Saturday, December 31, 2011

GOP's Bachmann limps to Iowa caucus finish line (AP)

NEVADA, Iowa ? Encountering small crowds and fresh viability questions, Republican Michele Bachmann slogged into the final weekend of Iowa caucus campaigning Friday looking for any spark to her flagging bid.

The closing week hasn't been kind to the one-time GOP contender: She's losing staff. She's faced calls to abandon her bid. And she has no money.

The difficulties were evident in two restaurant stops where reporters outnumbered patrons.

"Our effort wasn't to bring crowds out. We were just dropping in," she said outside a cafe in Early.

The Minnesota congresswoman is at the back of the pack in polls. But she vows to soldier on, even if that means her candidacy will split the vote of pivotal conservatives in Iowa and allow for victories by a candidate who isn't seen as adhering as strongly to GOP orthodoxy ? like Mitt Romney or Ron Paul.

Regarded as a tea party heroine, the only woman in the Republican race has struggled to revive her campaign since her standing dropped shortly after she won a statewide test vote in Iowa. That turned out to be the high point of her campaign.

Iowa Rep. Steve King, one of Bachmann's closest allies in Congress, came to one of Friday's events. He praised her but he stopped short of an outright endorsement in a race that's so far kept him neutral.

"I have not made a commitment on this presidential race but I've made a commitment to this great friend to always be this great friend," King said of Bachmann.

She's spent the final week before Tuesday's Iowa caucuses on a bus tour of the state's 99 counties. Sometimes the crowds barely registered double digits; in other places they spilled out the doors.

But instead of ending the exhausting sprint on a high note, Bachmann found herself facing a new reality: Rick Santorum was the conservative candidate whose standing was rising ahead of the caucuses, not her.

She also found herself feuding with high-level advisers, only the latest to abandon her.

Two top Iowa advisers left the campaign on successive days this week, with her state chairman, Kent Sorenson, quitting and then going so far as to endorse Paul within hours of campaigning with her. A day later, Wes Enos said he was leaving his job as Bachmann's political director.

Furious, Bachmann spent much of Thursday accusing Sorenson of switching allegiances for money. He denied it. But the candidate found herself in a daylong spat rather than hammering home her closing message to voters.

To some, it was another sign of a campaign in free-fall.

"If you can't get your campaign on one page, it's really hard to think you're going to get a country on one page. The timing is horrible," said veteran Iowa Republican strategist David Roederer, who is unaffiliated in this year's race but held top Iowa posts in John McCain's 2008 campaign and George W. Bush's 2000 bid.

By Friday, she deflected questions on the subject and signaled she was ready to move on.

Still, it didn't help that the departures came on top of calls by some Iowa pastors that either she or Santorum leave the race so evangelical voters can consolidate their support and block a victory by Romney or Paul. She quickly rejected the plea.

Brad Cranston, a pastor from Burlington who originally liked the idea of a merged campaign, said he's given up on that prospect and will stick with Bachmann. So will Pastor Bill Tvedt of Oskaloosa, even if he knows her chances of winning have taken a hit.

"Maybe she is out of the running at this point," Tvedt said. "I think she can come back. To bail out on the basis of electability is self-defeating to the process."

But even if she stays in the race through Tuesday, it's doubtful she could sustain a campaign beyond that.

Despite her reputation as a prolific fundraiser, she's virtually out of money. Bachmann didn't air a single TV ad in December and won't broadcast one until the day before the caucuses.

Instead, she's rolling out Internet videos, like the one she filmed this week that cast her as the "Iron Lady" of the 21st century.

And she's urging Republicans on the fence to ignore her stagnant or slipping poll numbers ? and Santorum's rise.

It's unclear whether she's having any luck.

Recent college graduate Adam Fischer sized up Bachmann in central Iowa and liked her solidly conservative voting record, but he said he may still opt for Santorum.

"I don't want to become subject to that poll mentality because that's what gets us weak candidates," Fischer said. Then he acknowledged that the one with the head of steam come Tuesday will probably get his vote.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_el_pr/us_bachmann_turmoil

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Fox apologizes to Jews for Facebook poll on Jesus

Fox Latin America has apologized for a poll on whether Jews killed Jesus Christ that one of its staffers put on a Facebook page promoting the National Geographic Channel's Christmas special.

The poll asked readers who they think is responsible for the death of Christ: Pontius Pilate, The Jewish People or the High Priests.

The Simon Weisenthal Center in Buenos Aires calls it a defamatory reference to Vatican propaganda that "resulted in the persecution and murder of Jews for two millennia."

The Jewish group says it's outraged that Fox would perpetuate an idea that the Vatican annulled back in 1965.

Fox Spokeswoman Guadalupe Lucero apologized on behalf of National Geographic, saying the poll was removed immediately and measures have been taken to prevent such incidents in the future.

Follow Michael Warren on Twitter.

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45819377/ns/technology_and_science-tech_and_gadgets/

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Police: Texas Killer Planted Gun

(NewsCore) - Police say the gunman who shot dead six members of his family before turning the gun on himself in Grapevine, Texas, on Christmas Day may have planted a handgun in the hand of one of his victims, the Dallas Morning News reported.

Police documents released Wednesday showed that handguns were retrieved from the hands of both the gunman -- Azizolah Yazdanpanah -- and his 59-year-old brother-in-law Mohamad Hossein Zarei.

"We think Aziz [Yazdanpanah] tried to stage the scene by putting the gun in Mohamad's hand," Grapevine police Lt. Todd Dearing told the Morning News. "The man was shot four times by both guns. He didn't shoot himself like that. He was a victim in all of this."

Yazdanpanah, 56, was a real estate agent who had been dealing with money problems and the breakup of his marriage when he killed his family after they unwrapped their Christmas presents Sunday, according to myFOXdfw.com.

He was reportedly dressed as Santa Claus as he carried out the murder-suicide.

His 55-year-old estranged wife Fatemeh Rahmati, their 19-year-old daughter Nona Yazdanpanah and 14-year-old son Ali Yazdanpanah were among his victims. Rahmati's sister Zohreh Rahmati, 58, her husband Zarei and their 22-year-old daughter Sara Fatemeh Zarei were the other three killed.

The police documents released Wednesday also provided details of the 911 call that was received at 11:30am on Christmas Day.

"On the recording, we discovered that the caller, whom we believe to be Aziz, ... [said] 'I am shooting people,' after he said 'Help ... Help,'" Dearing said in a statement.

"The newly discovered audio was not heard on the original audio software over many playbacks, and was not heard/understood by the dispatcher who took the call on Sunday."

Source: http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/dpps/news/police-texas-killer-planted-gun-on-victim-dpgonc-20111228-kh_16655420

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Ethiopia jails two Swedish journalists for aiding rebels (Reuters)

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) ? An Ethiopian court sentenced two Swedish journalists Tuesday to 11 years in prison for helping and promoting the outlawed Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) rebel group and entering the country illegally.

The accusations and last week's guilty verdicts have provoked anger in Sweden and suggestions in the media the case has taken on a political dimension.

Reporter Martin Schibbye and photographer Johan Persson were arrested in July after they entered the Ogaden province from Somalia's semi-autonomous Puntland region with ONLF fighters.

"The court has sentenced both defendants to 11 years. We have heard both cases ... and we believe this is an appropriate sentence," Judge Shemsu Sirgaga told the court.

Shemsu said the convictions warranted a sentence of up to 14 and a half years, but noted the freelance journalists' good behavior. The prosecution had asked for 18 and a half years.

"It wasn't an entirely unexpected sentence. It is regrettable in light of their journalistic assignment," Swedish Foreign Ministry spokesman Anders Jorle said. "The Swedish government's view is known, among other things through the prime minister's statement last week."

Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt said last week Sweden was seriously concerned about the judgment and the journalists should be freed as soon as possible.

The two Swedes had also been charged with terrorism but were acquitted in November on that count, as the court did not believe they were involved in carrying out any attacks. They did admit to crossing the border without a permit.

Schibbye and Persson looked at the judge without expression as the sentence was read out and then translated by their lawyer. No family members were present.

One of the journalists' lawyers said his clients were weighing the option of an appeal, but that for now there was no talk of pleading for clemency.

"We are only talking about the possibility of appealing for the time being, which follows judicial procedure," defense lawyer Sileshi Ketsela told Reuters.

STRAINED RELATIONS

Schibbye and Petersson's Swedish lawyer told Sweden's public broadcaster SVT that the pair were innocent reporters doing their job in a "closed area" and denounced the sentence as "completely unacceptable."

"This is judgment that represents a threat against foreign correspondents, against journalists who are trying to do their job," Thomas Olsson told the public channel in the Swedish capital, Stockholm.

About a dozen protesters gathered outside Ethiopia's consulate in Stockholm, waving Swedish and Ethiopian flags and chanting "Free Martin Schibbye! Free Johan Persson! Free all political and journalist prisoners!"

"The government does not respect the rule of law that is made in parliament. This is our reality," said 30-year-old Nebiyu Desta Yiman, who is seeking political asylum in Sweden. "These two, and thousands of others, should be released."

Persson's father told Swedish news agency TT the government had promised to contact the Ethiopian government.

"We also expect the government to contact the European Union and the United States, since these (countries) have given their support to Johan and Martin," Kjell Persson said.

Sweden's prime minister has said Sweden was making high-level contact with the Ethiopian government in the matter.

This year, Ethiopia has detained more than 150 people, including reporters, in a crackdown the opposition says is designed to stifle moves toward more democracy. The government vehemently denies such accusations.

Diplomatic relations between Ethiopia and Sweden have become increasingly strained in the last couple of years, analysts say.

Ethiopia's opposition leader Birtukan Mideska, who was convicted of treason after violence broke out following a presidential poll in 2005 and then pardoned, was jailed again n in 2008 after flying to Stockholm and publicly disputing Addis Ababa's version of the pardon.

Birtukan was released in 2010, four months after presidential elections, and is now in the United States.

"The authorities in Addis Ababa seemed to have been rankled with the perceived backing of Ethiopia's opposition by Stockholm," A Western diplomat, who declined to be named, said.

Sweden has also been critical of Ethiopia's human rights track record. Addis Ababa said in 2010 it planned to shut its mission in Stockholm as there was no significant development cooperation or trade ties between the two countries.

A spokesman for Ethiopia's justice ministry said claims the trial had been politicized were unfounded.

"How can there be a political motive when prosecutors provided evidence throughout the trial and the defendants themselves admitted to entering the country illegally with rebels?" spokesman Desalegn Deressa told Reuters.

(Additional reporting by Mia Shanley and Anna Ringstrom in Stockholm; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by David Clarke)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/wl_nm/us_ethiopia_sweden_journalists

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Hawaii Parade Honors Japanese-American WWII Vets

Hundreds of Japanese-American veterans of World War II were honored Saturday with a parade in Honolulu - nearly 70 years after they volunteered to fight for their country even as the government branded them "enemy aliens." About 200 veterans rode in convertibles, troop carriers and trolleys past a cheering crowd of tourists, family and local residents. The event celebrates the Congressional Gold Medal the veterans received last month. Fragile health prevented many of the surviving veterans - the youngest of whom are in their 80s - from traveling to Washington, D.C., to attend a ceremony at which the medal was presented. So their supporters decided to hold a celebration for them in Hawaii, where two-thirds of the veterans were from. The medal recognizes the 442nd Regimental Combat Team and the 100th Infantry Battalion which together saw some of the most brutal fighting in the war as the soldiers pushed their way through Italy, France and Germany. By the end of the war, the combined unit became the most highly decorated military unit in U.S. history for its size and length of service. Masato Doi, 90, said he was surprised and a little overwhelmed by the celebration. "It really is an honor," Doi said at a luncheon where the veterans received a replica of medal. Doi, who was a member of the 442nd, said he was proud that his service led to greater tolerance and acceptance of Japanese-Americans among the general public. Veterans Secretary Eric Shinseki, a 69-year-old former Army chief of staff and a Japanese-American, told them their service enabled him to grow up without having people doubt his loyalty. "Except for your service and bloody sacrifice, my life's work would not have followed the path that it did. And so to you and your family members - we are indebted to all of you for giving us lessons about living our lives with purpose and dignity," he said. "From my generation to yours - I thank you." Thousands of Japanese-Americans served in World War II even as the government viewed them with suspicion because their ancestors were from the country that bombed Pearl Harbor. Some on the mainland enlisted from internment camps, where the federal government had imprisoned 110,000 Japanese-Americans. Those in the parade Saturday wore hats with the names of their units on them, and some included the saying "Go for Broke," which had been the motto of the 442nd Regimental Combat team. The medal also honors Japanese-Americans who served as translators and interpreters against Japan, often on the front lines with Marines and soldiers fighting from island to island across the Pacific. As members of the Military Intelligence Service, they deciphered key Japanese communications, including one that tipped off the U.S. to the flight plans of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto - the architect of the attack on Pearl Harbor - in 1943. The U.S. shot down his plane, dealing a major blow to Japan. The parade also honored members of the 1399th Engineer Construction Battalion who were stationed on Oahu during the war. The elite medal has been given selectively since 1776, when George Washington was awarded the first. Other honorees include the Wright Brothers, Thomas Edison, Rosa Parks and the Dalai Lama. The Tuskegee Airmen, the first group of black fighter pilots, received the medal in 2007.

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

Source: http://www.wpxi.com/news/30020577/detail.html

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

State community colleges set to ration classes

During World War II, there was food rationing. In 2012, California?s community college leaders are poised to approve education rationing for thousands of students.

The proposal is controversial, with many students and educators critical of a shakeout that could end free courses offered for generations, including classes such as music appreciation and memoir writing. Also squeezed out would be students who linger at college for years, sampling one class after another.

The problem is as basic as a butter shortage. Essential classes are in critically short supply as the state?s economic crisis lumbers on. Last year, 137,000 students couldn?t get into at least one class they needed, including first-year English and math. And many who are entitled to financial aid never apply for it because there aren?t enough counselors to help them navigate the complex process.

60% dropout rate

The result is a dropout rate of 60 percent among students who expect to transfer to a four-year university or earn a vocational certificate, according to a 2010 study by the Institute for Higher Education Leadership & Policy in Sacramento.

Fixing the problem will require overhauling the vast community college system, according to a task force of 20 academics and college advocates who have wrestled with the issue for a year. Established by the Legislature in 2010, the Student Success Task Force wants campuses to do a better job of helping students reach academic goals, and it wants students to move more quickly and efficiently through school.

But it won?t be done with more money. Lawmakers cut $502 million this year from the system?s $5.9 billion budget, on top of hundreds of millions withheld since 2009.

Instead, the task force wants to change how colleges spend the money they already have. Or, as Chancellor Jack Scott plainly put it, ?It?s not joyful to have to ration.?

The backbone of the panel?s 22 recommendations is to focus community college resources on students seeking degrees or vocational certificates. All students should have an education plan and make steady progress on it. Those who don?t would lose registration priority. Those who qualify for a tuition waiver ? 47 percent of students ? would lose it if they are unfocused and take too many random classes.

via State community colleges set to ration classes.

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Source: http://educationviews.org/2011/12/26/state-community-colleges-set-to-ration-classes/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Egyptian political party rejects ?normalization? with Israel

JERUSALEM?(JTA) -- A radical Islamist party in Egypt that said it would respect the country's peace treaty with Israel has amended its statement to say it is against "normalization" between the two countries.

The Salafi Al-Nour party, which won up to 30 percent of the vote in the first two rounds of parliamentary elections in Egypt, reportedly said Sunday in a statement that the party will "stand firmly against normalization between the two countries in all forms, and are against ties with any entity that wants to harm the Egyptian identity."

Last week, a spokesman for the party announced in an interview with Israel's Army Radio that the party would respect all treaties signed by Egypt, including the 1979 peace treaty with Israel, though party leaders later clarified that the party is looking into the matter. The spokesman later told the Associated Press that he was not aware that he was talking to Army Radio.

He told the AP that the party supports changes to the peace agreement, including increasing the number of troops in the Sinai Peninsula, a number regulated by the treaty.

"We call for full Sinai rights for Egypt and for our brothers in Palestine and occupied lands, and we see this as directly related to the agreement," he told the AP.

The Salafi Al-Nour party finished second behind the Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party; the Muslim Brotherhood refuses to negotiate with Israel.
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Source: http://www.jta.org/news/article/2011/12/25/3090895/egyptian-political-party-rejects-normalization-with-israel

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Combat troops out of Iraq back at Fort Hood

(AP)?

FORT HOOD, Texas - 1st Sgt. Scott Dawson has spent several Christmases overseas during four deployments to Iraq, but he arrived home for this holiday Saturday ? and he and his family hope it's for good.

Dawson was among the very last U.S. combat soldiers to leave Iraq a week ago. Members of his brigade having been arriving Fort Hood in Texas over the past week, and he was in a group of nearly 200 that landed Saturday. Only about a dozen are still overseas, along with members of another brigade that was in the final convoy to cross the border into Kuwait.

The soldiers' families waited for two hours in drizzling rain and chilling wind on Christmas Eve morning, some wrapped in blankets and holding signs decorated with ornaments and candy canes. They screamed upon seeing the troops from the 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division arrive in buses and march onto a field at the Army post.

Troops home from Iraq in time for Christmas

When the announcer yelled "Charge!" at the end of the brief welcome-home ceremony, wives, children and parents ran to the soldiers, hugging and kissing them.

Dawson's wife, Capt. Jessica Dawson, said his absence has been difficult even though she may have a better understanding than other spouses. She deployed with her husband in 2009.

"He's missed a lot of birthdays and holidays, but you don't dwell on what you missed, and they are little enough that they won't remember he wasn't here," Jessica Dawson said. "The biggest thing is that he made it (back). Like I told the kids, even if he doesn't get back in time, this will be the best Christmas ever because he's out of Iraq."

Dawson kissed his wife and scooped up his two young daughters as they ran into his arms. Like many soldiers, he said he just wanted to spend time with his family over the holidays and hadn't made elaborate plans.

"It's great ... but it's odd because usually I don't get to stay home for very long," said Dawson, who is staying in the Army and isn't sure if he will be deployed to Afghanistan or somewhere else.

The troops slipped out of Iraq a week ago in heavily armored personnel carriers that moved under cover of darkness and in strict secrecy to prevent any final attacks. Dawson said the significance of being among the last to leave hadn't yet sunk in.

"In the future I'm sure this will really hit me," he said.

Col. Douglas Crissman, the 3rd Brigade's commander, also just returned home and said it was a privilege that the brigade was the last to leave Iraq. Preparing for the final exit took a year, he said.

"Fort Hood has given a lot ? blood, treasure, time and sacrifice ? like many Army installations, so being part of the closing days in Iraq is fitting," he said Saturday as he watched soldiers hug their families. "It's great to be part of the end. There's closure. We were the last vehicles to roll out, and that was a privilege."

Fort Hood has about 46,500 active-duty soldiers. Since 2003, more than 565 have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to officials at the Army post.

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsTheEarlyShowBoxOffice/~3/x9y8j_d8H2o/

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Iran, Ukraine set to ink $1b oil deal

Source: Tehran Times

Ukrainian Inter Naft Gas Prom Pars Company is set to sign a contract, worth around $1 billion, with Iranian Petroleum Engineering and Development Company aiming to develop three heavy crude oilfields in Iran, namely Kooh Mond, Booshgan and Kooh Kaki.

Under the comprehensive development plan, these three oilfields are expected to produce 10,000 to 12,000 barrels of oil per day in the first phase, and about 25,000 barrels per day in the second phase, according to the report, the Mehr news agency reported.

Meanwhile, National Iranian Oil Company's managing director Ahmad Qalebani announced earlier that Iran has excluded developing heavy crude oilfields of the oil industry's first priorities.

Like non-associated oilfields, heavy crude oilfields have also been excluded of the list of prioritized oil development plans, Qalebani added, according to the ISNA news agency.

However, if any entity offers buy-back or finance investments on non-associated or heavy crude oilfields, "we will welcome the offers", Qalebani explained.

"Developing joint oil and gas fields is the first priority of the country's oil industry," he said.

A total of 18 heavy and extra heavy oilfields have so far been discovered in Iran, including Ferdowsi oilfield in the Persian Gulf, which is one of the country's biggest heavy oilfields with proven reserves of more than 31 billion barrels.

Iran's total in-place oil reserves have been estimated at more than 560 billion barrels with about 140 billion barrels of recoverable reserve. Moreover, heavy and extra heavy varieties of crude oil account for roughly 70-100 billion barrels of the total reserves.

Iran holds the world's third largest proven oil reserves and the second-largest natural gas reserves.

... Payvand News - 12/25/11 ... --

Source: http://www.payvand.com/news/11/dec/1263.html

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/DwgGmI1VgLU/story01.htm

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

(Ladies Check the Pic) NBA: Blake Griffin Graces the Cover of Men?s Health Magazine

Los Angeles Clippers forward Blake Griffin lands on the cover of the January/February issue of Men?s Health, sharing the workout routine responsible for making him an explosive NBA player. ?Check the cover and some snippets of the interview after the jump.

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?Energy is something you can control,? Griffin said. ?In everything you do, you?re going to face people more talented than you. I set myself apart by bringing more energy than they do.?

In the issue, on the newsstands Tuesday, Blake talks on a variety of subjects.

On dunking: ?I constantly heard that all I do is dunk. ? And I can understand it. There aren?t ?SportsCenter? clips of me shooting 15-footers.?

On recovering from injury: ?There were days when I didn?t feel like going through the same routine. ? But I learned that if you?re positive, any situation can be a chance to improve yourself.?

On the importance of being a team player: ?I recently got to talk to Magic Johnson. ? He said he used to tell individual teammates, ?Come in before practice and work with me.? He emphasized that being a leader isn?t about just pushing yourself. It?s also about motivating teammates.?

ESPN

Source: http://www.inflexwetrust.com/2011/12/24/ladies-check-the-pic-nba-blake-griffin-graces-the-cover-of-mens-health-magazine/

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Warriors' Ellis sued for alleged sexual harassment (AP)

OAKLAND, Calif. ? A former Golden State Warriors employee filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against star guard Monta Ellis on Wednesday, alleging Ellis sent her unwanted texts that included a photo of his genitals.

In her lawsuit, which also names the team, Erika Ross Smith alleges Ellis began sending her several dozen explicit messages, sometimes several times a day, starting in November 2010 through January while she worked for the team's community relations department.

The messages included lines such as, "I want to be with you," and "Hey Sexy," and periodically asked her what she was wearing or doing, according to the lawsuit.

Smith would often reply with "What do you want?" or "I am sleeping," the lawsuit claims.

"On a micro level, my client has endured unwanted harassment, has suffered and continues to suffer emotional distress and trauma," her attorney, Burt Boltuch, said at a news conference in his Oakland office. "On a macro level, this type of conduct, especially in the sports world, must stop.

"She was embarrassed. She was intimidated. She felt scared and helpless."

The Warriors deny the allegations, saying Ellis and Smith had a "consensual relationship."

At a charity event in nearby Alameda, Ellis would only say that the team has responded.

"It's a legal matter, we'll let it play its course," Ellis told KTVU-TV. "Y'know, what happens, happens."

Boltuch said his client rejected Ellis' advances and feared that no one would believe her.

"I was treated unfairly. I was let go," Smith said at the news conference. "It wasn't my fault that I was let go."

Boltuch also showed a photo of what he said was Ellis' genitalia that the guard allegedly sent to Smith's work-issued cellphone on Dec. 17, 2010, a day after he complained to the team about her job performance.

When questioned if the photo came from Ellis, Boltuch responded, "We know it came from him."

Rick Welts, the Warriors' president and chief operating officer, said in a prepared statement Wednesday that the organization takes all harassment allegations seriously.

"When we were made aware of a consensual relationship between Mr. Ellis and the Plaintiff, we did what an organization should do. We told both to stop ? promptly, directly and fairly," Welts said. "The Warriors have never taken any action against the Plaintiff for any inappropriate reason, and we deny the allegations she is making."

Boltuch rejected the team's claim.

"It was absolutely, unequivocally 100 percent not consensual," Boltuch said. "And if it was, why was my client's job duties removed and nothing was done to Mr. Ellis? To me that smacks of sexual harassment."

Ellis' agent, Jeffrey Fried, said Wednesday that he was en route to Oakland and didn't immediately have a comment.

According to the lawsuit, the Warriors changed Smith's job description and eventually fired her after Ellis' wife, Juanika Ellis, learned of the texts and complained to team executives in January.

Smith said she told team executives that Monta Ellis told her he was using a "secret cellular phone" that was being kept by the team's equipment manager and was in the name of a third party.

Smith, who has worked in similar jobs with the Washington Wizards and the Phoenix Suns, said Wednesday that it was tough to go public.

"It was pretty hard because I knew that essentially my career is over and it would be hard to re-establish myself after working so hard throughout the years," said Smith, who believes she may be blacklisted in NBA circles.

According to the lawsuit, Smith said she told team officials that Ellis' wife called her on Jan. 7 and said, "I know about the secret phone."

Shortly after that, Smith said Ellis told her that he met with team officials and general manager Larry Riley told him "not to worry," and that "everything would be swept under the rug."

The following month, Juanika Ellis apparently used her purse to push Smith into a wall during a Warriors home game, the lawsuit said. Smith said she believes that Ellis' wife believes Smith initiated the texts with the player.

"She was accusatory towards me," Smith said Wednesday.

Boltuch said the team in February reduced Smith's responsibilities, including interaction with Ellis and other players after she refused to resign.

"They offered her what I believe is a bribe," Boltuch said. "They said, `It'd be best if you resign and we'll give you some money.' She rejected it."

Boltuch said the team eliminated Smith's position in August, more than a week after she notified the team that a reporter contacted her inquiring if Ellis was "stalking" her.

The lawsuit alleges retaliation, wrongful termination and intentional infliction of emotional distress and seeks unspecified damages.

Ellis was the Warrior's leading scorer last season, averaging 24.1 points per game. His acrobatic layups and ball handling skills have made him a fan favorite though he is known to be reticent and has few endorsement deals and less notoriety than other players of his stature.

Ellis signed a $66 million, six-year deal with the Warriors in 2008 not long after winning the NBA's Most Improved Player award.

He then sustained a serious ankle injury that summer on his motorized scooter and missed most of the season, earning a 30-game suspension without pay because he wasn't supposed to be riding such a vehicle.

Ellis was recently selected as a team captain for this season.

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

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Video: NLRB's New Union Election Rules: Big Win for Labor

Debating whether new union rules will hurt business, and if Congress needs to step in, with Phil Kerpen, Americans for Prosperity, and Peter Schaumber, fmr. National Labor Relations Board chairman.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45759309/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Ayew win would confirm family dynasty in Africa


Wed Dec 21, 2011 1:51pm GMT

(Adds dropped word Andre in first para)

By Mark Gleeson

CAPE TOWN - Ghana winger Andre 'Dede' Ayew could cement his family's status as Africa's foremost soccer dynasty if he emulates his father by becoming the continent's Footballer of the Year on Thursday.

Ayew is one of three candidates for the 2011 award to be announced in Accra, going up against Seydou Keita of Mali and Ivory Coast midfielder Yaya Toure for the accolade.

Ayew's father Abedi Pele was the first player to win the award three times, winning from 1991 to 1993 mainly for his achievements at club level with Olympique Marseille.

Ayew's successful year at the same club, plus his role in helping Ghana qualify for next year's African Nations Cup finals, see him make the short-list of candidates.

But it is more likely that his popular bow-legged running style and silky touches, strongly reminiscent of his father, has dominated the thinking of the judges who have controversially omitted several other worthy candidates.

Those missing out include Moussa Sow of Senegal, a Ligue 1 winner and top scorer with Lille, and Ivorian Gervinho, his fellow striker at the French champions before joining Arsenal.

Ayew, who was just two years old when his father was first named African Footballer of the Year, will be the sentimental favourite at the gala awards night in Ghana but he faces a strong challenge from Keita and Toure.

OUTFIELD APPEARANCES

Mali's Keita made more appearances for Barcelona last season than any other outfield player and had a brief cameo as a late substitute in the Champions League final win over Manchester United at Wembley in May.

But the 31-year-old boycotted Mali's national team until last month in a dispute with federation officials.

Toure scored the FA Cup final winner for Manchester City against Stoke City in May and has been a regular in their ascent to the top of the English Premier League this season.

Toure, 28, also played a key role as Ivory Coast achieved the only 100 percent record in the Nations Cup qualifiers.

If Ayew wins, he will be the second European-born player to take the award having been born in France in 1989 when his father played at Lille. Paris-born Frederic Kanoute of Mali won the award in 2007.

The African Footballer of the Year is decided by one vote from each of the 53 Confederation of African Football member associations, cast either by the national coach or technical director.

(Editing by Ken Ferris)

Source: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/12/21/uk-soccer-africa-award-preview-idUKTRE7BK0QO20111221?feedType=RSS&feedName=sportsNews

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Abbas meets woman who aided 2001 murder of Israeli (AP)

JERUSALEM ? Israel is furious at Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for meeting Wednesday with a Palestinian woman who infamously lured an Israeli teen to the West Bank in 2001, where he was murdered by Palestinians.

Abbas met Amna Muna in Turkey, along with 10 other former prisoners who were released and banished there as part of a deal that freed an Israeli soldier held captive by Gaza's militant Hamas group.

Muna, a 35-year-old West Bank woman, was serving a life sentence for using an Internet promise of romance to lure 16-year-old Ophir Rahum to the West Bank, where he was killed by waiting militants. Her mother, Samira, insists her daughter never intended for her victim to be killed.

Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev said Israel was disappointed that Abbas chose to meet Muna, whom he called a "terrorist temptress" whose "internet trap led to the brutal murder of an innocent Israeli teen."

"Instead of promoting peace and reconciliation, the Palestinian leadership seems to be putting murderers up on a pedestal," he said. "This (meeting) raises serious questions as to their commitment and their desire to end the (Mideast) conflict."

Abbas adviser Nimer Hamad said it was natural for the Palestinian president to "meet his people wherever they are" and blamed Israel for "searching for a pretext to cover the fact that it is destroying the peace process every day through its settlement activities."

Palestinian official Jibril Rajoub, who accompanied Abbas to Turkey, also defended the meeting.

"We can't he talk to her?" he said, in an interview with Israel Radio. "There are Israeli parliamentarians and army generals who are worse than her."

Israel released Muna along with more than 1,000 other Palestinian prisoners in a swap for Gilad Schalit, an Israeli soldier who was captured by Gaza militants and held in the Gaza Strip for five and a half years. The prisoner release took place in two stages ? the first in October and the second on Sunday.

Many of the freed prisoners were serving long sentences in Israeli jails for planning and participating in deadly attacks against Israeli soldiers and civilians.

Palestinian society generally reveres the prisoners as freedom fighters.

Peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinians have been at a standstill for more than three years. Israel says it is willing to start talks without preconditions, while the Palestinians have demanded Israel halt its construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem before resuming peace negotiations.

Also Wednesday, suspected Israeli extremists chopped down about 30 trees in a Palestinian olive grove in the West Bank, the military said, the latest in a rash of attacks on mosques, Muslim cemeteries and Israeli military bases.

The words "price tag" were sprayed nearby, a term used by extremist Israeli settlers to denote retribution for government operations against illegally-built settlement homes.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_palestinians

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Engadget Primed: Why your camera's sensor size matters

Primed goes in-depth on the technobabble you hear on Engadget every day -- we dig deep into each topic's history and how it benefits our lives. You can follow the series here. Looking to suggest a piece of technology for us to break down? Drop us a line at primed *at* engadget *dawt* com.

The first thing I look for when purchasing a camera is something most aren't even aware of. It's not the brand name or the quality of the lens, the touch screen technology or the LCD screen size, and not the array of functions it offers or shooting presets available - it's the size of the image sensor. As a 20-year pro photographer who's captured over a million images during my career, I'm the guy who admires the parts of the engine instead of falling in love with the flashy exterior or high-end sound system. The image sensor is where the rubber meets the photosensitive diodes.

In writing my first installment for Primed, I'll give a few definitions to clear things up a bit when it comes to a camera's image sensors and size, explain in detail the parts of a sensor, how it alters the photos (or video) you capture, where it came from, and why it's important to consider its size - I'll cover the meat and bones, get to the heart of the matter, the nub, the crux, the nuts and bolts, get down to the brass tacks, all while exhausting our thesaurus. Let's dive in, shall we?

Continue reading Engadget Primed: Why your camera's sensor size matters

Engadget Primed: Why your camera's sensor size matters originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Dec 2011 12:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/16/engadget-primed-why-your-cameras-sensor-size-matters/

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Union leader criticizes Argentine government

(AP) ? A top union leader who has been a strong ally of Argentina's government is taking an increasingly critical line, and the conflict could have political costs for President Cristina Fernandez.

Union leader Hugo Moyano said Thursday that Argentine workers will keep pressing for wages that they feel they deserve. He also issued a warning to Fernandez, saying that more than half of her votes in her re-election victory in October came thanks to union workers.

Moyano said in a speech that he is resigning his posts within Fernandez's party as interim president in the province of Buenos Aires and as a national vice president.

"I'm quitting my posts, but not the struggle," Moyano said, paraphrasing Eva Peron, the wife of former President Juan Domingo Peron. "We're going to rebuild Peronism."

He accused Fernandez's party of straying from the values of Peron.

Moyano, who spoke at a soccer stadium flanked by leaders of various union groups, questioned Fernandez for her criticisms of union stances during her Dec. 10 inauguration speech. Fernandez said then that "there is a right to strike, but not to blackmail nor to extort."

Moyano heads the General Labor Confederation, the largest union group in the country. He had smoother relations with Fernandez's husband and predecessor as president, Nestor Kirchner, who died last year.

Tensions between the government and unions have grown as the government has sought to show greater restraint in public spending with an eye to shielding Argentina's finances from world economic woes.

The government has sought to limit wage increases. Union leaders say they are concerned those limits are far below inflation. Private economists say prices are rising at an annual rate of at least 27 percent, while the government insists inflation is about one-third that.

Moyano's labor group has said there should be no ceiling in wage talks. The union leader has also said soaring inflation is a major problem.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-15-LT-Argentina-Union-Leader/id-2dbc09780bff4db3b5af9b274f9dad7d

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Work to help young cancer patients

Wednesday 14th December 2011

Many teenagers and young adults with a rare cancer are potentially missing out on vital treatment due to a lack of understanding of cancer in the age group, but new research may change this and help save lives.

Germ Cell Tumours (GCTs) usually affect the testes and ovaries, or gonads, as they are collectively referred to.

But GCTs in this age group are often overlooked as medical teams focus more on children, older adults or specifically men or women, which means treatment for adolescents is poorly understood and often undertaken on wards that aren't tailored to young patients' needs.

The Laura Crane Youth Cancer Trust (LCYCT) has pledged to raise funds into research to help establish the best form of treatment for young adults with GCTs.

It is being led by a team in Huddersfield and Leeds on behalf of the National Cancer Research Institute Testis Clinical Studies Group (CSG), the Gynaecological CSG and the Teenage and Young People CSG, and also involves collaborations with laboratories and clinical teams from across the UK, as well as centres and specialists in Europe and USA.

Dr Johnathan Joffe, consultant medical oncologist at Huddersfield Royal Infirmary and Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, is part of the team co-ordinating the research.

He said: "The research will, for the first time, explain why these tumours behave differently in different age groups and will demonstrate the optimal way to treat and cure more patients with these cancers. It will also hopefully put an end to the separate approaches currently being used by cancer teams."

For National Youth Against Cancer Week, which concludes on December 18, the LCYCT is running its campaign "Gonads! It's not just b#*?@cks... it's a serious message" and is encouraging men to make sure they regularly check themselves for testicular cancer. They also want women to be aware of the symptoms of ovarian cancer.

Pam Thornes, trust manager at LCYCT, said: "We don't fully understand how age affects gonad cancer so this research will help ensure that young people with GCTs get the best treatment."

For more information on testicular and ovarian cancer visit www.lauracranetrust.org.

Source: http://www.mediatrust.org/newswirefeed/health-research-1412-health-research/

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Grand Central Apple Store opening December 9th, giving New Yorkers eight billionth way to buy an iPad

It's been a long time coming, but it looks like Apple's finally ready to take the wraps off its latest store. The company's latest New York City outpost is set to get its grand opening in landmark Grand Central Terminal on December 9th, leaving only a few weeks for some combative holiday shopping amidst tourists, fellow commuters and kids from the suburbs. According to an email sent to customers, the store will open its doors for the first time on Friday at 10AM, so you should probably start lining up in an hour or two -- after all, nothing beats claustrophobia, a little elbowing and that new Apple Store smell, right?

[Thanks, David]

Grand Central Apple Store opening December 9th, giving New Yorkers eight billionth way to buy an iPad originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Dec 2011 10:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/OlX40-d-koQ/

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Dr. Lloyd J. Old, Cancer Researcher, Dies at 78

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Dr. Old made seminal discoveries about the relationship between cancer and the immune system and promoted the development of vaccines that use the body?s ability to fight disease.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=5e5a38cda821fd37fb71065878c7498a

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