp/45744302#45744302

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Friday, December 16, 2011

China investigates SKorean embassy's broken window (AP)

BEIJING ? China said Wednesday it is increasing security around South Korea's embassy in Beijing after it had a window broken, amid tensions over allegations in South Korea that a Chinese fisherman fatally stabbed a coast guard officer.

South Korea's news agency Yonhap cited an anonymous official as saying it was unclear if the incident was related to this week's stabbing death in South Korean waters. Some Chinese have accused South Korea of bullying their country's fishermen.

The Yonhap report said the embassy was hit by a metal ball believed fired from an air gun Tuesday afternoon. No one was hurt.

An embassy press officer surnamed Zheng said it was unclear what caused the hole in the window.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said Wednesday that authorities "take this incident seriously and are sparing no time in investigating it," but that initial inspections showed the embassy was not attacked. China is increasing the numbers of police officers and enhancing security patrols around the embassy, Liu said.

South Korea's Foreign Ministry said it formally asked China on Wednesday to beef up security around their Beijing embassy to prevent further incidents. Such a request is not very unusual between countries, the ministry said.

Tensions have risen since South Korean officials said Monday that the Chinese captain of a boat suspected of illegally fishing in South Korean waters killed one coast guard officer and wounded another.

On Tuesday in Seoul, protesters at the Chinese Embassy defaced a Chinese flag and a newspaper called the Chinese fishermen "pirates."

A commentary published in China's Global Times on Wednesday accused South Korean's media of misleading the public and said the fishermen were not "an arrogant group of bandits."

The Foreign Ministry's Liu said Wednesday that bilateral relations between the countries would not be affected.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111214/ap_on_re_as/as_china_skorea_embassy

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Police, volunteers search for missing Detroit girl

Volunteer Rita Denard searches an abandoned property for missing 2-year-old Bianca Jones, in Detroit, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Detroit police are seeking volunteers from the public to help search for Bianca since a reported carjacking Friday. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Volunteer Rita Denard searches an abandoned property for missing 2-year-old Bianca Jones, in Detroit, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Detroit police are seeking volunteers from the public to help search for Bianca since a reported carjacking Friday. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

This image provided by Michigan Amber Alert via The Detroit News shows Bianca Jones, 2 years old. Detroit's police chief says investigators are questioning the truth of a story that Bianca Jones was kidnapped during a carjacking. Chief Ralph Godbee issued a statement Sunday, De. 4, 2011 saying police are interested in "allaying some of the fears of the public" about the "apparent randomness" of her disappearance. (AP Photo/Michigan Amber Alert via The Detroit News)

This Nov. 28, 2006, photo released by the Michigan Department of Corrections in Lansing, Mich., shows Dandre Lane, the father of a missing 2-year-old Detroit girl. Police Chief Ralph Godbee said authorities are questioning Lane?s statement Friday, Dec. 2, 2011, that Bianca Jones was kidnapped when a carjacker took the car Lane was driving. Lane was being held on an unrelated charge while police continued the disappearance of his daughter. (AP Photo/Michigan Department of Corrections)

Banika Jones, left, is hugged by her aunt Patricia McLemore in Detroit, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Detroit police are seeking volunteers from the public to help search for Jones' daughter, 2-year-old Bianca Jones, since a reported carjacking Friday. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

Banika Jones holds a photo and missing poster of her daughter Bianca Jones, 2, in Detroit, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Detroit police are seeking volunteers from the public to help search for 2-year-old Bianca Jones since a reported carjacking Friday. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

(AP) ? Stepping gingerly among mounds of discarded tires, piles of soggy clothing and nail-pierced wood boards, Makibla Gideon's head swept from side to side in search of a purple toddler's jacket or pink shirt ? any remnant that could have been worn by a 2-year-old Detroit girl whose father claims was taken during carjacking.

"You have to put all that aside when it comes to a precious little girl," said the 39-year-old Gideon, barely avoiding oily pools of filthy rain water in one of dozens of alleys not far from where Bianca Jones is reported to have last been seen.

More than three dozen volunteers searching for Bianca fanned out in small groups of five to 10 Monday morning through the North End neighborhood, while police continued to pore over D'Andre Lane's version of how his car was taken during a robbery Friday morning with his daughter in the rear seat.

"If it was my son or me missing I would want somebody looking for me," said Gideon, moments before peering inside a trash-filled and nearly collapsed garage only blocks from where police found Lane's car.

She and others who canvassed the area amid 30-degree temperatures that eventually gave way to snow returned a couple hours later to Metropolitan United Methodist Church, many tired but vowing to try again Tuesday if necessary.

Lane, 32, was being held in nearby Oakland County on an outstanding warrant from an unrelated case. But Undersheriff Mike McCabe said Monday afternoon that Lane had been released.

Detroit Police Chief Ralph Godbee said Sunday investigators were questioning the truthfulness of Lane's story. Police also searched his home Monday morning, but declined to provide details.

No suspects have been identified related to the alleged carjacking.

"The search for Bianca Jones is ongoing and continues to be of the highest priority relative to our commitment of dedicated resources to this case," Godbee said in a statement. "The Detroit Police Department will not comment on the quantity nor the quality of any evidence or information we have gathered to date. However, in the interest of allaying some of the fears of the public regarding the apparent randomness of Bianca's disappearance, the authenticity and credibility of the original version of events is under intense scrutiny by our investigative team."

Banika Jones, the girl's mother, said before the search began that she last saw her daughter Nov. 26, when family and friends celebrated her birthday. Jones said Lane had taken Bianca to see a movie, brought her back to her mother's house for the party and then the girl left with her father.

"Please continue to keep searching for Bianca," Banika Jones said. "We love her and we want her home. Bianca, Mommy has lots and lots of gingerbread men for you when you get home."

According to Michigan prison records, Lane was jailed for more than three years on drug and firearm possession charges stemming from a 2003 arrest and was paroled in 2007. He also served a more than four-year probation starting in 1996 after being convicted of assault with intent to commit armed robbery and a conspiracy charge.

A pre-sentencing investigation report from 2007 shows that Lane, a father of three other children from three previous relationships, sought to shield his incarceration from his children. A probation officer wrote that Lane did not want his children to come to see him in prison because it was not a place for them to visit.

Banika Jones said Lane has a good relationship with Bianca, who is described as 2 feet, 5 inches tall and weighing about 25 pounds, with brown eyes and black hair.

"He has unfettered access to her; welcome to come anytime," she said. "He's never been anything but loving and committed to her. I know he probably wants to see Bianca home as much as I do.

"I have no information on the investigation. My focus is on finding Bianca. That is what I'm driven to do right now is bring my daughter home. I just want to see Bianca again.

"We are looking for Bianca. We are trying to find her. We are going to bring Bianca home."

Lane has been close to the Jones family for years, according to Kelly Jones, Banika's sister.

"They were never officially in a relationship" and there was no "bad blood," Kelly Jones said of Lane and Banika.

"There was no problem and now Bianca's gone. Let's just find her," Kelly Jones said.

Locating a child that some fear is somewhere shivering in the cold is what prompted Michelle Carter to join the search Monday.

"It was cold," Carter said after returning with others to Metropolitan United Methodist Church. "We went through the alleys. We searched porches, under debris, moved bags and went through trash. We called Bianca's name."

The 39-year-old nail salon owner refused to think the worst and admitted to having no idea what Bianca's mother may be feeling.

"I don't want to imagine. No," Carter said. "Being a mother and not even knowing where your child is ... I know is devastating."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-05-Carjacking-Missing%20Child/id-2f69d1bc01a14fa4b3f7b8847fdf7907

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

World stocks fall on S&P eurozone debt warning

Trader Edward Curran, right, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Stocks rose broadly in early trading Monday on hopes for a plan to restore long-term confidence in the euro. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Trader Edward Curran, right, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Stocks rose broadly in early trading Monday on hopes for a plan to restore long-term confidence in the euro. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

BANGKOK (AP) ? World stocks sank Tuesday after Standard and Poor's warned 15 countries using the euro that it could downgrade their credit ratings. Skepticism over a new plan to prevent a breakup of the common currency also dragged markets lower.

European stocks fell in early trading but Wall Street appeared on the verge of a higher opening. Asian shares sank earlier in the day. Benchmark oil hovered below $101 per barrel while the dollar rose against the euro and was steady against the yen.

The S&P announcement came only hours after French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday unveiled sweeping plans to change the European Union treaty in an effort to keep tighter checks on overspending nations.

The S&P warning left out only two of 17 countries that use the euro: Cyprus, whose bonds have near-junk status, and Greece, whose low ratings already suggest it is likely to default soon anyway.

The inclusion on the list of Germany and France means those countries could lose their coveted AAA ratings. Without the AAA rating ? the highest available ? those two countries might not be unable to raise enough money to bail out their weaker neighbors.

Sarkozy and Merkel discussed several broad changes for the EU treaty, including the introduction of a penalty for any government that allows its deficit to exceed 3 percent of gross domestic product. The penalty would be automatic ? unless a majority of nations opposed it, a loophole that drew sharp criticism from analysts.

Andrew Sullivan, principal sales trader at Piper Jaffray in Hong Kong, said the sanctions were "subject to political control" and in reality represent no meaningful change from mechanisms already in existence.

Among major European markets, Britain's FTSE 100 was marginally lower at 5,563.98. Germany's DAX slid 0.8 percent to 6,055.42 and France's CAC-40 lost 0.2 percent to 3,194.52.

On Wall Street, Dow Jones industrial futures were up 0.2 percent at 12,084 and S&P 500 futures rose 0.1 percent to 1,256.10.

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped 1.4 percent to close at 8,575.16. South Korea's Kospi fell 1 percent to 1,902.82 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng lost 1.2 percent to 18,942.23. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 shed 1.4 percent to 4,262.

In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite Index edged down 0.3 percent to 2,325.91.

The French-German proposal on budget control will be taken up at a summit of EU leaders on Thursday and Friday aimed at fixing a debt crisis so severe that it threatens the viability of the euro currency. A collapse could lead to a severe recession in Europe and trigger economic ramifications across the globe.

Some analysts feel the proposal, which demands strict austerity measures, misses the mark completely and will only worsen already feeble economies like Greece by making it impossible to borrow money and repay loans.

Derek Cheung, chief investment office of Neutron INV Partners Ltd. in Hong Kong, said he believes that central banks printing money ? instant cash with which government debt could be repaid ? is the only way to stanch the crisis in the short-term.

"In the short term, belt-tightening will do more harm than good," he said. "If their economies continue to slow down, do you think people will still continue to buy their bonds?"

Losses were broad, hitting sectors across most key markets.

Among steelmakers, Japan's Kobe Steel Ltd. and Nippon Steel both fell 3 percent.

Airlines also felt the pinch. Hong Kong-listed China Eastern Airlines dropped 5 percent and Korean Air Lines Co. fell 2.2 percent.

Retailers skidded in Hong Kong. Esprit Holdings dropped 10.5 percent after the company announced the resignation of chief financial officer Chew Fook Aun. Prada SpA lost 4.3 percent.

Australian gold miner Newcrest Mining fell 4 percent and Zijin Mining Group, China's biggest gold miner, lost 4.6 percent. The price of the precious metal fell about 1 percent Monday as some investors sold holdings at a profit after the price rose nearly 4 percent last week.

Camera and medical equipment maker Olympus skyrocketed ahead of the release of a probe that confirmed the company had falsified accounting records to cover up huge investment losses from the 1990s. Shares of Olympus gained 9.1 percent as investors bet the company would not face a delisting by the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 0.7 percent to 12,097.83. The S&P 500 rose 1 percent to 1,257.1. The Nasdaq added 1.1 percent to 2,655.76.

Benchmark crude for January delivery was down 28 cents to $100.71 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 3 cents to settle at $100.99 on Monday.

In currency trading, the euro fell to $1.3375 from $1.3382 late Monday in New York. The dollar was nearly unchanged at 77.76 yen from 77.77 yen.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-06-World-Markets/id-788ced9114944e30b9d04992bd83cfbf

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Nintendo UK appoints new head of communications | VG247

Mon, Dec 05, 2011 | 14:33 GMT

Nintendo?s announced that Jo Bartlett will become its new head of communications in the UK. Bartlett, who?s previously done PR for PlayStation and Warner Bros., replaces Rob Saunders, who left the company back in April this year for Apple. Until now, his role had been left vacant. More details are on MCV.

Source: http://www.vg247.com/2011/12/05/nintendo-uk-appoints-new-head-of-communications/

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Mexico's other challenge: to burnish its brand

Can Mexico help the world see past its escalating drug war, and showcase all that it offers?

To say that Mexico has a big branding problem might sound pretty flip. What America's southern neighbor faces is nothing that a smirking Don Draper type could spin: Its drug war has taken 40,000 lives in the past five years. Ciudad Ju?rez has become the world's murder capital. That's sort of like having Mogadishu, Somalia, just across the river from El Paso, Texas.

Skip to next paragraph

Of course, Mexico's other faces include Cabo San Lucas, the playground of Baja California. There's Canc?n and Cozumel, white-sand magnets for spring breakers and divers. Mayan ruins. Luminous folk art. Cuisine.

Perceptions matter, whether from outside or within. They affect how a nation fares economically ? tourism, business relations ? and its political standing. On some level they might even help determine how much help is offered by outsiders in realms ranging from finance to security.

News last year of the killing of an American jet-skier ? by Mexican drug traffickers, perhaps ? on border-straddling Falcon Lake got Americans' attention. Now come reports that potent "black tar" heroin from Mexico is creeping into eastern US states. And 17 tons of marijuana were recently found in a border tunnel.

For Mexicans, perception hardens into an unkind reality. Bad news keeps coming, much of it linked to cartels flexing their muscles in increasingly bold ways, as Sara Miller Llana, the Monitor's Mexico City bureau chief, reports from Veracruz (see page 26). There are beheadings. Grenade attacks on police.

The Calder?n government maintains that much of the violence is of the criminal-on-crimimal kind. But crossfire killings, peripheral damage, fear, and suspicion appear to be spreading.

In a drive-by shooting in western Sinaloa State recently, one of those killed was Diego Rivas, whose "narcocorridos," songs that glorify drug traffickers, apparently slighted the wrong drug lord. And when a helicopter crashed in fog Nov. 11, killing a top government drug enforcer, some wondered whether it had been a narcoterrorist hit. (Charges of government opacity and corruption also generate their own buzz.)

How does that kind of mounting cultural dysfunction hit people's perceptions of a country?

One metric, for what it's worth: FutureBrand, a global consultancy, just released its latest Country Brand Index. It surveys a range of data (including statistics on violence and unrest), adds insights gleaned from interviews with influential branding sources, and cranks out a list.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/T4A72LYEbdc/Mexico-s-other-challenge-to-burnish-its-brand

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Private college presidents' pay up modestly (Providence Journal)

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