Saturday, December 31, 2011

On 10th anniversary, euro takes blame for economy (AP)

PARIS ? Just three years ago, the euro was being praised as the can-do currency that had delivered unprecedented prosperity in Europe.

Now, it's widely derided as a hugely flawed experiment in the wake of a debt crisis that's threatening its very existence ? an uncomfortable backdrop as the currency's notes and coins hit their first decade in circulation on Jan. 1.

The question is: Will it get to its 11th birthday, let alone 20th? In the euro's tumultuous short history, it has already been heralded as the ultimate mark of a peaceful, united Europe; scoffed at as a giant act of hubris by a distant political elite; and credited with giving Europe a more influential voice in the world.

These days, as it faces its biggest crisis yet, the euro is a daily reminder to more than 330 million people of the dismal state of the economy in the 17-nation eurozone. Many countries seem headed back into recession, and policymakers are grappling with a spiraling debt crisis.

While few Europeans are prepared to scrap the euro ? in part because they fear a chaotic collapse more than the current muddle ? some are nostalgic for the money they counted on before it arrived.

Parisians waiting to exchange their old francs outside a branch of the Banque de France before a Feb. 17 deadline harked back to the "rosy" days.

"Life was better before," said Mamia Zenak, a 52-year-old doctor. "It (the euro) is a misery for everyone."

But it was not always so.

In 2009, fanfare accompanied the 10th anniversary of the euro's "launch," when it began floating on international exchanges and banks and governments started using it in their accounting. It was widely credited with cushioning the countries that use it from the banking crisis sparked by the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008, and for preventing proud euro member Ireland from descending into the economic chaos that befell non-euro Iceland.

"When the euro was launched there were plenty of people who thought it would crash and burn," the BBC wrote in a story on its website at the time. "Ten years on, its role as a global currency is secure."

It doesn't look so secure now. Events took a dark turn in 2010, when the debt-fueled boom years finally caught up with Greece and the eurozone realized it didn't have the tools to deal with its economic implosion.

Eventually Greece's euro partners and the International Monetary Fund found the money to bail the country out but it wasn't long before Ireland had to be rescued too after its property and banking sectors collapsed. In 2011, Portugal's failure to deal with its chronically sclerotic economy meant it joined the bailout club too.

Now as 2012 dawns, the euro's role as even a regional currency is uncertain as the crisis has spread to much-bigger Italy, with many skeptical about its ability to survive, at least in its present form.

Today's pessimism recalls the early days, when consumers worried that the currency would do them in financially, as shopkeepers took advantage of the changeover to hike prices. Maria Esteban, a catering manager in Madrid, remembered the price of a beer jumping from 150 pesetas to euro1.50 ? an increase of 66 percent.

"People barely knew what they were paying," said the 50-year-old.

Prices that had been set for their ease ? 10 francs, which was one coin, for a cone of roasted chestnuts in Paris, for instance ? saw some of the most egregious markups. Overnight, those chestnuts rose by a third ? to euro2, also a single coin.

A European Central Bank analysis found that while the perception that prices skyrocketed after the euro is generally exaggerated, 0.3 percentage point of 2002's 2.3 percent inflation was due to the introduction of the new notes and coins.

But, after that first uneasy year, an EU survey found that just over half of respondents thought the euro was "overall advantageous," while nearly a third thought the opposite. By 2007, at the height of an economic boom and with calls for the euro to become the world's reserve currency, 72 percent thought the currency was a "good thing" for Europe.

In the EU's latest survey, that figure has fallen to around two-thirds of respondents, and the economic downturn has renewed complaints about the squeeze exerted by the single currency.

While public affection for the euro vacillates frequently, Europeans have remained convinced of one thing: Few believe the currency has achieved one of its more lofty goals, forging a common European identity from Dublin to Tallinn.

The European Commission most recently asked citizens last year if the euro had made them feel more European. More than three-quarters said it had "no effect." That number has remained fairly intractable over the years; it was 80 percent in 2002.

Dutchman Patrick Plomp, who collects and trades rare bank notes, said the bills' design is partially responsible for their failure to instill a connection to Europe.

Whereas his country's guilders carried pictures of the sunflower, Austrian schillings depicted a Lipizzaner stallion and Greece's drachma bore Apollo's head, the drawings on euros are merely examples of different types of European architecture: They don't represent real monuments.

"If you look at a euro, you'll see that it's made with buildings that don't exist, bridges to nowhere," said Plomp, 44. "The effect that this has is that people feel alienated from the money. It's something that comes from far away."

Taina Kovamaki, a 40-year-old nurse, added that a feeling of alienation from the note leads to worries about the currency in general.

"After all the Finnish markka was Finnish ? it was our own," Kovamaki said as she lined up at the Bank of Finland counter in Helsinki, where the markka can be changed until Feb. 29. "The financial crisis scares me. I'm just not sure those people in Brussels know what they're doing."

But as with all things euro, how people feel about it depends largely on what they had before.

While many deride their generic look, stationery store owner Yiannakis Ioannides compares the notes to the flimsiness of the old Cypriot pound.

"It's better quality than the pound, which wasn't as good," the 52-year-old said.

The view from outside the currency union has also been just as fickle. Once seen as a sign that eastern European countries had "made it," joining the euro is now a far more sensitive subject. Poland, for one, is carefully measuring its words, calling for reforms before it joins.

Pauline Frommer, the managing editor of the Frommer's travel guides, recounts the glee of the currency's early days, when an Italian shopping spree could be had on the cheap by Americans because of the favorable exchange rate and the eventual dismay as the rate turned around in recent years.

Now, the euro has moved into a new phase, she said.

"The euro has come to symbolize something that may not have been fully thought through and may come back to bite us," said Frommer. "I think we're all very worried about the future of the euro, that maybe its 10th anniversary will be its last."

___

Online:

European Commission's surveys on the euro: http://ec.europa.eu/public_opinion/topics/euro_en.htm

___

Associated Press writers Toby Sterling in Amsterdam, Matti Huuhtanen in Helsinki, Menelaos Hadjicostis in Nicosia, Cyprus, Harold Heckle and Ciaran Giles in Madrid and Vanessa Gera in Warsaw, Poland, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_euros10_years_on

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WATCH: All 28 goals from yesterday?s Champions for Africa charity match (Video)

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Friday, December 30, 2011

urbanhomestead: Y'all or anyone you know coming to Pasadena for the Rose Parade and Rose Bowl? The Urban Homestead's "Front Porch... http://t.co/cMhNnKTc

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Champs Sports matchup full of history, intrigue

ORLANDO, Fla. ? A win in Thursday's Champs Sports Bowl won't give No. 25 Florida State or Notre Dame an express pass back into college football's elite status.

But that doesn't mean the coaches at both schools aren't thinking about how a victory against another of the sport's most-recognizable programs could aid their rebuilding.

Advertisement

Notre Dame Bowl History

Record: 15-15

Dec. 31, 2010 Sun Bowl_Notre Dame 33, Miami 17

Dec. 24, 2008 Hawaii Bowl_Notre Dame 49, Hawaii 21

Jan. 3, 2007 Sugar Bowl_LSU 41, Notre Dame 14

Jan. 2, 2006 Fiesta Bowl_Ohio St. 34, Notre Dame 20

Dec. 28, 2004 Insight Bowl_Oregon St. 38, Notre Dame 21

Jan. 1, 2003 Gator Bowl_N.C. State 28, Notre Dame 6

Jan. 1, 2001 Fiesta Bowl_Oregon St. 41, Notre Dame 9

Jan. 1, 1999 Gator Bowl_Georgia Tech 35, Notre Dame 28

Dec. 28, 1997 Independence Bowl_LSU 27, Notre Dame 9

Jan. 1, 1996 Orange Bowl_Florida St. 31, Notre Dame 26

Jan. 2, 1995 Fiesta Bowl_Colorado 41, Notre Dame 24

Jan. 1, 1994 Cotton Bowl_Notre Dame 24, Texas A&M 21

Jan. 1, 1993 Cotton Bowl_Notre Dame 28, Texas A&M 3

Jan. 1, 1992 Sugar Bowl_Notre Dame 39, Florida 28

Jan. 1, 1991 Orange Bowl_Colorado 10, Notre Dame 9

Jan. 1, 1990 Orange Bowl_Notre Dame 21, Colorado 6

Jan. 2, 1989 Fiesta Bowl_Notre Dame 34, West Virginia 21

Jan. 1, 1988 Cotton Bowl_Texas A&M 35, Notre Dame 10

Dec. 29, 1984 Aloha Bowl_Southern Methodist 27, Notre Dame 20

Dec. 29, 1983 Liberty Bowl_Notre Dame 19, Boston College 18

Jan. 1, 1981 Sugar Bowl_Georgia 17, Notre Dame 10

Jan. 1, 1979 Cotton Bowl_Notre Dame 35, Houston 34

Jan. 2, 1978 Cotton Bowl_Notre Dame 38, Texas 10

Dec. 27, 1976 Gator Bowl_Notre Dame 20, Penn St. 9

Jan. 1, 1975 Orange Bowl_Notre Dame 13, Alabama 11

Dec. 31, 1973 Sugar Bowl_Notre Dame 24, Alabama 23

Jan. 1, 1973 Orange Bowl_Nebraska 40, Notre Dame 6

Jan. 1, 1971 Cotton Bowl_Notre Dame 24, Texas 11

Jan. 1, 1970 Cotton Bowl_Texas 21, Notre Dame 17

Jan. 1, 1925 Rose Bowl_Notre Dame 27, Stanford 10

? Associated Press

"I think you have to understand the culture," Florida State coach Jimbo Fisher said. "You went through 10 years of not really being on top, and it's not three years or two years, it's been 10. And you have to understand that mentality, and that's something that you have to change to get back to where you're used to winning 10 or 11 games."

With 70 previous bowl appearances between them, both programs have undergone several cycles of change and a fair share even since their last postseason matchup in the 1996 Orange Bowl.

Most recently longtime Seminoles coach Bobby Bowden relinquished the reins to Fisher, while at roughly the same time Kelly was tapped to lead the Irish's latest reconstruction project following the firing of Charlie Weis.

Both Fisher and Kelly won bowl games in their inaugural seasons and came into 2011 with heightened expectations before early season missteps muddied that preseason hype.

The Seminoles (8-4) lost all three of their games this season against ranked opponents, including back-to-back early season losses to Oklahoma and Clemson and a one-point loss to Virginia in late November.

The Irish (8-4) won three of their final four games but were done in by back-to-back losses to South Florida and Michigan to open the season.

Kelly said this season has been a learning experience that factors into what it will take for Notre Dame to return to the program it once was.

"It starts with the ability to keep your football team together for another month. The ability to build more relationships and bonds with your players," he said. You're still evaluating and giving opportunities to freshmen that may not have that chance to go out and prove themselves. I think there's a lot of things that go into having a bowl game."

Thursday's game achieved sellout status for the first time in just a few days, suggesting there's a hunger to see how the teams will match up on the field.

To that end, the quarterback position on both sides certainly will play a role in who walks out of the Florida Citrus Bowl with the trophy.

The Irish must contend with E.J. Manuel, who as a full-time starter for the first time powered the Seminoles' offense to a scoring average of 31.7 points per game while accounting for 16 passing and four rushing touchdowns.

"I think their offense goes off him," Notre Dame senior safety and captain Harrison Smith said. "He's big, strong and can throw it. He's fast. So he's really got the tools to do everything, and they really like to get him involved in the offense."

The group protecting Manuel, though, has been battered and is expected to start four freshmen against the Irish.

Freshman right tackle Bobby Hart replaced senior Andrew Datko early in the season after he went down with a shoulder injury, and freshmen guards Josue Matias and Tre' Jackson are expected to start as well, along with freshman center Austin Barron.

Bryan Stork, the sophomore starter at center is recovering from nearly having a finger amputated after an infection, and sophomore starting guard Garrett Faircloth will have surgery on his injured hip soon.

"It wasn't really a future thing; it was really out of necessity," Fisher said. "It's great that they want to play, and it does help us for the future. ... But I think it gives us the best chance to win the game."

Manuel said he likes what he's seen out of them this week.

"They've done a good job," he said. "Like I've always said, coach (Rick) Trickett is going to get those guys prepared for any game, no matter who we're playing against. I think they realize the task at hand, knowing that those guys have 300 pounders down low, and they have to be ready for them."

Kelly said he will play both sophomore quarterback Tommy Rees and redshirt freshmen Andrew Hendrix.

Rees started all but one game this season and threw for 19 touchdowns but also had 12 interceptions. Hendrix has appeared in just four games but gives the Irish some different options.

"They're both prepared," Kelly said. "We've had plenty of time, and there are no excuses. Both of them can go in there and play the game, and we'll see how it goes."

As for what happens for both programs following Thursday's game, Fisher said he expects that to take care of itself.

"Are we disappointed about the wins? Yes, we wish we would've won more games. I mean, you'd like to win them all," he said. "But for a young football team to deal with distractions, with criticisms, the things that come with not winning as many games as you'd like to, they never lost faith in each other. In fact, it maybe made them closer. I feel very good about the future."

Source: http://dailyherald.com/article/20111228/sports/712289743/

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Man Loses Eyesight Because He Has No Health Insurance

Add the story of a San Francisco man to the many accounts of people across the country suffering because they lack health insurance.

Thirty-two-year-old Elisha Harris lost sight in his left eye entirely five months ago. Diagnosed with type 1 diabetes when he was 12 years old, Harris said he didn't take his condition seriously until he was in college.

A few months ago, when he lost his job because of failing vision, he fell into a deep depression and back into his old habit of skipping the three daily injections of insulin he needs to survive.

The fact that he wasn't able to afford the insulin shots, which cost close to $250 a month, was part of the problem. Not taking his insulin finally caused him to lose his eyesight.

"I was basically not eating a lot, so my blood sugar wouldn't go as high, [or] maybe [I would] go out and run instead of giving myself insulin, because that's another way of sort of controlling it," he told 9 News.

His doctor said if he had waited a few days longer, he would have lost vision in both eyes. Dr. Allen Ho told 9 News, "He came in with significant bleeding and scarring in the eye." Dr. Ho treated Harris after he landed a new job with insurance. Harris now has close to three months' worth of insulin stockpiled.

President Obama may have signed into law the Affordable Health Care Act, but we still hear countless horror stories about the medical system's lack of compassion. While Harris could have prevented a lot of this himself by taking his medication consistently when he was younger, his lack of adequate funds to purchase these medications would still have done him in.

Read more at 9News.

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Source: http://www.theroot.com/man-loses-eyesight-no-health-insurance

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

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Gender discrimination in Israel on the firing line

Published: Dec. 25, 2011 at 8:45 AM

JERUSALEM, Dec. 25 (UPI) -- Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu Sunday issued a harsh rebuke against gender discrimination and called for the arrests of men who harass women .

Netanyahu referred to a report of an 8-year-old girl who was harassed by ultra-orthodox Jewish males as she walked to school in Beit Shemesh. Channel 2 Friday night said the males spat at her and called her names, and she is now afraid to walk to school.

"In liberal, western democracies the public space is open and secure for everyone -- men and women alike. There is no place here for any harassment or discrimination," The Jerusalem Post quoted Netanyahu saying at Sunday's cabinet meeting.

The prime minister instructed Public Security Minister Yitzhak Aharonovitch to arrest those responsible for harassing women and ordered all government ministries and municipal authorities to remove signs calling for gender segregation, the newspaper said.

The latest incident comes days after an Israeli woman refused to adhere to calls by members of the ultra-orthodox community to move to the rear of the bus bound for Jerusalem.

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5662611432

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Amazon, Apple Soar In Customer Satisfaction In 2011; Netflix Plummets

amazonAccording to customer experience analytics company ForeSee, e-commerce giant Amazon once again topped consumer satisfaction in online retail after taking the top spot in 2010. However, Netflix, which had a dismal year, plummeted in customer satisfaction. For the past seven years, Netflix and Amazon have been competing for first place in Foresee's Index, but this is the first year where one of the e-retailers saw a massive dip in sentiment. Amazon climbed two points to score 88 on the study?s 100-point scale, which is the highest score from any retailer in 14 consecutive studies. Netflix?s well-publicized blunders, including price hikes last summer and the unsuccessful attempt to spin off the DVD rental business, caused its customer satisfaction to plummet by seven points and 8% to 79.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/elz62Bv-f24/

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U.S. regrets Cuba failure to free American citizen (reuters)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178824412?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Dell | Microsoft Management and Virtualization Solutions

Simplify virtualization management. Reduce costs. Remove barriers.

As businesses work to virtualize a greater portion of their data centers and hold costs down, integrated management solutions are essential. With Dell | Microsoft Management and Virtualization Solutions, you can take an approach that simplifies virtualization management, reduces costs and removes barriers to cloud adoption.

Integrated management solutions
Announced in April 2011, Dell | Microsoft Management and Virtualization Solutions is a new, 3-year strategic initiative. The goal is to help customers quickly deploy and manage virtualization and private cloud technologies. This partnership can help you simplify management and improve efficiency with integrated management solutions comprised of the Dell? Virtual Integrated System, Dell Advanced Infrastructure Manager (AIM) and Microsoft? System Center. These virtualization solutions?are based on Microsoft Windows Server? 2008 Hyper-V?, which delivers strong workload performance and low total cost of ownership.

A single point of contact
Of course, with Dell you get a single source for hardware, software, services and support. We can help guide you through a successful implementation of virtualization technology by offering jointly engineered solutions based on Dell's hardware and virtualization management technologies, and Microsoft's hypervisor and systems management technologies.

We've been engaged with Microsoft throughout the design and testing of the next-generation Microsoft Windows Server? OS, providing input on Hyper-V, Microsoft's hypervisor-based server virtualization technology. Additionally, the Dell Global Infrastructure Consulting team has a pool of expertise and best practices related to Microsoft's virtualization technology.

Dell | Microsoft Management and Virtualization Solutions?will help you:

  • Remove management barriers
    Dell and Microsoft?will help you accelerate virtualization by providing unified and consolidated management with Dell AIM and Microsoft System Center. This approach allows for more automation and provisioning management across physical and multi-hypervisor virtual environments. By implementing unified tools to manage across server, storage, network, apps?and services, you can reduce complexity between multiple hypervisors.
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    With Microsoft Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V, you can hold licensing costs down and retain your investments in training, hardware and software. By using the right hypervisor for the right workload, you can achieve better application performance and lower total cost of ownership.
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    Most of the integration work has already been done by Dell and Microsoft with our Business-Ready Configurations and Microsoft Hyper-V Cloud Fast Track solutions. So you can minimize risks and deploy private clouds faster and easier by using solutions that are proven, jointly engineered, optimized and tested. With self-service options, you can scale up or down on demand.

While new management and virtualization solutions will be developed by Dell?and Microsoft under this partnership, you can begin your journey to large-scale virtualization today by leveraging the solutions already available.

Learn more about Extending Virtualized Environments with Multiple-Hypervisor Management. Or to learn more about Dell | Microsoft Management and Virtualization Solutions,?contact us today.

Source: http://content.dell.com/us/en/business/d/virtualization/Dell-and-Microsoft-Simplify-IT-with-Dynamic-IT.aspx?ref=rss

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Fire at ad exec's Conn. home kills 3 kids, parents

Firefighters are seen on the roof of a house where an early morning fire left five people dead Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011, in Stamford, Conn. Officials said the fire, which was reported shortly before 5 a.m., killed two adults and three children. Two others escaped. Their names have not been released. (AP Photo/Tina FIneberg)

Firefighters are seen on the roof of a house where an early morning fire left five people dead Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011, in Stamford, Conn. Officials said the fire, which was reported shortly before 5 a.m., killed two adults and three children. Two others escaped. Their names have not been released. (AP Photo/Tina FIneberg)

Firefighters spray water on the roof of a house where an early morning fire left five people dead Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011, in Stamford, Conn. Officials said the fire, which was reported shortly before 5 a.m., killed two adults and three children. Two others escaped. Their names have not been released. (AP Photo/Tina FIneberg)

FILE - In this Aug. 25, 1998 file photo, Madonna Badger, president and creative director of what was then called Badger Worldwide Advertising, now Badger and Winters Group, poses in her New York office. Badger is the owner of a tony Connecticut home that burned in a blaze that killed five people on Christmas morning Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. (AP Photo/Jim Cooper, File)

The back of a house where an early morning fire left five people dead is seen Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011, in Stamford, Conn. Officials said the fire, which was reported shortly before 5 a.m., killed two adults and three children. Two others escaped. Their names have not been released. (AP Photo/Tina FIneberg)

A section of a house where an early morning fire left five people dead is seen Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 in Stamford, Conn. Officials said the fire, which was reported shortly before 5 a.m., killed two adults and three children. Two others escaped. Their names have not been released. (AP Photo/Tina Fineberg)

(AP) ? A fire tore through the home of an advertising executive in a tony neighborhood along the Connecticut shoreline Sunday, killing her three children and both of her parents on Christmas morning.

Madonna Badger and a male acquaintance were able to escape from the house as it was engulfed by flames, said Stamford Police Sgt. Paul Guzda. But Badger's three daughters ? a 10-year-old and 7-year-old twins ? perished in the fire, Guzda said.

He said Badger's parents, who were visiting for the holiday, also died.

Neighbors awoke to the sound of screaming shortly before 5 a.m. and rushed outside to help, but they could only watch in horror as flames devoured the grand home in the pre-dawn darkness and the shocked, injured survivors were led away from the house.

"It is a terrible, terrible day," Mayor Michael Pavia told reporters at the scene of the fire. "There probably has not been a worse Christmas day in the city of Stamford."

Badger, an ad executive in the fashion industry, is the founder of New York City-based Badger & Winters Group. A supervisor at Stamford Hospital said she was treated and discharged by Sunday evening.

Property records show she bought the five-bedroom, waterfront Victorian home for $1.7 million last year. The house is situated in Shippan Point, a wealthy neighborhood that juts into Long Island Sound.

The male acquaintance who also escaped the blaze was a contractor who was doing work on the home, Guzda said. He was also hospitalized but his condition was not released.

Police officers drove Badger's husband, Matthew Badger, from New York City to Stamford on Sunday morning. Badger's parents lived in Southbury, Conn., Guzda said.

Firefighters knew there were other people in the home but could not get to them because the flames were too large and the heat too intense, said Acting Fire Chief Antonio Conte, his voice cracking with emotion.

"It's never easy. That's for sure," he said. "I've been on this job 38 years ... not an easy day."

Conte said fire officials don't yet know the cause of the blaze and likely won't get clues for a few days until fire marshals can enter the structure.

By Sunday evening, the roof of the blackened house had largely collapsed.

A neighbor, Sam Cingari Jr., said he was awakened by the sound of screaming and saw that the house was engulfed by flames.

"We heard this screaming at 5 in the morning," he said. "The whole house was ablaze and I mean ablaze."

Cingari said he did not know his neighbors, who he said bought the house last year and were renovating it.

Charles Mangano, who lives nearby, said his wife woke him up and alerted him to the fire. He ran outside to see if he could help and saw a number of fire trucks in front of the house.

"I heard someone yell 'Help, help, help me!' and I started sprinting up my driveway," Mangano told The Advocate of Stamford.

He told the newspaper he saw a barefoot man wearing boxers and a woman being taken out of the house. The outdoor temperature at the time was below freezing, according to the National Weather Service.

The woman said, "My whole life is in there," Mangano said. "They were both obviously in a state of shock."

Stamford, a city of 117,000 residents, is about 25 miles northeast of New York City.

Badger was the creative mind behind major advertising campaigns for leading fashion brands, including the iconic Marky Mark underwear ads for Calvin Klein.

Raised in Kentucky, Badger began her career working as a graphic designer in the art department of Esquire magazine. Before starting her own company, she worked as an art director for several magazines and CRK, the in-house advertising agency for designer Calvin Klein.

Badger & Winters has worked with Proctor & Gamble, CoverGirl, A/X Armani Exchange, Emanuel Ungaro and Vera Wang, among other high-profile corporations. The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment Sunday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-25-Fire-Five%20Dead/id-0983b46ee7ca41b1bc8213f7e4eae901

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

NKorea calls heir Kim head of powerful committee

AAA??Dec. 25, 2011?9:41 PM ET
NKorea calls heir Kim head of powerful committee
AP

In this Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011 photo released by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed in Tokyo, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011, by the Korea News Service, Kim Jong Un, center, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il's youngest known son and successor, visits at Kumsusan Memorial Palace in Pyongyang, North Korea, to pay respect to his father. At far left front is Jong Un's uncle Jang Song Thaek. (AP Photo/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service) JAPAN OUT UNTIL 14 DAYS AFTER THE DAY OF TRANSMISSION

In this Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011 photo released by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed in Tokyo, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011, by the Korea News Service, Kim Jong Un, center, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il's youngest known son and successor, visits at Kumsusan Memorial Palace in Pyongyang, North Korea, to pay respect to his father. At far left front is Jong Un's uncle Jang Song Thaek. (AP Photo/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service) JAPAN OUT UNTIL 14 DAYS AFTER THE DAY OF TRANSMISSION

In this Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011 image made from KRT television, Kim Jong Un, center, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il's youngest known son and successor, with military officials, stand in front of his father's body displayed in a glass coffin, not in photo, at Kumsusan Memorial Palace in Pyongyang, North Korea. At far left is Jong Un's uncle Jang Song Thaek . (AP Photo/KRT via APTN) TV OUT, NORTH KOREA OUT

In this Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011 photo released by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed in Tokyo Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 by the Korea News Service, Moon Hyung-jin, president of the Unification Church, second from right, carries a wreath with unidentified men to lay in front of a portrait of the late Kim Jong Il at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. (AP Photo/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service) JAPAN OUT UNTIL 14 DAYS AFTER THE DAY OF TRANSMISSION

In this Saturday, Dec. 24, 2011 photo released by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed in Tokyo Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 by the Korea News Service, North Koreans react as they pay their respect to late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in Nampo, North Korea. (AP Photo/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service) JAPAN OUT UNTIL 14 DAYS AFTER THE DAY OF TRANSMISSION

In this Dec. 23, 2011 photo released by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed in Tokyo Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 by the Korea News Service, North Koreans pay respects to their late leader Kim Jong Il in front of his portrait in South Hwanghae province, North Korea. (AP Photo/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service) JAPAN OUT UNTIL 14 DAYS AFTER THE DAY OF TRANSMISSION

(AP) ? North Korea's state media on Monday called Kim Jong Il's heir the head of the ruling Workers' Party Central Committee, which would give Kim Jong Un power over one of the country's highest decision-making bodies more than a week after his father's death.

The reference in a commentary by the North's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper came as two groups of prominent South Koreans with ties to Pyongyang traveled to North Korea to pay respects to Kim Jong Il, who is being mourned by millions in his homeland.

North Korean soldiers, Rodong Sinmun said, are upholding a slogan urging them to dedicate their lives to protect the committee headed by Kim Jong Un. The slogan means that Kim will likely be appointed as the party's general secretary, one of the country's highest positions.

North Korea is in official mourning for Kim until after a memorial Thursday. But the country is also offering hints about Kim Jong Un's rise as ruler. North Korea began hailing him as "supreme leader" of the 1.2-million strong military over the weekend.

Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s and was unveiled in September 2010 as his father's choice as successor, will be the third-generation Kim to rule the communist nation of 24 million.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-25-AS-Kim-Jong-Il/id-e97515ea4d6b42fd8e1c7bfcda03a1df

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'Prometheus' Teaser Trailer: A New 'Alien' Threat

"Prometheus" isn't an "Alien" prequel, you say? Sure fooled me ? because the just released trailer for director Ridley Scott's long awaited return to the science fiction arena looks exactly like a continuation of his 1979 horror masterpiece, in the very best of ways.
The trailer, which hit the web today, is a teaser in the [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2011/12/22/prometheus-teaser-trailer/

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

TATAMEMAGAZINE: UFC: Overeem e a luta dos sonhos contra Lesnar http://t.co/yxjsMjOF

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New suspect in 'Great Dying': Prehistoric blast

A great explosive burning of coal set fire and made molten by lava bubbling from the Earth's mantle , looking akin to Kuwait's giant oil fires but lasting anywhere from centuries to millennia, could have been the cause of ?the world's most-devastating mass extinction, new research suggests.

The event, called the Great Dying, occurred 250 million years ago, at the end of the Permian period. "The Great Dying was the biggest of all the mass extinctions," said study researcher Darcy Ogden of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego. "Estimates suggest up to 96 percent of all marine species and 70 percent of all land species were lost."

Researchers still debate the cause of this mass-extinction event, implicating everything from asteroids to volcanic eruptions to a decrease of the oxygen in the atmosphere.

Coal combustion
Studies earlier this year found evidence of a compound called fly ash, one of the products of coal combustion, in rocks laid down right before this extinction event. The finding suggested a large amount of coal had combusted over a period of tens to thousands of years.

The researchers already knew a series of volcanic eruptions, which gave rise to a region of volcanic rock called the Siberian Traps, occurred around this time and covered up to 2.7 million square miles in lava. These lava floods, made of molten basalt rock, could have taken out the animals and plants directly in their paths. To have any global impact, however, the volcanic eruptions also would have needed to send airborne ash, soot and gases high into the atmosphere, the researchers noted.

Coal also seems to have been present in the area of the Siberian Traps, and the researchers thought that perhaps the lava burned up a large amount of coal and left the fly ash ? but they weren't sure whether it was physically possible. They ran computer simulations of these processes and found evidence that a coal explosion could have been the cause of worldwide climate change and the Great Dying.

Explosive extinction
These basalt floods could have mixed with the coal underground, then migrated up to the surface, where the mixture explosively lighted on fire when it mixed with oxygen in the air. [ Image Gallery: Wild Volcanoes ]

A blast that powerful "requires a very large amount of basalt to erupt over the surface in one place, and this place has to have large coal beds," Ogden said. "The Siberian Traps are a great candidate for this, since they are one of the biggest volcanic events in history and there is evidence to support the presence of coal in that region."

When this basalt-coal mixture reached the surface, it could have led to an explosive, fiery reaction similar to the giant oil fires set off by Iraqi forces in Kuwait in 1991. Volcanic emissions from the explosion would include carbon dioxide and methane, greenhouse gases that trap heat on Earth.

"The coal-basalt mixture comes out of the ground as a fluid, like oil, then ignites and combusts upon contact with the oxygen in the air," Odgen said. "The resulting soot, fly ash and gases are driven into the atmosphere in a large, dirty plume."

The study was published Dec. 19 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

You can follow LiveScience staff writer Jennifer Welsh on Twitter @microbelover. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescienceand on Facebook.

? 2011 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45771494/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Logitech Harmony Link app gets customization-focused iPhone, Android update

Logitech's updated the iPhone and Android versions of its Harmony Link App. Now your smartphone-as-TV-remote can be customized to your whim, confusing any visitors who thought they'd watch some Jersey Shore at your pad. You'll also be able to power the TV down from your blower, for those moments when guests decipher your settings and you see your beautiful set polluted by Snooki and co. As a tip, this update doesn't change the iPad edition of the app, which will get some special attention just as soon as Logitech's engineers can get their eyes off MTV.

Logitech Harmony Link app gets customization-focused iPhone, Android update originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Dec 2011 23:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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House GOP rejects 2-month payroll tax cut (tbo)

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

SC governor Nikki Haley endorses Mitt Romney (AP)

SIOUX CITY, Iowa ? South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is endorsing Mitt Romney for president.

Haley said Friday on Fox News she is throwing all of her support behind Romney in the Republican primaries. She says jobs, the economy and spending are most important and the former Massachusetts governor is the best candidate to address those issues.

Haley also says President Barack Obama seems most afraid to face Romney.

Haley is a rising star in the GOP, and her endorsement means a lot in South Carolina, the first Southern state to hold a primary election.

Romney will appear with Haley Friday afternoon in South Carolina. Haley says they will campaign together Saturday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney_haley

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Virginia to allow adoption discrimination against gays, others ...

Ken Cuccinelli (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

The Virginia State Board of Social Services voted 5 to 1 on Wednesday to allow licensed adoption agencies to refuse to approve adoptions or foster parents based solely on a would-be parent?s sexual orientation as well as six other characteristics.

The board took that action by rejecting for the second time this year an adoption related rule change first drafted in 2009 by state social services officials under former Governor Tim Kaine.

The proposed change called for banning discrimination in the state?s adoption and foster care system solely because of someone?s sexual orientation, religion, age, gender, disability, political beliefs, or family status.

Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell and the state?s controversial attorney general, Ken Cuccinelli, who took office in 2010, opposed the changes. Cuccinelli told the board in a letter that it lacked the authority to add a sexual orientation non-discrimination provision in adoption rules because sexual orientation is not a protected status under state law.

?Politics once again trumped child welfare in Virginia,? said Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign. ?How many times can you let the 1,300 children in Virginia?s foster care system waiting for a loving, forever home down??

Solmonese called on the Virginia Legislature to pass legislation ?that makes the best interest of the child the sole basis for adoption, not whether someone is gay or whether two caring adults are able to be married.?

Virginia law limits adoptions to married couples and single parents. Unlike some states, it does not prohibit gays from adopting. It prohibits adoptions by unmarried couples, gay or straight. The proposed change that the board rejected did not call for legalizing adoptions for unmarried couples.

The Family Equality Council, a national gay rights group, says as many as 6,700 adopted children are being raised in Virginia by same-sex couples, with one member of the couple having obtained the adoption.

Equality Virginia, a statewide LGBT advocacy group, also condemned the board?s action, saying it would have an especially harmful impact on large numbers of LGBT youth awaiting adoption or placement in a foster home.

?Today, the State Board of Social Services told the people of the Commonwealth, who they represent, that it is okay for agencies licensed by the state to discriminate in making their services available to prospective adoptive and foster care parents, the 1,200 children waiting for a loving forever home and the 6,000 children in foster care,? said Claire Gastanaga, Equality Virginia?s legislative counsel.

In its action on Wednesday, the board left in place the state?s current non-discrimination policy for adoption and foster care, which bans discrimination based on race, color, and national origin.

Gastanaga, who attended the meeting in which the board voted, said the vote came after a Cuccinelli representative told the six board members that expanding the rules to include sexual orientation discrimination and the other categories could subject board members to ?personal liability.?

She said legal experts supporting the expanded non-discrimination rule have disputed Cuccinelli?s claim that the board doesn?t have the authority to make the change.

A spokesperson for the Virginia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union told Reuter?s News Service that the ACLU was considering filing a lawsuit to challenge the board?s action.

The board has said that during a 30-day public comment period on the proposed rule change it received 1,611 comments in support of expanding the non-discrimination protections and 1,154 comments opposed to the expanded protections.

Among those speaking out against the expanded protects was Krystal Thompson, chief executive officer of Commonwealth Catholic Charities, one of several faith based organizations licensed by the state to facilitate adoptions and foster care placements.

?We have the right under federal and state law to make decisions consistent with our religious beliefs,? the Richmond Times-Dispatch quoted her as saying.

Gastanaga said some faith based adoption agencies as well as non-religious agencies routinely approve adoptions and foster care placements to lesbians and gay men in Virginia.

?Equality Virginia believes that best interests of the child should be the sole basis for child placement decisions,? she said in a statement. ?Discrimination based on any of the factors stripped from the final rules has no place in the decision by the state or its licensed agencies whether to provide adoption or foster care services to children or to prospective loving parents.?

Aradhana ?Bela? Sood, professor of psychiatry and chair the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at Virginia Commonwealth University, serves as chair of the State Board of Social Services. She was the one board member to vote against the decision to reject the expanded non-discrimination rules.

?The science really doesn?t substantiate the notion that that is the only way children should be raised,? the Times-Dispatch quoted her as saying in referring to the assumption that children do better when raised by a married heterosexual couple.

Source: http://www.washingtonblade.com/2011/12/16/virginia-to-allow-adoption-discrimination-against-gays-others/

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Russia's Putin relies on "collective hostages" (Reuters)

MOSCOW (Reuters) ? To his admirers, he is the man who saved Russia from chaos and the clutches of Western imperialism, soothing its hurt pride and revitalizing its military might to restore it to greatness.

They see him as an "ideal man" who wins wars, puts the West in its place and ensures workers keep their jobs by preventing the closure of struggling factories - but also makes time to ride horses, dive for ancient treasure and ski down mountains.

Vladimir Putin, for some in Russia, is superman.

The former spy who has dominated Russia since 1999 sought to bolster his image in his annual televised phone-in on Thursday, portraying himself as the man to maintain stability and unite the country.

There may be fewer Russians who believe in the tough-guy image now but, outside the big cities where successful young professionals have been leading the biggest opposition protests of his 12-year rule, they are still there, and in large numbers.

"You can never love someone who was once your enemy. But I like him. I can say that. He's a good leader. He watches over us, and he's given us the resources to rebuild our city," said a 26-year-old who gave his name only as Omar in Grozny, capital of the Chechnya region where Putin ousted a separatist government in a devastating war.

On the other side of Russia, in the Pacific port city of Vladivostok, 18-year-old Maxim, an activist in Putin's United Russia party, put it simply.

"I support Putin because he is a real man. He's strong."

Putin's challenge is to harness that kind of support and ensure it does not erode further before the March 4 presidential election, which he is still expected to win, although not as easily as seemed likely just a few weeks ago.

"Everything's changed. Not so long ago, he had a large majority. Now he needs to rediscover these people. But they won't come into the fold of their own accord," said Gleb Pavlovsky, a political analyst and former Kremlin adviser.

"He will want to start something new, he will try to show a new Putin to win back some of the love. It's a bit like showbusiness - to win back your fans you've got to get back on the stage."

POWER BASE OUTSIDE CITIES

The 59-year-old prime minister has long had a loyal following in small towns and villages and has a power base in state-owned businesses, among the bureaucrats who owe their careers to him, the businessmen whose fortunes depend on his goodwill and an older population afraid of again losing everything they own to change.

In a parliamentary election on December 4, which the opposition says was slanted to favor Putin's United Russia, much of the ruling party's support came from provincial towns and villages that hold between 62 to 63 percent of Russia's 142 million population. It was in major cities that support for the party, and Putin, has stumbled most.

"I don't think he expected it at all," said Boris Dubin, director of political and social studies at polling agency Levada.

He said Putin's team had calculated that an announcement on September 24 that he would swap jobs with President Dmitry Medvedev would lead to a surge in his popularity by signaling his return to the top job after four years as prime minister. This although he had in reality remained in charge under their power-sharing deal.

Instead, many voters in the cities were upset by what they saw as arrogance that their political future - which if Putin wins two more presidential terms would stretch until 2024 - had been decided without them.

"They didn't expect that people, mostly qualified professionals ... would hate the fact that, behind their backs, they made this deal to 'castle' well before its announcement; almost four years ago they agreed this," Dubin said, using chess terminology.

In the provinces, it was a different story.

"COLLECTIVE HOSTAGES"

Putin has long enjoyed success in the small provincial towns and villages by presenting himself in one of his favorite guises - as what has been referred to as the plumber tsar, the ruler who is prepared to roll up his sleeves and get his hands dirty.

Aware of this kind of image, Putin travelled before the election to Russia's southern bread basket region to help bring in the harvest. He and Medvedev even drove combine harvesters.

"Did you like it?" a grinning Medvedev asked Putin after getting down from his harvester.

"Yes, very much," Putin said, playing to the television cameras before boasting about the six tonnes of corn he had harvested in a field that had been left with just a small square

for Russia's leaders to cut.

With lives that have changed little since Soviet times, many Russians in the villages and small towns still have an unrivalled reverence for their leaders, a tradition from which tsars, Soviet commissars and now presidents have benefited.

They often have little real choice. Some local officials are not shy of warning voters that vital government funding could depend on how they vote.

"How we live in the republic over the next five or six years depends on how responsibly and correctly we vote in the elections," Mikhail Surkov, a district head in the Mordovia republic in central Russia, was quoted as telling pensioners.

"Our people are wise. They know whom to vote for. And anyway candidates for other parties are not active, knowing that it makes no sense to spend time here on the election campaign," he told the New Times magazine.

Many villagers have no access to the Internet, on which opposition protesters have been issuing invitations to protest, and they get most of their news from state television or local newspapers which are often run by the ruling party.

The state channels pump out a daily diet of Putin's and Medvedev's successes. Even footage of protests shown by state television last Saturday contained no direct criticism of Putin or calls for him to step aside.

"The fundamental organizations which everyone uses in the provinces have not changed in terms of their form or how they function. They are Soviet," Dubin said.

They are the state's "collective hostages," he said.

But if the main television channels step up their tentative coverage of the protests and unrest, more people outside the big cities might yet change their mind, he said.

"I don't think it's the case that they really love Putin and it's not the case that they completely trust him," Dubin said.

"He represents the state and for them, even if they don't like parts of the state, they know very well they have no other partners to turn to. The state is their best and only chance."

BUSINESS VASSALS

Putin has developed a political system where much of Russia's social and economic life is beholden to the state. In Russia that means, by extension, to him.

Even big business, which is supposedly free of state control, has to watch its step.

The fate of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, once Russia's richest man but now imprisoned on fraud and other charges after falling foul of the Kremlin, serves as a reminder to all businessmen - including the super-rich oligarchs - who is the boss.

"Every big decision has to have Putin's approval. Before starting a big deal, they run it past Putin. Before signing, they check again with Putin," said a senior Western business executive with many years experience in Russia.

Business leaders have had 12 years under Putin, as president or prime minister, to learn the rules of his game. Some fear a change of ruler would upset the stable political system they favor.

Alexander Khodachek, director of the Higher School of Economics in St Petersburg, said some of Putin's strongest backers had made their fortunes over the last 10 years - including some from Russia's second city, where Putin cut his political teeth as an aide to the mayor.

What would happen to their fortunes if Putin were to go?

As Maxim Ustyugov, 37, an entrepreneur in the Ural Mountains city of Yekaterinburg put it: "Don't change your horses in midstream. We are in midstream and only just standing."

Big business would be unlikely to turn against Putin, at least not at this time, although some of Russia's richest and most powerful tycoons have moved or are moving their businesses to Britain, where they often educate their children and have more faith in the courts.

"Putin will be holding out a hand to try to hang on to some of the people who are not happy, especially those in the cities, in the middle class, in business and especially medium-sized business," Pavlovsky said.

ANTI-WESTERN SCRIPT

Another important part of Putin's script for reinforcing his power base could be to try to rekindle Soviet-era paranoia over the West, suggesting the United States stoked the protests.

He has already show he will do this, tapping into a feeling of 'us and them' that has marked Russian life for decades, one which helped create the Nashi (Ours) youth movement and several other offshoots that Putin relies on for support.

The government has spent large amounts on these groups, leading critics go so far as to say that youngsters are encouraged at regular meetings and long summer camps to all but worship Putin.

Russian newspaper Vedomosti reported that Nashi, which has in the past used threatening and sometimes violent measures against its 'enemies' or foreign diplomats and critical journalists, received 467 million roubles ($13.8 million) in the same period - a lot more than other youth organizations.

Maria Kozhevnikova, a 27-year-old former actress, model and one-time Russian Playboy cover girl who is a member of the Young Guard, United Russia's youth movement, said its group had an important role helping the needy.

She, like several other members of the Young Guard, has moved swiftly up the ranks and is about to take up a seat in parliament for United Russia. She echoes Putin in suggesting the opposition protests are being funded from outside Russia.

"A 'strong Russia' cannot be controlled," she said in an email response to Reuters. "Mass rallies have never solved the people's problems and answered their aspirations. The people were always just a weapon in the struggle for power."

Nashi and Young Guard supporters say Putin is needed to prevent Russia returning to the turmoil of the late 1980s as the Soviet Union collapsed and the 1990s when the transition to a free-market economy proved chaotic.

"I've seen Putin close up several times and I want to say that this man has very strong vibes," Kozhevnikova said.

"I've watched how people have changed when they got close to Putin, not because they are afraid, but because they feel a calm and strong confidence. Because of this, the West is afraid of him, and that is understandable."

NO ALTERNATIVE

Putin's greatest advantage is perhaps that, for now, there are few alternatives.

Russia's opposition - those who are permitted to run in elections - have produced few challengers. Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov has failed to win the presidency three times, and nationalist leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky has lost on all of the four occasions he tried.

The candidacy of billionaire businessman Mikhail Prokhorov is widely seen as a Kremlin ploy to offer a choice for middle class voters and not as a serious challenge. No leader of the opposition protests is registered for the election and there are doubts that any of them could unite the opposition.

"Putin has already been president so he knows what to do, what it is all about," said Dima, a young voter in Vladivostok.

"He is strong - a real Russian. And who else is there? Who is the Communist man ... Zyuganov? I don't want him. And who else? Zhirinovsky is a joker."

(Additional reporting by Thomas Grove in Grozny, Guy Faulconbridge in Vladivostok, Natalia Shurmina in Yekaterinburg and Timothy Heritage in Moscow)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111215/wl_nm/us_russia_putin_powerbase

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(AP)

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Japan says stricken nuclear power plant in cold shutdown (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? Japan declared its tsunami-stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant to be in cold shutdown on Friday in a major step toward resolving the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25 years.

The Fukushima Daiichi plant, 240 km (150 miles) northeast of Tokyo, was wrecked on March 11 by a huge earthquake and a towering tsunami which knocked out its cooling systems, triggering meltdowns, radiation leaks and mass evacuations.

In making the much-anticipated announcement, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda drew a line under the crisis phase of the emergency at the plant and highlighted the next challenges: post-disaster clean-up and the safe dismantling of the plant, something experts say could take up to 40 years.

"The reactors have reached a state of cold shutdown," Noda told a government nuclear emergency response meeting.

"A stable condition has been achieved. It is judged that the accident at the plant itself has ceased," he added, noting radiation levels at the boundary of the plant could now be kept at low levels, even in the event of "unforeseeable incidents."

"The government is due to set a clear road map and will do the utmost to decommission the plant," Noda later told a news conference.

A cold shutdown is when water used to cool nuclear fuel rods remains below boiling point, preventing the fuel from reheating. One of the chief aims of the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), had been to bring the reactors to cold shutdown by the year-end.

After months of efforts, the water temperature in all three of the affected reactors fell below boiling point by September, but Tepco has been cautious about declaring a cold shutdown, saying it had to see if temperatures and the amount of radiation emitted from the plant remained stable.

The declaration of a cold shutdown could have repercussions well beyond the plant. It is a government pre-condition for allowing about 80,000 residents evacuated from within a 20 km (12 mile) radius of the plant to go home.

But Kazuhiko Kudo, professor of nuclear engineering at Kyushu University, said authorities still needed to determine exactly the status of melted fuel inside the reactors and stabilize a makeshift cooling system, which handles the tens of thousands of tons of contaminated water accumulated on-site.

"What is more important is the next steps the government and Tepco decide to take," Kudo said.

HUGE COSTS, ANXIETY

The government and Tepco will aim to begin removing the undamaged nuclear rods from the plant's spent fuel pools next year. However, retrieval of fuel that melted down in their reactors may not begin for another decade.

The enormous cost of the cleanup and compensating the victims has drained Tepco financially. The government may inject about $13 billion into the company as early as next summer in a de facto nationalization, sources told Reuters last week.

An official advisory panel estimates Tepco may have to pay about 4.5 trillion yen ($57 billion) in compensation in the first two years after the nuclear crisis, and that it will cost 1.15 trillion yen to decommission the plant, though some experts put it at 4 trillion yen ($51 billion) or even more.

Japan also faces a massive cleanup task outside the east coast plant if residents are to be allowed to go home. The Environment Ministry says about 2,400 square km (930 square miles) of land around the plant may need to be decontaminated, an area roughly the size of Luxembourg.

The crisis shook the public's faith in nuclear energy and Japan is now reviewing an earlier plan to raise the proportion of electricity generated from nuclear power to 50 percent by 2030 from 30 percent in 2010.

Japan may not immediately walk away from nuclear power, but few doubt that nuclear power will play a lesser role in future.

Living in fear of radiation is part of life for residents both near and far from the plant. Cases of excessive radiation in vegetables, tea, milk, seafood and water have stoked anxiety despite assurances from public officials that the levels detected are not dangerous.

Chernobyl's experience shows that anxiety is likely to persist for years, with residents living near the former Soviet plant still regularly checking produce for radiation before consuming it 25 years after the disaster.

(Editing by Tomasz Janowski, Mark Bendeich and Robert Birsel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/wl_nm/us_japan_nuclear

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