Saturday, December 31, 2011

?Octomom? in one-child China stuns public

BEIJING (AP) ? The photo was undeniably cute: a studio portrait of eight babies in identical onesies and perky white cotton hats, sporting an array of expressions from giggly to goofy, baffled to bawling.

Intended as an advertisement for the studio, the photo grabbed a different kind of attention: In a country that limits most couples to one child, many Chinese were amazed to learn that a couple had spent nearly a million yuan ($160,000) and illegally enlisted two surrogate mothers to help have the four boys and four girls.

The incident has highlighted both the use of birth surrogates, a violation of Chinese law, and how wealthy Chinese do as they please, with scant regard for the rules that constrain others. The most common reaction, though, has been simple disbelief.

?Heavens. To have one family with eight kids ? in an era of family planning where most people have just one, the contrast is just too much,? said popular Chinese Central Television news anchor Bai Yansong as he introduced a 20-minute special report on the babies last weekend. ?It doesn?t sound like news. It sounds more like a fairy tale.?

Chinese media are calling the mother ?babaotai muqin,? or ?octomom,? a reference to the American woman who gave birth to octuplets using in vitro fertilization.

Much remains uncertain about the family from Guangzhou, the capital of south China?s Guangdong province. According to the Guangzhou Daily, a government newspaper, the biological mother carried two of the babies, while two surrogates gave birth to three each. After the babies were born in September and October last year, 11 nannies were hired to help take care of the children, the report said.

While some suspect a hoax, a media officer with the Guangdong Health Department said the case was real and under investigation. He declined to identify the couple, citing privacy concerns.

The story has captivated the public because it symbolizes a bold defiance of the country?s strict family planning rules, said Liang Zhongtang, a demography expert at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

?People are very interested in the policy these days and the need for changes to it,? he said. ?A lot of people think it should have been dropped a long time ago, or relaxed at least.?

A 2001 law prohibits Chinese medical institutions and personnel from performing gestational surrogacy services, in which an embryo created from a couple is implanted into another woman who carries the baby to term.

Still, an underground market is thriving as more couples put off marriage and childbirth until later in life, only to find they are unable to conceive. The law forbids only the medical procedures, and agencies connecting couples and surrogates are easy to find online.

The Guangzhou Daily said the octomom couple resorted to in vitro fertilization and surrogates after years of failed attempts to conceive.

A manager for the Guangdong branch of the Daiyunguke surrogacy agency, Liu Jialei, said that this has been the busiest of his company?s seven years in business, with more than 600 surrogates matched to families. His customers are Chinese, but the medical procedures are carried out abroad, in Southeast Asia and Japan, to circumvent the law.

Chinese media reports say many procedures are also done illegally at hospitals in China.

Many Chinese frown on surrogacy, which is often portrayed as a way for the rich to avoid going through pregnancy.

An opinion piece about the eight babies in the China Daily denounced surrogacy as something done by wealthy women unwilling to disrupt their careers or ruin their figures.

Author Cai Hong, a senior writer for the newspaper, wrote that the practice would inevitably give rise to ?a breeder class? of poor women who end up ?renting their wombs to wealthy people.?

But Therese Hesketh, a University College London professor who has done numerous field studies in China on family planning issues, says that her impression is that Chinese who can afford surrogates tend to seek out attractive university graduates, not the underprivileged.

Chinese media say octomom and her family have gone into hiding. A Chinese Central Television investigative report could only dig up former neighbors who described seeing a pack of nannies taking the babies for strolls and to a toddler center for playtime.

A series of outtakes from the portrait session posted to a blog show the logo for the QQ Baby studio prominently displayed in the background, but staff at the shop in Guangzhou denied knowing anything about the photos.

Only the relatively well-off can afford in vitro fertilization and surrogacy or to live in a villa, as this couple reportedly did.

The rich also find it easier to flout the one-child limit, because they are better able to afford the hefty fines for doing so. Some also acquire foreign citizenship, which exempts them from the birth quotas.

On the popular Sina microblog, one user posted an article about the couple and commented: ?If you have money, what does the law mean??

All the hoopla may be boosting the surrogacy business. At Daiyun.com ? an agency whose website is splashed with photos of babies nestled in flowers ? a manager said all the attention made it inconvenient for any staff to speak with reporters.

?But one thing is for sure, our business is getting better and better,? said the woman, who would only give her surname, Liu. ?More and more people come to us for services.?

___

Associated Press researchers Zhao Liang and Yu Bing in Beijing contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Photos on a Chinese blog: http://bit.ly/uxwW80

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nhjournal/~3/mM_C_HO5IrA/

dr conrad murray verdict take care childish gambino camp drake take care tracklist drake take care tracklist dr murray trial take care drake

No firm totally destroyed by tornado, storm

by Doug Walker, Associate Editor Rn T.Com

Damages to the Fairbanks Co. were conservatively estimated at $200,000. That figure is expected to rise significantly. (Doug Walker / Rome News-Tribune)

Damages to the Fairbanks Co. were conservatively estimated at $200,000. That figure is expected to rise significantly. (Doug Walker / Rome News-Tribune)

slideshow A week after an EF-2 tornado etched a swath across Rome and into neighboring Bartow and Gordon counties, a more thorough examination of the damages has resulted in an estimated dollar value for damages to local businesses in the neighborhood of $1.82 million.

The figure does not take into account any losses to residential properties.

Floyd County Emergency Management Agency Director Scotty Hancock reported that two-thirds of the losses were incurred by just six businesses, all estimated to be at a minimum of $200,000, however, none were completely destroyed as preliminary assessments indicated.

The Fairbanks/American Pipe buildings, 202 Division St.; the former Habitat for Humanity HomeMart building, 617 Excelsior St.; Shorter University?s warehouse, 218 John Davenport Drive; Brenda White Insurance, 9 N. Hanks St.; the West Rome IGA shopping center on Shorter Avenue; and mini-warehouses at 702 Shorter Ave. were the businesses that were listed as having sustained major damages.

Keith Clark, owner of the West Rome IGA grocery, said he is still working on a final assessment of the damages at his store.

?Ours is over $100,000 in itself,? Clark said. ?Everything from roof damage to sign damage to throwing away over $70,000 worth of product ? produce, meat, the deli ? we just dumped it in the dumpster out back and watched it drive off.?

Clark said the entire roof over the shopping center is going to have to be replaced.

Similarly, Mark White, manager at the Fairbanks Co., indicated the $200,000 figure placed on their business is expected to be well below the actual cost of repairs to the building that essentially lost two exterior walls and a part of its roof.

Thirty-one other businesses or commercial establishments also sustained losses that are being listed as minor, meaning losses of at least $20,000 were estimated.

On Thursday night, Hancock learned that Floyd County became eligible for assistance through the Small Business Administration.

A disaster loan outreach center will open Tuesday from noon to 6 p.m. at the Northwest Georgia Public Health District office, 1309 Redmond Road.

The hours are: Jan. 4 through Jan. 6, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Jan. 7, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.; and Jan. 9 through Jan. 12, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Hancock said Thursday he felt confident the county would be eligible.

?We?ve not only met but exceeded the threshold,? Hancock said.

Hancock said all they needed was 25 uninsured or under-insured properties to get the designation for assistance.

Source: http://rn-t.com/bookmark/16938870

matt nathanson rick perry oops rick perry oops tom bradley penn state tom bradley penn state grace potter grace potter

Friday, December 30, 2011

Texas Capital Bank Houston Region chairman to resign

Welcome to your Personalized User Bar. Here, you can manage your account, sign up for newsletters, navigate to site sections, and share interesting content on social networks. You also can receive alerts on upcoming events, new products, or subscription/account activities.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_3/~3/lkWMZlIlQ40/texas-capital-bank-houston.html

alanis morissette r kelly vanessa bryant vanessa bryant kurt busch kurt busch nfl mock draft 2012

How many of you combine taskbar buttons on Windows 7?

It really depends on how you use Windows 7 for which option may work best for you.

Like me, I usually have so many things opened at once, it's not even funny. For example, 10 tabs in IE9, a few virtual machines, and a few other programs. There just wouldn't be enough room on the taskbar for all of them without them being grouped. "Always combined" is just more convenient for me.

Source: http://www.sevenforums.com/chillout-room/205334-how-many-you-combine-taskbar-buttons-windows-7-a.html

beverly hills hotel beverly hills hotel tori spelling duke basketball brian williams patrice o neal patrice o neal

iPhone 4S Gets Chinese Certification, Mainland Sales To Start January 2012 [Apple's Wildly Popular New Phone Will Land On Chinese Shelves Starting Early Next Year Following Government Approval]

Well, that?s pretty much it, folks; the iPhone 4S, which launched just a couple short months ago, has just picked up the necessary network access permits to get in on the shelves at China Unicom. We first filled you in on Apple?s permit odyssey back in late November, and now, with only a few days left to the month, Apple can get in on one of the biggest phone sellers in China, which in its own right, is a pretty big smartphone market.

According to reports, China?s various regulatory bodies have all issued the necessary certifications to get China into the big show over the last several days, and now, the iPhone 4S?model number A1431 in China?is now ready to go.

China is a massive market for Apple product, sufficiently massive, in fact, that back in Apple?s June quarterly earnings, we discovered that Apple sold fully $3.8 billion in goods. And bringing the iPhone 4S?which already did land-office business in several Asian markets like Hong Kong and Shanghai?to China Unicom will no doubt bring massive sales Apple?s way. After all, not only is China Unicom the third largest cell phone carrier in China, it?s still basically the mainland?s largest carrier of iPhones.

There were, earlier, stirrings of a deal between Apple and China Mobile as well, but when China Mobile demanded a cut of Apple?s App Store sales to make the deal happen, that wasn?t really heard from again. However, considering that Apple?s now got a deal in hand with China Unicom, getting China Mobile to back off its original demands may not be too difficult. And getting both China Unicom and China Mobile in hand will likely put some serious punch in Apple?s sales in the Chinese market, which is, thanks to its substantial population numbers, a huge market.

So what do you guys think here? Will the iPhone 4S be a big part of the Chinese market? Or will Apple have to settle for relatively slim numbers in their sales in the Middle Kingdom? No matter what your stance on this one, we always like hearing from you, and the comments section is the best place we can think of to do exactly that.

Source: http://nexus404.com/Blog/2011/12/27/iphone-4s-gets-chinese-certification-mainland-sales-to-start-january-2012-apples-wildly-popular-new-phone-will-land-on-chinese-shelves-starting-early-next-year-following-government-approval/

what time is it lsu vs alabama cain gingrich debate andy rooney dies andy rooney dies bank transfer day daylight savings 2011

electronista: Analyst: Apple could drop lawsuits, collect $10 per Android http://t.co/ZFDCnP9e

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Analyst: Apple could drop lawsuits, collect $10 per Android dlvr.it/12b6dM electronista

Electronista.com

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/electronista/statuses/152215021143855104

ashram merce cunningham saints tim hightower tim hightower waldorf school waldorf school

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Christmas Online Sales Jump to 16.4 Percent With iPad Contributing Major Share

It clearly seems that folks are likely to hop onto the shopping wagon once again even after being done with the shopping season, according to IBM's Smarter Commerce unit, which tracked online shopping this Christmas Day.

IBM's Benchmark online retail figures saw a 16.4 percent boost on Dec. 25 over the last year, said a report by Associated Press. Online sales further rose by 10 percent as of 3 p.m. EST the very next day. Post-Christmas deals are said to contribute to the sudden step-up in sales on this particular day, which is also dubbed "Mega Monday."

One of the busiest shopping days of the season also witnessed a sales spurt of 172.9 percent with an increasing number of shoppers making purchases using their iOS, Android or tablet devices. Just into 18 months after its debut, the iPad accounted for the lion's share of nearly 7 percent of all online sales on Sunday, with the iPhone and Android raking in 6.4 percent and 5 percent share of the sales. The report did not reveal data about purchases made using gift cards.

Like us on Facebook

As for the new trend spotted this year, John Squire, chief strategy officer at IBM Smarter Commerce, said in a statement on Forbes, "The iPad wasn't even around two years ago and now it's the leading mobile device for purchases. Android came out from nowhere last year, and now it is in third place."

Despite the weak economy, Americans are ever willing to splurge especially with e-commerce making waves this year.

Source: http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/272863/20111227/christmas-online-sales-jump-16-4-percent.htm

history of halloween eagles cowboys eagles cowboys trick or treat times trick or treat times madoff bernie madoff

For Sale: Street-Legal Maserati MC12 Corsa

For Sale, Maserati ? By Chris on December 26, 2011 at 4:14 pm ? 2 Comments

For Sale: Street-Legal Maserati MC12 Corsa

The Maserati MC12 was developed to signal Maserati?s return to racing after 37 years. With a limited production run of just 55 cars, from which 50 were available to customers, the MC12 is far more exclusive than the Ferrari Enzo on which is was based (or the Bugatti Veyron and McLaren F1). Now the most exclusive of all MC12?s is currently for sale.

The Maserati MC12 Corsa is the hardcore variant of the MC12 intended for racetrack use. The Corsa shares its engine with the MC12 GT1, the 6-liter V12 produces 755 horsepower at 8,000rpm ? 122hp more than the original MC12. This car has a top speed of 330km/h and it is capable of accelerating from 0 to 200km/h in just 6.4 seconds.

Only fifteen of these variants were ever made. Three vehicles were produced for testing and publicity purposes and twelve were sold to valued Maserati customers who could only use this car for track days as it wasn?t homologated for use on public roads.

The MC12 Corsa with serial number #01 was modified and certified for street use. The Italian supercar received a series of modifications including a catalytic converter and silencer and a fuel system adapted for use with petrol pumps. The chassis has also been raised to increase the ground clearance of the car, the dampers and springs have all been changed, and an air jack has been fitted in order to tackle speed bumps.

This exclusive car is being offered at Mobile.de. Interested? The price tag is just over a million euros.

Source: http://www.gtspirit.com/2011/12/26/for-sale-street-legal-maserati-mc12-corsa/

best buy we bought a zoo we bought a zoo ipad accessories derrick rose port charlotte florida clippers

Case Closed? Columbus Introduced Syphilis to Europe (LiveScience.com)

In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue, but when he returned from 'cross the seas, did he bring with him a new disease?

New skeletal evidence suggests Columbus and his crew not only introduced the Old World to the New World, but brought back syphilis as well, researchers say.

Syphilis is caused by Treponema pallidum bacteria, and is usually curable nowadays with antibiotics. Untreated, it can damage the heart, brain, eyes and bones; it can also be fatal.

The first known epidemic of syphilis occurred during the Renaissance in 1495. Initially its plague broke out among the army of Charles the VIII after the French king invaded Naples. It then proceeded to devastate Europe, said researcher George Armelagos, a skeletal biologist at Emory University in Atlanta.

"Syphilis has been around for 500 years," said researcher Molly Zuckerman at Mississippi State University. "People started debating where it came from shortly afterward, and they haven't stopped since. It was one of the first global diseases, and understanding where it came from and how it spread may help us combat diseases today."

Stigmatized disease

The fact that syphilis is a stigmatized sexually transmitted disease has added to the controversy over its origins. People often seem to want to blame some other country for it, said researcher Kristin Harper, an evolutionary biologist at Emory. [Top 10 Stigmatized Health Disorders]

Armelagos originally doubted the so-called Columbian theory for syphilis when he first heard about it decades ago. "I laughed at the idea that a small group of sailors brought back this disease that caused this major European epidemic," he recalled. Critics of the Columbian theory have proposed that syphilis had always bedeviled the Old World but simply had not been set apart from other rotting diseases such as leprosy until 1500 or so.

However, upon further investigation, Armelagos and his colleagues got a shock ? all of the available evidence they found supported the Columbian theory, findings they published in 1988. "It was a paradigm shift," Armelagos says. Then in 2008, genetic analysis by Armelagos and his collaborators of syphilis's family of bacteria lent further support to the theory.

Still, there have been reports of 50 skeletons from Europe dating back from before Columbus set sail that apparently showed the lesions of chronic syphilis. These seemed to be evidence that syphilis originated in the Old World and that Columbus was not to blame.

Armelagos and his colleagues took a closer look at all the data from these prior reports. They found most of the skeletal material didn't actually meet at least one of the standard diagnostic criteria for chronic syphilis, such as pitting on the skull, known as caries sicca, and pitting and swelling of the long bones.

"There's no really good evidence of a syphilis case before 1492 in Europe," Armelagos told LiveScience.

In the seafood?

The 16 reports that did meet the criteria for syphilis came from coastal regions where seafood was a large part of the diet. This seafood contains "old carbon" from deep, upwelling ocean waters. As such, they might fall prey to the so-called "marine reservoir effect" that can throw off radiocarbon dating of a skeleton by hundreds or even thousands of years. To adjust for this effect, the researchers figured out the amount of seafood these individuals ate when alive. Since our bodies constantly break down and rebuild our bones, measurements of bone-collagen protein can provide a record of diet.

"Once we adjusted for the marine signature, all of the skeletons that showed definite signs of treponemal disease appeared to be dated to after Columbus returned to Europe," Harper said, findings detailed in the current Yearbook of Physical Anthropology.

"What it really shows to me is that globalization of disease is not a modern condition," Armelagos said. "In 1492, you had the transmission of a number of diseases from Europe that decimated Native Americans, and you also had disease from Native Americans to Europe."

"The lesson we can learn for today from history is that these epidemics are the result of unrest," Armelagos added. "With syphilis, wars were going on in Europe at the time, and all the turmoil set the stage for the disease. Nowadays, a lot of diseases jump the species barrier due to environmental unrest."

"The origin of syphilis is a fascinating, compelling question," Zuckerman said. "The current evidence is pretty definitive, but we shouldn't close the book and say we're done with the subject. The great thing about science is constantly being able to understand things in a new light."

Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience?and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sexualhealth/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111228/sc_livescience/caseclosedcolumbusintroducedsyphilistoeurope

bobby valentine al franken al franken mary did you know seattle seahawks grammy nominations philadelphia eagles

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

denverpost: Utah woman and son rescued from hostage situation after woman seeks help via #Facebook post: http://t.co/TageQYr6

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Utah woman and son rescued from hostage situation after woman seeks help via #Facebook post: dpo.st/rVxkZm denverpost

The Denver Post

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/denverpost/statuses/151470847289327616

horton hears a who horton hears a who cotto margarito big daddy role models lsu game lsu game

Men's Lacrosse Cornell Releases Connecticut College Schedule for Upcoming 2012 Season

December 21, 2011

NEW LONDON, Conn.--Connecticut College Head Men's Lacrosse Coach David Cornell has released his 14 game schedule for the upcoming 2012 campaign.

The Camels will be tested early with each of their first three opponents ranked among the Inside Lacrosse Division III pre-season Top 20.

Connecticut College will open the season Saturday, March 10 with a NESCAC showdown against #17 Bowdoin College in New London, Conn.

The Camels will then hit the road for conference tilts at #5 Tufts University on the 13th followed by a visit to the ninth ranked Panthers at Middlebury College on the 17th of the month.

"I don't know every schedule in the country but I think it's a fair statement to say that our first week has got to be one of the toughest," Cornell said. "It's certainly going to be a great measuring stick for us."

On the 21st, the Camels will take on SUNY-Farmingdale at Franklin Field on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania.

Franklin Field is the oldest stadium operating for NCAA football games and can house 52,593 fans. It is also the site of the first scoreboard (1895) and was the first stadium to use artificial turf (1922).

Later on in the week on the 24th, the Camels will play under the lights at Homewood Field on the campus of Johns Hopkins University against Williams College.

Cornell is extremely excited about the team's spring trip to the Mid-Atlantic which will feature games at two historic venues.

"As far as college lacrosse goes, these two venues are some of the most storied in the history of the game," Cornell said. "I think this will be an exciting opportunity for our student-athletes."

The Camels will close out the month of March with home NESCAC games against #15 Trinity College on the 28th, followed by Colby College March 31.

Connecticut College will play seven games in the month of April. The Camels are proud to host Kean University April 7 for a game that will benefit the Women's Center of Southeastern Connecticut.

"We cultivated a relationship with WCSECT in the fall and we're excited to support them in any fashion we can," Cornell said. "They provide a wonderful service that literally saves lives. Though I know the Center is thankful for our support, it's our student-athletes who have benefitted from the relationship by witnessing firsthand what caring can do."

The Camels will clash with 2011 NCAA Qualifier Keene State April 10.

On the 14th, the Camels will celebrate senior day and will also welcome back alumni for their NESCAC game with the Continentals of Hamilton College.

"That last home Saturday game is always an emotional day for the seniors," Cornell said. "When you add in our Alum coming back and the hype of our new league opponent, it certainly sets the stage for a special day."

The Camels will host #2 Amherst College Lord Jeffs April 17 in the final regular season home game of the year.

Connecticut College will close out the regular season with game at Bates College April 21st and at Wesleyan University on the 25th.

For more information contact: William Tomasian (860) 439-2501; william.tomasian@conncoll.edu

Source: http://www.conncoll.edu/news/7563.cfm

newt gingrich chicago bears margarito margarito horton hears a who horton hears a who cotto margarito

Video: Holiday miracle: College student wakes from coma

An Arizona boy woke up from his coma just as his family and doctors were deciding what to do next. He returned home to spend Christmas with his family. NBC?s Kristen Dahlgren reports.

Related Links:

TODAY.com home page

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45789911/

kathy griffin how to make it in america how to make it in america schweddy balls schweddy balls hedy lamarr bill conlin

Anonymous Hackers Still Active, Closing 2011 with a Bang (NewsFactor)

Anonymous struck again on Monday morning -- and the backlash by the infamous hacking group may not be over yet. Anonymous, which took down Strategic Forecasting's Web site over the weekend, has vowed to strike again. This time, the targets are Stratfor members who are speaking out to support the firm.

As a result of the hack, Stratfor said it has reason to believe the names of its private corporate subscribers have been posted on other Web sites. Its Web site remained down Tuesday afternoon. The last update from Stratfor was Sunday night.

Stratfor sees the hack as retaliation for the treatment of Pfc. Bradley Manning, an Army intelligence analyst charged with leaking more than 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables to the WikiLeaks Web site. WikiLeaks posted many of the cables.

Global Clients Compromised

"It's come to our attention that our members who are speaking out in support of us on Facebook may be being targeted for doing so and are at risk of having sensitive information repeatedly published on other Web sites," the company wrote on its Facebook page. "So, in order to protect yourselves, we recommend taking security precautions when speaking out on Facebook or abstaining from it altogether."

The firm said it was diligently investigating the issue. The data is of an especially sensitive nature, considering Stratfor is a global intelligence firm that deals in business, economic, security and geopolitical affairs. Clients include the U.S. Department of Defense, Lockheed Martin, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Doctors Without Borders and Bank of America.

"Anonymous keeps doing this because it works, and that's part of the problem," said Zeus Kerravala, principal analyst at ZK Research. "PayPal has been the No. 1 target." Anonymous gained fame last year when it issued a hit list of Web sites hostile to WikiLeaks, including PayPal, Visa and MasterCard.

Anonymous Backlash

Kerravala is correct. Anonymous attacks work in that they disrupt the business world, but authorities are beginning to find success cracking down on Anonymous members. The first major arrest was made by Dutch police in Dec. 2010 in conjunction with the cyberattacks to protest shutdown of financial contributions to WikiLeaks.

In June, Spanish police celebrated the arrest of three men who allegedly were part of the computer hacking group that launched cyberattacks against Sony's PlayStation Network, among others. Authorities in Turkey, Australia and Great Britain have also made arrests of alleged Anonymous members. But the Anonymous arrests haven't stopped the attacks. Indeed, 2011 saw the rise of hacktivism on many fronts.

Paul Henry, a security analyst at Lumension, told NewsFactor one year ago today that the world hadn't heard the last of WikiLeaks. On Dec. 27, 2011 he said he expected the impact of WikiLeaks to expand well beyond simply embarrassing governments, to releasing data that would cause harm to big-business reputations.

He was right. Despite the fact that its funding has been largely strangled, WikiLeaks continues to be a force to be reckoned with, even if it's only through the attacks of groups like Anonymous.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20111227/tc_nf/81547

facebook ipo national defense authorization act national defense authorization act clemson seven days in utopia seven days in utopia big 10 championship game

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Man killed amid Britain's post-Christmas sales

Police examine blood stained clothes at the scene of a second stabbing close to the junction of Oxford Street and Regent Street in central London, Monday Dec. 26, 2011. The victim of the second attack was a male who had been stabbed in the legs. His injuries were not life threatening, police confirmed. The male is receiving treatment in hospital and it is "too early to say" whether the attack was linked to an earlier stabbing, a Scotland Yard spokesman said. In the earlier incident, a teenager was fatally stabbed after an argument broke out in a sports store on London's most famous retail street as thousands of shoppers flocked to Britain's capital seeking post-Christmas bargains. (AP Photo / Yui Mok/PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT

Police examine blood stained clothes at the scene of a second stabbing close to the junction of Oxford Street and Regent Street in central London, Monday Dec. 26, 2011. The victim of the second attack was a male who had been stabbed in the legs. His injuries were not life threatening, police confirmed. The male is receiving treatment in hospital and it is "too early to say" whether the attack was linked to an earlier stabbing, a Scotland Yard spokesman said. In the earlier incident, a teenager was fatally stabbed after an argument broke out in a sports store on London's most famous retail street as thousands of shoppers flocked to Britain's capital seeking post-Christmas bargains. (AP Photo / Yui Mok/PA) UNITED KINGDOM OUT

People rush into a department store as it opens for Boxing Day sales in central London, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. Despite disruptions caused by London's subway drivers striking over a pay dispute, large crowds of shoppers started flooding department stores in London as soon as doors opened early Monday. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

People crowd into a department store as it opens for Boxing Day sales in central London, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. Despite disruptions caused by London's subway drivers striking over a pay dispute, large crowds of shoppers started flooding department stores in London as soon as doors opened early Monday. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

People queue early in the morning outside a department store ahead of it opening for Boxing Day sales in central London, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. Despite disruptions caused by London's subway drivers striking over a pay dispute, large crowds of shoppers started flooding department stores in London as soon as doors opened early Monday. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

People rush into a department store as it opens for Boxing Day sales in central London, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. Despite disruptions caused by London's subway drivers striking over a pay dispute, large crowds of shoppers started flooding department stores in London as soon as doors opened early Monday. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

(AP) ? A teenager was fatally stabbed Monday and a second man wounded in attacks on London's most famous retail street as thousands of shoppers flocked to Britain's capital seeking post-Christmas bargains.

The killing of the 18-year-old man on Oxford Street ? and a second wounding in the same road ? did little to deter shoppers crowding into neighboring stores in the landmark shopping district. Bargain hunters were also largely untroubled by a subway strike which badly disrupted the city's public transport services.

Selfridges ? close to the scene of Monday's stabbing and one of Britain's most popular department stores ? reported its biggest ever first hour of trading Monday morning, while the New West End Company, which represents traders on central London's shopping streets, reported 15 million pounds (US$23.5 million) in sales in the first three hours of trading.

Jace Tyrrell, of the New West End Company, said hundreds of thousands of people had visited central London retailers, despite action by police to cordon off parts of Oxford Street and temporarily close some stores.

"These incidents are extremely rare on Oxford Street and we understand arrests have been made," she said. "The emergency services were quick to respond and have cordoned off the street as they continue with their investigations. We are working to ensure the street is open to businesses and shoppers tomorrow."

Tyrrell said shopkeepers had requested a meeting with police to discuss the incidents. "We understand both incidents involved gangs of youth who were known to each other (and) the police, and did not involve individual shoppers," she said.

London's air ambulance helicopter had earlier rushed to the street following the fatal stabbing.

Authorities said the teenage victim died before medics could administer help, while amateur video footage showed police struggling to part large crowds of shopper to allow emergency vehicles to reach the man.

Police erected a tent outside a Foot Locker sports store as they carried out investigations and confirmed that about ten people had been arrested in connection with the death.

Officers said a second stabbing took place close by ? on the corner of Oxford Street and Regent Street ? but insisted it wasn't immediately known if the two incidents were linked.

Det. Chief Insp. Mark Dunne, of London's Metropolitan police, said two groups of young people appeared to have become involved in a large-scale altercation before the teenager's death.

Dunne said that little more was known about the circumstances, but there were likely to be large numbers of witnesses. "This is probably the busiest place in the United Kingdom right now, on the busiest shopping day," he told reporters at the scene.

"A number of weapons have been recovered from that scene ? whether I have got the murder weapon I don't know. There's an assortment of items, but no guns," he said.

In the second attack, a 21-year-old man was stabbed in the leg and is being treated in hospital for his wound.

Police said in a statement that three men had been arrested, but it was "too early to say whether this incident is linked to a fatal stabbing on Oxford Street."

On London's subway network, the ASLEF train drivers' labor union staged a one-day strike to demand extra pay and additional time off for members working on the public holiday.

Despite the disruptions, huge crowds ? some lining up outside stores from midnight ? rushed into department stores in London and other British cities as soon as doors opened early Monday.

The London Underground, the organization that manages the subway system, condemned the move, saying it was pointless and demonstrated "a complete disregard for our customers." Authorities said extra buses were running in main shopping areas to cater to the increased flow of travelers on one of the year's busiest shopping days.

The ASLEF union has warned it plans to stage three more strikes in January and February if the dispute is not resolved.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-26-EU-Britain-Subway-Strike/id-4ba8314ebae54d4aa79d924735bb0800

j r martinez j r martinez long island serial killer wizard of oz jeff green saturday night live aortic aneurysm

tanman9: #NAHL 12/31: Texas Tornado VS. Odessa Jackalopes 7:05 PM,

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
#NAHL 12/31: Texas Tornado VS. Odessa Jackalopes 7:05 PM, tanman9

Tanner Wilson

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/tanman9/statuses/151371049768988672

chester mcglockton arsenic los angeles weather big ten acc challenge scott disick kourtney kardashian kourtney kardashian

Anything Boys Can Do...

Image: Illustration by Thomas Fuchs

When then Harvard University president Lawrence Summers suggested in 2005 that innate differences between men and women may account for the lack of women in top science and engineering positions (and subsequently resigned), he was referring to the greater male variability hypothesis. Women, it holds, are on average as mathematically competent as men, but there is a greater innate spread in math ability among men. In other words, a higher proportion of men stumble mathematically, but an equally high proportion excel because of something in the way male brains develop. This supposedly explained why boys tend to dominate math competitions and why men far outnumber women in elite university math departments. Since then, scientists have put the variability hypothesis to the test, and it comes up short.

In the most ambitious study so far, mathematics professor Jonathan Kane of the University of Wisconsin?Whitewater and oncology professor Janet Mertz of the University of Wisconsin?Madison analyzed data on math performance from 52 countries, including scores from elite competitions such as the International Mathematical Olympiad. In particular, they examined variance?roughly, how spread out scores are. Two patterns emerged, they report in a paper in the January issue of the Notices of the American Mathematical Society. The first is that males? and females? variance is essentially equal in some countries. The other is that the ratio of males? to females? variance differs greatly from one country to another. These ranged from 0.91 to 1.52 (where a ratio of 1 means the two sexes? variance is equal, and a number greater than 1 means males? scores were more spread out than women?s).

The finding that males? variance exceeds females? in some countries but is less than females? in others and that both range ?all over the place suggests it can?t be biologically innate, unless you want to say that human genetics is different in different countries,? Mertz argues. ?The vast majority of the differences between male and female performance must reflect social and cultural factors.?

Such as? One clue comes from the finding that a widely used measure of a nation?s gender equality, called the Global Gender Gap Index, correlates with the ratio of boys versus girls scoring in the top 5 percent on an international math competition called PISA. In some countries, such as the Czech Republic, the boys? and girls? distribution of math scores were nearly identical. Another clue that gender differences in math performance are not innate comes from the shrinking gender gap. In the U.S., the ratio of boys to girls scoring above 700 on the math SAT fell from 13:1 in the 1970s to 3:1 in the 1990s.

Psychology professor Stephen Ceci of Cornell University calls the new analysis ?a very important argument? in the debate over the sources of sex differences in math careers. But, he adds, the findings do not mean that biology plays no role. Just because diet affects human height, for instance, does not mean ?that nature is unimportant.? Now that the greater male variability hypothesis has fallen short, nature is not looking as important as scientists once thought.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=0e7bc6f19f1327e50ea6192b01dfc268

margarito horton hears a who horton hears a who cotto margarito big daddy

Monday, December 26, 2011

European Companies Limit Always-On Communications (NewsFactor)

As the holiday vacation arrives, it's good to remember that there once was a time when people didn't get e-mail at all hours of the day or night. Now, Volkswagen has agreed to give German workers a taste of that world.

Following a union agreement, the largest European carmaker will limit work-related e-mails on the BlackBerry smartphones of about 1,200 workers to a half-hour before and a half-hour after the workday for its staff. Mobile devices will still be available for calls by those workers, at any time.

No Longer 'Switch Off'

According to news reports, the agreement only relates to those workers covered by collective bargaining, thus apparently leaving executives to the same always-on schedule. The Trades Union Congress has issued a statement cautioning that Volkswagen's solution may not work in other organizations.

Another German company, Deutsche Telekom, created a Smart Device Policy in 2010 that allows workers to have a communication-free time when they're not at work. At the time, the company said that mobile communication devices have advantages, but they also create conditions where employees can no longer "switch off" their worktime.

Communication overload is also being addressed by other European companies. For example, international IT services company Atos Origin proclaimed an ambition in February to become a "zero e-mail company" within three years. CEO and Chairman Thierry Breton said in a statement that "we are producing data on a massive scale that is fast polluting our working environments and encroaching into our personal lives."

'Unsustainable for Business'

Thierry said the volume of work-related e-mail was "unsustainable for business," with managers spending five to 20 hours weekly on e-mails, using 25 percent of their time searching for information, and finding that only about 15 percent of the e-mails received in a day were useful.

He added that his company was "taking action to reverse this trend" of internal e-mail pollution, "just as organizations took measures to reduce environmental pollution after the industrial revolution." To counter this informational time drain, Breton said that Atos Origin has set up collaboration tools and social community platforms, to track ideas on subjects.

"Businesses need to do more of this," he said, because "e-mail is on the way out as the best way to run a company and do business." The company said that the use of the social media tools has, according to initial feedback, reduced e-mail by 10 percent to 20 percent.

In an interview with the BBC, Breton, who has been the chief executive and chairman of France Telecom and the French minister of economy, finance, and industry, noted that newly graduated young employees were not using e-mail that much anymore, having transitioned to social media. He said using e-mail for external communications with other organizations is still useful, while internal e-mail is used largely as a communication tool, a place to store content, or for other uses beyond e-mail's original intent.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20111223/bs_nf/81513

mega millions cleveland cavaliers cleveland cavaliers sacramento kings taylor lautner war horse

Reader photos: Southern California Moments, Day 359

Click through for more photos of Southern California Moments
Santa style:
Greg Lilly photographs a group of Santas walking through Hollywood at SantaCon 2011 in this Dec. 17 photo.

Every day of 2011, we're featuring reader-submitted photos of Southern California Moments. Follow us on Twitter and visit the Southern California Moments homepage for more on this series.

?

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/lanowblog/~3/1VcHBMbzF2I/reader-photos-southern-california-moments-day-359.html

uekman uekman music awards music awards giants eagles bcs rankings week 13 bcs rankings week 13

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas games for the whole family

Risk Legacy, Settlers of Catan, and Carcassonne are a few great board games to play with the whole family, along with classics like Monopoly. Question 4 in this week's mailbag.

What?s inside? Here are the questions answered in today?s reader mailbag, boiled down to five word summaries. Click on the number to jump straight down to the question.
?1. Retiring at age 50
?2. Return to work or not?
?3. Handling an inheritance
?4. Christmas games
?5. Money and relationships
?6. Housing predicament
?7. Pie options
?8. 40/30/30 question
?9. Wanting frugal gifts
?10. Sleep remedies

Skip to next paragraph Trent Hamm

The Simple Dollar is a blog for those of us who need both cents and sense: people fighting debt and bad spending habits while building a financially secure future and still affording a latte or two. Our busy lives are crazy enough without having to compare five hundred mutual funds ? we just want simple ways to manage our finances and save a little money.

Recent posts

The days leading up to Christmas are always filled with excitement and energy. There are tons of little things to remember, checklists to fulfill, items to wrap and prepare, and last-minute emergencies to handle.

I?m actually thankful that Christmas comes just a little bit after the shortest day of the year (December 21). It gives us something to occupy our minds when the days are grey and very short.

Q1: Retiring at age 50
?I?m 31 and I have a goal of retiring at 50. Like any other goal, I have a realistic plan to make it happen, and metrics to track my progress.

We?re a family of 5 and our monthly expenses are about $8k/month. I figure when the kids leave the house, it?ll be around $5/month (in today?s dollars).

Our current retirement savings are in the low 6-digits. 401k and Roth IRA, invested in Vanguard?s Target Retirement 2040 Fund. I add about $25k per year, depending on how much I can bring in. The IRA is maxed out, and the 401k is funded well beyond my employer-match level.

My question is what investment strategies/products should I use to ?bridge the gap? of about 15 years between when I retire and when I?m able to draw out of my 401k and Roth IRA? (I?m able to draw the principal out of the IRA at any time, right?)
?- Cael

Yes, you can withdraw your contributions from your Roth IRA at any time.. That?s certainly one possibility for bridging that gap.

It?s also important to note that you can begin making ?retirement? withdrawals from your Roth IRA at age 59 1/2, assuming you?ve had the IRA for five years or more (which you will have). This shortens the ?gap? that you?re trying to cross.

If I were you, I?d probably keep saving along the same path that you?re on without changing much at all. If you do reach a point where you think you can make the leap into retirement before a traditional retirement age, then I?d rely on Roth IRA contributions to bridge that gap.

Q2: Return to work or not?
?Here?s our situation: our first child, a girl, was born with a rare bone marrow disease. I did not return to my work as an administrative assistant to take her to her many, many doctor appointments. We decided a year and a half ago to try to have a sibling, through in-vitro fertilization, who is a donor match for our daughter in case she needs a transplant (not a likely scenario for her since she?s stable on drug treatments, but certainly a possibility). Insurance did not cover most of it. I am now pregnant and due in April. The enormous medical bills, even with the help of family, have left us with about $12,000 in debt and monthly payments we can?t quite cover on my husband?s salary. It seems like we?re slipping behind, not cutting down the debt. We still allow ourselves very small luxuries (a Christmas present or two, an occasional evening out, even a two-day vacation this Christmas). Do we cut these out entirely, or should I look for work?? I don?t want to leave a small infant with a nanny but hate paying the interest on all this debt. I think the stress of our debt is making me a less fun parent anyway. There is no guarantee I can find a job in this climate, but at least it would help a little towards dragging us out of this mess we?re in. Or should we just try to get by, paying just the interest, on our debt for a year until I consider my son old enough to be left at daycare (much cheaper than a nanny)?
?- Ellen

Unless you get a job that pays quite well, you?ll be losing money on a nanny for your child. You?ll have to make substantially more than you?d be paying a full time nanny to make that work.

Most people in your situation ? a situation not too different than the one we were in not that long ago ? usually wind up using some form of daycare for their child. Our experience with our daycare was overwhelmingly positive, but I would highly recommend spending plenty of time finding the right one before putting your child in.

One way to do this is to set yourself a ?deadline? for when you plan to enroll the child, then start shopping for one now. Many of the good daycares have a waiting list to get in, so you?ll probably want to get on some of those lists.

Q3: Handling an inheritance
?When my father passed away last year, we found out that he had name me, not my mother, as the beneficiary to his IRA. I have a choice of small annual payments until retirement (I?m 37) or taking out all the money now and assume the tax hit. I know that he worked hard at building up the value of the account so that, if he should pass, my mother and I could pay off the mortgage on the house we own jointly and live in. We currently owe approximately $96,000 and his account, before I get hit with both federal and state taxes, is $105,000. After taxes, we expect what?s left from my father?s retirement account to be less than what we owe and will still have a couple year?s worth of payments left to go.

The house is a split level with no bathroom on the main floor. My mother is 70, and we expect her not to be able to navigate stairs by the end of the next decade (as it is now she gets winded sometimes due to her asthema). Putting on an main floor addition of a master bedroom suite would make the house more comfortable for her. We?ve gotten some rough quotes, and such an addition would be between $70,000 and $100,000. Also, there are some other repairs and improvements which need to be done on the house. For example the roof will need to be replaced within the next 5 years, and some of the insullation needs to be replaced as well.

Here?s my question(s):
?Where should I invest this money my father left us?
?Should we follow his wishes and put it all into the mortgage, and have only a few more years of payments, as opposed to over 20 years? (this would delay paying for any major repairs and/or additions for quite some time).
?Should we pay to have an addition put on and make the house more comfortable and practical for her in the later years of her retirement, and take the risk that the addition could cost more than the money we have in hand? (and still have over 20 years of mortgage payments)
?Or should we use the money to take care of those major repairs, and put any remaining money towards the mortgage?

I?ve asked friends, family and co-workers what they would do and the responses are all across the board, each with seemingly good rational.

What would you do if you were me?
?- Jill

If your father wanted you to put it into the mortgage and you?re sure of his wishes, you should follow them.

The question for me really is whether or not that was really the spirit or intent of his wishes. He wanted the money put into the mortgage, but why did he want that? What you should do with that money is fulfill the why part of the question, and that will probably take some soul-searching.

My guess, based on your story here and similar stories I?ve heard, would be that he wanted comfort and security for his wife and thought you were the best person to ensure that. If that?s the case, you should do what will make your mother?s life the best down the road. Adding a room like this will likely increase the value of the home significantly, so when you do eventually sell it, you?ll be able to pay off the mortgage and have some left over.

Q4: Christmas games
?In past years, our family has had Christmas at my mom and dad?s house. This year, we made a family decision to have me and my wife start hosting Christmas to take some stress off of my parents.

One of our family?s traditions is to play some board and card games in the afternoon on Christmas day. We usually play Monopoly or Risk or bridge. We have a deck of cards, but no other games. I thought it might be fun to have some different games to play with my family instead of these old classics. I know you play a lot of these games. Any suggestions?
?- Randall

One interesting option might be to pick up a copy of Risk Legacy. This takes Risk and adds some interesting twists to it in that you actually customize the game as you play it. For the first fifteen games, everyone who plays it is involved with actually modifying the game through small gameplay changes, the naming of continents, and other such things. It?s really fun ? my wife and I are playing this with a group of our friends right now. This would take the classic feel of Risk and add a new twist to it.

There are a handful of really great games that I recommend to almost every family: Ticket to Ride, Carcassonne, and Settlers of Catan immediately come to mind.

Honestly, you might want to also just have copies of the classics, too. Games are really about socializing, and well-played games have a lot of nostalgia to them, which is a wonderful socializing spur. You can often get these classics at thrift stores for a dollar or two, though I suggest buying two copies just so you can be sure you have all of the pieces.

Q5: Money and relationships
?You always seem to have similar goals to the ones I aspire to in life. And you seem to have found a perfect soul mate for this. I am French and live abroad, though I aspire to come back soon and start a life there, and a family. I am just over 30 now, and really envy people who found a perfect match at 23, have a mortgage and other financial goals together with a spouse, like fixing up a house or investing towards financial freedom. I sometime feel like when I save money or plan financial things it would be so much easier to be a couple.

I own two properties, and they rent nicely. I do freelance writing for a living but have come to a point where I do not need that income to live. My dream is to find someone like minded and be able to dedicate all this freedom to raising children, I am even considering homeschooling, and other activities that would be a real perk to a man who wants to invest in his career, like fixing up the house, optimizing meals, and so forth, so we could easily live on one income and have a happy family.

I have been on relationships before who lasted anything from a few months to a few years but every time I felt like the financial agreement would fail us and ended the relationship. Any advice on that? I read that every relationship success, whether business, family, friends, or love, was based on a sound economic agreement. Yet I have a hard time when I start dating someone putting the finances on the table to see if we are bound to have a future.

It is taboo over here, or when I say I dream of being a housewife and raising my children they look at me like a 50s wannabe wife or like I want to take advantage of their income to live for free (I am very independent, financially from my parents since I am 17, graduated debt free with grants, have about 200K net worth before turning 30, and able to maintain myself without incurring any debt, pay my credit card and loans in full each month and so on). I have thought about turning to church to find a christian man since those values are important, but not being very religious myself I am afraid we would have disagreements on that topic.

What are your thoughts?
?- Susan

I don?t think finances need to be on the table at the start of a relationship. However, when a relationship becomes serious enough that both parties are entertaining thoughts of joining their lives together, then finances should be brought up.

Communication is always the key. If you?ve communicated a lot with this other person and you feel your relationship is strong, bring up how you feel and talk it through. That?s always the best approach in a relationship.

As for looking for someone who would respect you in the housewife role, you?re right that a Christian church might be a good place to start. However, if you?re finding that dating someone of a particular religion is going to bring up other problems, you probably shouldn?t seek someone there. Seek out groups that match your values in some ways, then look for individuals in those groups that match your values in other ways. It?s all about the filtering, and it takes time.

Q6: Housing predicament
?My wife and I currently live in condo that we have a mortgage on. We purchased 4 years ago, rate is 5%. We purchased for $140,000 and have about $135,000 remaining on the mortgage. When we purchased the condo we took the $7,500 housing grant that we have to pay back over a 15 year time period or when you sell the house. The stipulation is if you do not make a profit then you don?t have to pay this back. We have already paid back $1,000 of this. The purchase price is adjusted for any improvements or commissions you have paid in the process. We put in more than $10,000 of improvements so if we were to sell for anything over $143,500 we wouldn?t have to pay back any of the remaining grant. We could also choose to rent, which is what I would do if we didn?t take out the grant, but if we were to do this we would have to pay the remaining balance of the grant back at that time since it is no longer our primary residence. This was the $7,500 home buyer credit, not the $8,000 that you don?t have to repay and can rent after 3 years.

So our current situation, my wife and I are both 27 have no debt (no credit card, no student loans) besides our mortgage and 2 car loans. Car 1 ? 1 year remaining $250/month, Car 2 ? 2 year remaining $350/month. We make a combined $115,000/year. We currently put about $1,000 a month in retirement (+ company match) and have a combined $40,000 currently saved in our retirement. We also have $10,000 in our savings for a future down payment on our house. We are expecting our first baby in February and at that time my wife will take off 12 weeks of work, she will get 50% pay during this time. I am going to lower my retirement to just the company match during this time period to make sure we have enough money, although I think we should be fine and and will increase the retirement once she goes back to work. We will be incurring day-care costs once she goes back to work of roughly $800 per month.

Here is our delimna. We have our condo currently listed at $144,000 however we may only be able to get $135K or even less for it, which after commissions would barely break even on our mortgage and could possibly even take a little loss. We want to continue to save and build our savings account up to around $15K before we buy our new place. For us to do this we can?t really afford to lose that much when we go sell. The condo we are living at will probably be too small once the baby gets to about a year old so we are looking at houses in our area at around $200-$250K, (I realize we wouldn?t have 20% down but this is what we are wanting for now). We also want to take advantage of the lower interest rates that are currently in affect right now (I personally believe they will be low until 2013).

Looking back I now realize we should have probably just rented 4 years ago but hindsight is 20/20. Anyway, I guess our options are stay in the condo until we can get a buyer that is willing to give us a decent offer, take a loss on our condo and not have as much to put in a downpayment, or pay out the remaining grant and rent out the condo ourselves until the market turns around in our area (this would also lower our down payment).

It is frustrating because I feel like we are responsible with our money and didn?t necessarily do anything incorrect yet we may end up losing money on this decision to buy our first place, however I realize this is just the times we are living in and going forward I will think more indepth of our decisions. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
?- Jim

You didn?t do anything incorrectly other than not prophetically predict what the housing market was going to do. You made a move based on the information you had at the time and you?re largely responsible with your money. Don?t be frustrated with yourself.

If I were in your shoes, I would stay put for the time being and make it work with the child for as long as you possibly can. Sarah and I shared a very tiny apartment with our first child until he was almost 2 and our second was on the verge of arriving. If it weren?t for that second child, we might still be living there.

This will allow you to not only save for the down payment for the house you want to buy, but will also allow you to get more and more above water on your condo. Even if you don?t time the market perfectly, if it begins to rebound, your condo will also go up in value, meaning the rebound won?t hurt you as badly as you might think.

Q7: Pie options
?Is it less expensive to make your own pies or to buy them from a good baker? I don?t like to buy some of the cheaper pies because they taste artificial but there are several bakeries around here that make good pies.
?- Linda

Sarah and I have made quite a few pies over the years. My experience has been that a truly great homemade pie takes about two hours of work and uses between $10 and $15 in ingredients, assuming you have very little of the ingredients on hand. A simpler homemade pie ? one with a pre-made crust ? can be done in much less time, but isn?t quite as good.

So, how does that compare to pies that you might purchase? There?s a bakery here that sells pies that are roughly as good as the pies we can make with a pre-made crust for about $15. There?s one bakery that supposedly sells mind-blowing pies (though I?ve never tried them) for about $20.

You?ll save money by making it yourself, but not enough to make it worth the time unless you really enjoy the process of making pies. I actually do if I?m in the right mood.

Q8: 40/30/30 question
?I have a question about the 40/30/30 rule you spoke of in November of last year. You say it basically means you should spend 40% of your income on basic bills, 30% on saving for the future and 30% on enjoying life. But how do you do the math? For instance, if I save $16,500 through my 401(k) at work, that?s money that I never see in my bank account, but it is money that?s going towards saving for the future. So do I just take my net bi-weekly pay, annualize it, add $16.5k to the total, divide by 12 months and then use the 40/30/30 formula on that number to figure out my monthly ?budget??
?- Regina

That?s what I would suggest doing. I would simply ignore taxes entirely. If I used pre-tax money for savings, I?d just count that normally.

It?s important to remember with things like 40/30/30 that they?re just guidelines to get you moving in a healthy direction. They?re not absolute rules that work perfectly in all possible situations. Almost all personal finance advice is just like that ? everyone?s specific situation is different.

If you?re putting $16,500 into your 401(k), you?re probably doing really well with your finances. Keep it up.

Q9: Wanting frugal gifts
?I was just wondering if you could give some advice, it?s only a small problem, barely a problem really but I thought you might have an idea that I haven?t thought of. With Christmas coming up presents have been a topic of conversation here and there. My mum has always bought one or two big things for me for Christmas and then a few little stocking fillers (I?m an only child so she always goes a little overboard). The stocking fillers always used to be useful things, socks, underwear, occasionally toiletries. I always loved this, I went through a stage of about four years where I didn?t have to buy my own underwear because I always got new ones at Christmas!

Of late though she?s been buying more trinket type things that don?t have any use. It?s not that I mind her buying things like that, it?s more that I feel bad that she?s spending money on something that is just going to get (eventually) thrown out because I have no use for them. I think she?s doing this because I?ve become more frugal over the past few years and she thinks I?m depriving myself, when the truth is I just laugh at the prices they put on things that have (in my mind) no value. Any ideas on how I could suggest to her that I much prefer the socks and undies route? I?ve tried commenting how awesome it was when she was doing the socks and underwear thing but that didn?t work.

As I said, it?s not a huge problem, it?s not that I mind that much getting those sort of things, I know that the thought is there, it?s more that I feel bad that she?s essentially wasting her money.
?- Lauren

I think the key is communication, but I wouldn?t do it right in the face of the Christmas season.

Accept whatever you get this year, then have a conversation about this in April or in June or in September. Sit down with your mon and simply say that you actually do not want a lot of those ?trinket?-type things. Reinforce it by simply not commenting on or even gently deriding the materialistic things you don?t value outside of the context of gift-giving.

The key is to make sure that you?re not bashing your mother?s gifts. The purpose of this isn?t to hurt her feelings but to make sure she understands what you actually value. Tell her what you value and make it clear to her through your actions.

Q10: Sleep remedies
?You almost always seem to have great frugal ideas for life?s problems. My big challenge as of late is insomnia. I often can?t get to sleep until one or two in the morning and when I have to get up at six, I?m exhausted. Do you ever get like this and if you do, how do you deal with it?
?- Evan

Whenever I?m having a hard time sleeping, I do two things.

First, I exercise a lot in the morning. Not in the afternoon or evening. The morning. I do something around the house that requires a lot of exertion or I?ll go on a brisk walk or jog for a long while or I?ll go on a bike ride. The key is to really wear myself out in the morning so the endorphins and other responses wear off before bedtime, leaving me with physical exhaustion.

My other tactic is my old standby of warm milk with nutmeg. I just take some milk, heat it until it?s warm (bordering on hot), and sprinkle several dashes of nutmeg on top. This puts me to sleep really well, for some reason.

Got any questions? Email them to me or leave them in the comments and I?ll attempt to answer them in a future mailbag (which, by way of full disclosure, may also get re-posted on other websites that pick up my blog). However, I do receive hundreds of questions per week, so I may not necessarily be able to answer yours.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on www.thesimpledollar.com.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/8OqbbxcZF6M/Christmas-games-for-the-whole-family

barbados raiders chargers latin grammys latin grammys ogopogo walmart black friday walmart black friday

Jen Stirrup: 'Mobile Business Intelligence and the iPad'

Start date/time: ?Thursday 5th January 2012: 7.30pm
End date/time: ?Thursday 5th January 2012: 9pm
Venue: ?Fountain Inn 12 Regent Street, CB2 1DB, Cambridge.
Organiser name: ?Sobia Hamid
Organiser email: ?sobia.hamid@cantab.net
Organiser tel: ?07814 580583

'Mobile Business Intelligence and the iPad' - Data Insights Cambridge?Meetup with Jen Stirrup.

Jen Stirrup is a newly-awarded SQL Server Most Valuable Professional?(MVP). Specialising in Data Integration and Business Intelligence, Jen?believes passionately in getting the right data to the right people, at the right time. Jen's specific focus is on Data Visualisation.?For this talk, Jen will present how?Apple?s cutting edge usability, along with PowerPivot?s accessibility, can be combined to enhance productivity for mobile business users. Together these?technologies can support Mobile Business Intelligence as an essential tool?for end users who need data 'on the go'.

For more information and to register, please visit?http://www.meetup.com/Data-Insights-Cambridge/

See also:

Copyright Cambridge Network 2011

Source: http://www.cambridgenetwork.co.uk/events/article/default.aspx?objid=86387

golden globe nominees megyn kelly michael turner richard hamilton richard hamilton paris jackson paris jackson

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Understanding Congress' payroll tax cut fight (AP)

WASHINGTON ? If President Barack Obama, the House and the Senate all want to extend a Social Security payroll tax cut and jobless benefits through next year, why are they fighting so bitterly over doing it?

Obama, House Democrats and lopsided majorities of both parties in the Senate want to immediately renew the tax cut and jobless benefits for the next two months, and find a way later to extend them through 2012. House Republicans want to do it for a full year right away.

That doesn't sound like an unbridgeable gap. Yet the fight has evolved into a year-end partisan grudge match with no clear resolution in sight and with huge political and economic stakes.

Without action, the payroll tax paid by 160 million workers will rise by 2 percentage points to 6.2 percent on Jan. 1. That would mean $1,000 a year less in the pockets of people making $50,000, or about $19 weekly. In addition, 3 million people currently receiving long-term jobless benefits will begin to lose weekly payments that average under $300 ? for many, their only support.

Following is a guided tour, in question and answer form, through the dispute.

Q: Why do Obama and the Senate want to extend the tax cut and jobless benefits by only two months?

A: Actually, they don't. When the Senate voted overwhelmingly last weekend for a two-month bill backed by Obama, it was a fallback position after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., disagreed over ways to pay for a yearlong extension. Both sides agreed they would not let the bill increase long-term deficits.

The Senate's two-month version continues the payroll tax and jobless benefits at this year's levels and costs $33 billion. The bargainers agreed to pay for that by raising fees people pay for new mortgages or refinancing insured by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-backed mortgage companies. For a $200,000 mortgage, the fee increase would raise a borrower's cost about $17 a month.

A full-year extension would cost around $200 billion, and the two sides couldn't agree on how to pay for that. So they agreed on a bill extending the tax cuts and jobless benefits through February, and then they would return early next year to resolve their differences over a yearlong measure.

Q: The government spends over $3.5 trillion every year. How hard can it be to find another $170 billion or so in savings?

A: It's been tough because of the math and the ways each side would do it.

The two parties seemed to agree that additional savings could come from a federal sale of parts of the broadcast spectrum, and by requiring government workers to contribute more to their pensions. Beyond that are vast differences, substantive and political.

A yearlong extension that the GOP-run House passed this month would make higher-income seniors pay more for Medicare coverage and cut spending for parts of Obama's health care overhaul law enacted last year. Those provisions, taken from earlier Obama proposals, are opposed by congressional Democrats.

Democrats have proposed paying for a one-year extension of the payroll tax and federal unemployment benefits by imposing a 1.9 percent surtax on income above $1 million a year, a non-starter with Republicans. During talks between top Senate Democrats and Republicans, Democrats also proposed other ways of boosting levies on the wealthy, but those were rejected.

Q: Are there any other differences?

A: They're also fighting over the jobless benefits taxpayers should provide as the economy slowly improves.

Democrats want to keep the current structure. Most states provide 26 weeks of unemployment coverage, and federal programs enacted since the recession boost the eligibility up to 99 weeks in some states.

The House-passed bill would pare that total coverage to a maximum 79 weeks. That probably would fall even further in some states as employment improves. The House bill also requires benefit recipients without high school diplomas to pursue education alternatives and lets states test recipients for drug use.

Q: While they work through these differences, why the fuss over whether Congress first approves a two-month or a one-year plan?

A: For one thing, many freshman and conservative House Republicans are tired of compromising with the Senate and want their leaders to take a stand. They also say a two-month extension of the payroll tax cut would create uncertainty for taxpayers and businesses and problems for employers' payroll systems.

Many House Republicans hate the idea of keeping the issue alive until March 1, when the two-month bill would expire. Democrats have damaged Republicans politically with proposals to pay for the payroll tax cut by boosting levies on the rich. GOP lawmakers solidly oppose that approach, saying it would discourage job creation, and Democrats have used that to argue that Republicans are defending the wealthy at the expense of the middle class.

That's not an argument Republicans want to spend the 2012 election year having. As a result, many want to avoid additional votes on the matter next year, and they don't want to let Obama spend next month's State of the Union address discussing it. They would rather spend 2012 voting on issues they feel are on their terrain, like blocking Obama administration regulations, reducing the size of government and cutting its spending.

Q: What about Democrats?

A: They say the tax cut and unemployment coverage must be renewed to protect the millions who would be hurt Jan. 1. They also have no desire to surrender leverage by abandoning the two-month deal negotiated by the Senate's Reid and McConnell.

But they, too, have political motivations.

Democrats cite economists who say the payroll tax would pump enough money into the economy to help it grow slightly next year. Knowing that the 2012 presidential and congressional races are likely to hinge on the economy's performance, they want to take no chances with anything that might tip the economy in the wrong direction. To them, that means the payroll tax cut and extra jobless coverage must be extended.

Q: Wouldn't these bills also prevent a scheduled cut in reimbursements to doctors who treat Medicare patients?

A: Yes, a 27 percent reduction takes effect next month unless Congress acts. Doctors say that cut would discourage physicians from treating the elderly people served by Medicare. Neither party wants to anger older voters by limiting their access to doctors.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_go_co/us_congress_payroll_tax_q_a

turkey recipes sweet potato pie sweet potato pie stuffing recipe happy thanksgiving dwts cnn debate