Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Police catch suspect in 75 drug cartel killings (AP)

MONTERREY, Mexico ? Police in northern Mexico have captured an alleged member of the Zetas drug gang who confessed to killing at least 75 people, including many who were pulled off buses, authorities said Monday.

Enrique Elizondo Flores told investigators 36 of his victims were bus passengers traveling through the town of Cerralvo, near the border with Texas, said Nuevo Leon state security spokesman Jorge Domene.

Elizondo was detained Jan. 20 in the town of Salinas Victoria, but authorities delayed announcing his arrest so they could verify details of his confession, state Attorney General Adrian de la Garza said.

Domene said the 35-year-old suspect told investigators that he had been working in the area at least three years and that he was in charge of killing members of the rival Gulf drug cartel heading to the towns of Cerralvo and General Trevino.

Elizondo and other gunmen last January began pulling passengers off buses as they arrived at Cerralvo's bus station, Domene said. They are among at least 92 bus passengers the Zetas are accused of killing in three attacks in January and March 2011. Many the victims were originally from the central state of Guanajuato and had arrived in Cerralvo from the border city of Reynosa, Domene said.

Elizondo was known "for torturing, maiming and then killing his victims," Domene said.

Last year, authorities in the neighboring state of Tamaulipas unearthed 193 bodies from clandestine graves in the town of San Fernando. Security forces said they were led to the site by members of the Zetas who confessed to kidnapping and killing bus passengers traveling through the area.

The motive for the bus abductions remains unclear. Prosecutors have suggested the gang may be forcefully recruiting people to work for it or trying to kill rivals they suspected were aboard the buses.

Northeastern Mexico has been engulfed by a turf battle between the Gulf Cartel and the Zetas since they split in 2010.

More than 47,000 people have been killed nationwide since President Felipe Calderon launched a crackdown against drug traffickers in December 2006.

In the border city of Ciudad Juarez, police officers killed three men and detained a fourth Monday after being attacked at a gas station, authorities said.

The officers were refueling their patrol cars at a gas station a few blocks from the Zaragoza border crossing into El Paso, Texas, when they were attacked, a police statement said. The officers returned fire, killing three assailants, and they also seized two assault rifles, two handguns and a hand grenade, it said.

Last week, messages signed by the New Juarez drug cartel and left in several parts of the city claimed Police Chief Julian Leyzaola is favoring a rival cartel. It said that one officer would be killed daily if their members continue to be arrested. Five police officers have been killed since.

Leyzaola was not immediately available to comment on Monday's attack.

In a public appearance over the weekend, Mayor Hector Murguia said the recent string of attacks on law enforcement officers was a response from criminals affected by Leyzaola's work.

"Go downtown, there are no more brothels where drugs used to be sold," he said, referring to a police crackdown in downtown Juarez as part of the city's efforts to combat crime.

As a safety measure, police officers are now required to leave precincts wearing street clothes and are allowed to take their guns home. The city also is considering plans to rent hotels to quarter all the police force.

In 2009, then Police Chief Roberto Orduna quit after several police officers were killed and their bodies dumped along with messages saying more officers would be killed unless he resigned.

Leyzaola is no stranger to threats. Shortly after he was hired in 2011, the body of a tortured man was left in a street with a message to Leyzaola that read, "This is your first gift."

In April 2009, when he was police chief in western border city of Tijuana, drug traffickers took over police radio frequencies to say that if he didn't quit, many police officers would die.

A few days after, seven officers were killed in separate but coordinated attacks. Drug traffickers took over the police radio frequencies again to say their threat had been carried out.

___

Associated Press writer Juan Carlos Llorca in El Paso, Texas, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120130/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_drug_war_mexico

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Monday, January 30, 2012

Top Trends in Impact Investing 2012: #10- The U.S. Heats Up ...

Top Trends in Impact Investing 2012: #10- The U.S. Heats Up

#10 Trend in Impact Investing in 2012: The U.S. Heats Up

Last year, we previewed what we thought the top trends in impact investing/social enterprise would be, and with a few glaring exceptions, we were pretty spot-on.? In the next 10 days, we?re going to take a crack at the upcoming year (though, with it almost being February, maybe we?re cheating a bit by having a sneak peek.? Too bad.)? Without any further delay, here?s trend #10:

Most of the press surrounding impact investing has been international; over 50% of the featured social entrepreneurs in Forbes? ?Impact30? are US-based, but operating abroad (e.g. Jacqueline Novogratz, Willy Foote).? In a survey we did of over 300 impact investing funds, fewer than 10% were U.S. focused, though over 50% were U.S. based.? While some major funds and entrepreneurs (e.g. RSF Social Finance, Calvert Foundation) have been active in the U.S., the bulk of activity hasn?t been concentrated in the States.

In 2012, that will change.? We see major moves towards impact investing in the U.S. on three fronts:

  • Impact investors with an increasing U.S. focus.? Brian Trelstad, Chief Investment Officer of the Acumen Fund, is taking lessons learned from Acumen Fund and applying them to the development of a U.S. fund; Kevin Jones, founder of Good Capital and SoCap is working on the launch of his second fund later this year; and Investor?s Circle has dropped its international companies to move to a 100% U.S. focus.? More impact funds are being started?2011 saw the scale-up of Cleveland-based JumpStart and the launch of the New Orleans Startup Fund, an Acumen-model impact fund focused on the greater New Orleans region.? And the Hub Cities Fund looks to seed an ambitious number of new Hubs in North America.
  • The nonprofit sector gets more active in impact investing.? In October, Antony Bugg-Levine, managing director of the impact investing initiative at the Rockefeller Foundation (and author of the term ?impact investing), left to become CEO of the Nonprofit Finance Fund.? Many in impact investing were puzzled as to why one of the poster-boys of the impact investing movement would join the nonprofit world, but it?s indicative that nonprofits are getting more clever with how they use resources.? The Nonprofit Finance Fund has over $80 million in assets under management?larger than most impact funds in the world?and deals with organizations that most Americans come more regularly in contact with than ?social enterprises?: churches, homeless shelters, and schools.? Similarly, Village Capital?s chair, Joy Anderson, is launching the Church as an Economic Being initiative in 2012 to look critically at how churches?America?s biggest nonprofits by a longshot?use their finances to generate impact.
  • City, state, and local governments get active. ?In 2011, we saw the U.S. government get active in impact investing internationally, through USAID?s Development Innovation Ventures program and OPIC?s Call for Proposals on Impact Investing.? In 2012, we?re already seeing the U.S. government get more active in its backyard.? Nish Acharya, one of the most respected individuals in social enterprise as the director of the Deshpande Foundation, recently joined the U.S. Government as the Director of the Office of Innovation and Entrepreneurship in the Department of Commerce.? On a more local level, Detroit, Cincinnati, New Orleans, New Haven, and Atlanta are all launching local impact investing initiatives.? As governments are pushed to do more with less, impact investing is looking like an increasingly compelling policy tool.

Finally, the U.S. economy is not out of the woods, but is getting better.? With a bit more risk-tolerance, but still feeling the sting of an economic recession (and the hopes to avoid another one), those with capital in the U.S. are looking to take 2012 to do things a bit differently.

By Ross Baird. ?Photo credit Hu Toya.

?

Source: http://www.vilcap.com/?p=1461

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Kindle Sales Growing Faster Than The Nook?s

kindle fireBarnes & Noble may be challenging Amazon's dominance of the e-book world, but the Kindle sales are still growing faster than the Nook's ? at least if you connect the dots between some of the numbers included in a recently-published article by The New York Times.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/P42BakLcEUs/

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Sunday, January 29, 2012

Is HBO's Horse-Racing Series Luck a Big Gamble? (omg!)

Dustin Hoffman  | Photo Credits: Gusmano Cesaretti/HBO

Pick Six. Furlong. Backstretch. Quinella. Trifecta. Daily Double.

These are just a few of the racetrack terms that may be thrown around in HBO's new horse-racing series Luck, which premieres Sunday at 9/8c. From executive producers David Milch and Michael Mann, the gritty show looks at the owners, jockeys and the degenerate gamblers in the horse-racing world.

While the lingo, the setting and the overall story line may feel alien to those who don't frequent one of the more than 100 racetracks around the United States, Milch, the man behind Deadwood and NYPD Blue, says that shouldn't deter viewers from watching. "It's an act of faith," says Milch of creating a series on such a foreign topic. "Your fundamental responsibility is to stay true to the deepest nature and intention of the materials and that's what we did."

Check out photos of Luck

"I think [viewers] can relate to the story the way they relate to any other well-told, dramatic, emotional story," adds Mann. "That's the whole point. If they have a sense of the important things, they'll let the lingo go by, trusting they'll pick it up later."

At its basic level, the premise is simple. Chester "Ace" Bernstein (Dustin Hoffman) has just returned from a stint in prison taking the rap for other unsavory types. Now unable to hold an owner's license due to his criminal record, Ace enlists his driver Gus Demitriou (Dennis Farina) to act as the owner of a fleet-footed horse, now trained by Turo Escalante (John Ortiz). Another trainer, played by Nick Nolte, is also looking to make a splash with a horse sired by one of the greats (think of it as Seabiscuit's baby).

"Although the racetrack is the beating heart, I'd say the show is more of a study of the characters," Milch insists, adding that even the degenerate gamblers, who live race-to-race by handicapping the winners, will be relatable to viewers. A horse owner himself, Milch would even classify himself as one of them. "My dad took me to the track when I was five years old and identified me as a degenerate gambler then, which is a little hard for a 5-year-old to understand," he says with a laugh. "I've been busy figuring out what that meant for the past 60 years."

HBO tries its Luck with David Milch drama starring Dustin Hoffman

Worrying about the audience's ability to understand and relate to the series is only one hoop to jump through for Luck. There's also the high expectations from the people whose real lives color this story. "There are certain parochial responses," Milch says of the racetrackers. "It's like the way people are protective of family, and you don't tell any secrets outside the family. It becomes our responsibility to be truthful in our portrayal. If someone is going to get upset, that becomes their business."

Not unlike his other series, Milch hopes that audiences will find a passionate connection with Luck through "its ups and its downs, and its tragedies and its successes." And he hopes they make it soon. By nature of the horse-racing circuit and when they'd have to start filming again, the producers are already hard at work on what a second season would look like, though HBO has yet to pick up the series. "I would hope to find out over the next week or two," he says.

Will you be tuning in to Luck?

Luck premieres Sunday at 9/8c on HBO. HBO Go users can watch the second outing immediately following the premiere.

Related Articles on TVGuide.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_hbos_horse_racing_series_luck_big_gamble035900320/44334804/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/hbos-horse-racing-series-luck-big-gamble-035900320.html

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Friday, January 27, 2012

Scientists create first free-standing 3-D cloak

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Researchers in the US have, for the first time, cloaked a three-dimensional object standing in free space, bringing the much-talked-about invisibility cloak one step closer to reality.

Whilst previous studies have either been theoretical in nature or limited to the cloaking of two-dimensional objects, this study shows how ordinary objects can be cloaked in their natural environment in all directions and from all of an observer's positions.

Published today, 26 January, in the Institute of Physics and German Physical Society's New Journal of Physics, the researchers used a method known as "plasmonic cloaking" to hide an 18-centimetre cylindrical tube from microwaves.

Some of the most recent breakthroughs in the field of invisibility cloaking have focussed on using transformation-based metamaterials ? inhomogeneous, man-made materials that have the ability to bend light around objects ? however, this new approach uses a different type of artificial material ? plasmonic metamaterials.

When light strikes an object, it rebounds off its surface towards another direction, just like throwing a tennis ball against a wall. The reason we see objects is because light rays bounce off materials towards our eyes and our eyes are able to process the information.

Due to their unique properties, plasmonic metamaterials have the opposite scattering effect to everyday materials.

"When the scattered fields from the cloak and the object interfere, they cancel each other out and the overall effect is transparency and invisibility at all angles of observation.

"One of the advantages of the plasmonic cloaking technique is its robustness and moderately broad bandwidth of operation, superior to conventional cloaks based on transformation metamaterials. This made our experiment more robust to possible imperfections, which is particularly important when cloaking a 3D object in free-space," said study co-author Professor Andrea Alu.

In this instance, the cylindrical tube was cloaked with a shell of plasmonic metamaterial to make it appear invisible. The system was tested by directing microwaves towards the cloaked cylinder and mapping the resulting scattering both around the object and in the far-field. The cloak showed optimal functionality when the microwaves were at a frequency of 3.1 gigahertz and over a moderately broad bandwidth.

The researchers, from the University of Texas at Austin, have shown in previous studies that the shape of the object is irrelevant; oddly shaped and asymmetric objects can both be cloaked using this technique.

Moving forward, one of the key challenges for the researchers will be to demonstrate the cloaking of a 3D object using visible light.

"In principle, this technique could be used to cloak light; in fact, some plasmonic materials are naturally available at optical frequencies. However, the size of the objects that can be efficiently cloaked with this method scales with the wavelength of operation, so when applied to optical frequencies we may be able to efficiently stop the scattering of micrometre-sized objects.

"Still, cloaking small objects may be exciting for a variety of applications. For instance, we are currently investigating the application of these concepts to cloak a microscope tip at optical frequencies. This may greatly benefit biomedical and optical near-field measurements," continued Professor Alu.

###

Full paper can be downloaded from http://iopscience.iop.org/1367-2630/14/1/013054

Institute of Physics: http://www.iop.org

Thanks to Institute of Physics for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/117087/Scientists_create_first_free_standing___D_cloak

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Gaming Everything ? Blog Archive ? Mortal Kombat Vita due out in ...

January 17th, 2012 Posted in News, Vita Posted By: Valay

Legendary Fighting Series Delivers Award-Winning Action to PS Vita system in 2012

London, United Kingdom ? January 17, 2012 ? Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment announces Mortal Kombat will ship for PlayStation?Vita system in Spring 2012. Developed by NetherRealm Studios, the game delivers an experience designed specifically for on-the-go gaming with brand new gameplay features and content developed exclusively for the new handheld device.

?The NetherRealm team is committed to making sure that we follow up the success of 2011?s Mortal Kombat with an equally compelling experience on the PlayStation Vita,? said Ed Boon, Creative Director, NetherRealm Studios. ?The original game content and new features we developed for the PlayStation Vita will provide gamers with the best fighting game experience available on the new mobile platform.?

Selling more than three million units worldwide in 2011, Mortal Kombat became the highest-selling fighting game of the year and has won numerous ?Best Fighting Game of 2011? awards including Spike TV?s 2011 Video Game Awards, Official Xbox Magazine and GameTrailers.com.

In a triumphant return to the game?s original mature presentation, Mortal Kombat offers over-the-top fatalities and wince-inducing X-ray moves. This latest iteration in the franchise brings the game back to a 2D fighting plane and introduces a number of new gameplay features including Tag Team, Challenge Tower and a deep story mode. Several new features have been developed exclusively for Mortal Kombat for PS Vita system, which will be revealed in the coming months.

For more information about Mortal Kombat, please visit www.themortalkombat.com, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/mortalkombat or on Twitter @MK_Mortalkombat

Source: Warner Bros. Interactive PR

Source: http://gamingeverything.com/14000/mortal-kombat-vita-due-out-in-spring-2012/

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

UK police officer loses Olympic security documents

(AP) ? A British tabloid reported Tuesday that it had been handed documents about security arrangements for the London Olympics that were left on a train by a police officer, the latest in a series of embarrassing mishaps involving British authorities misplacing government documents.

London police confirmed Tuesday that one of its officers lost a bag containing documents on Jan. 5 and reported it to his bosses, but downplayed the incident, adding that the papers were not "operationally sensitive."

"Obviously the loss of restricted material is a matter for concern, but we are satisfied that this does not compromise our security operation for the Olympics," police said in a statement.

The Sun newspaper said it received the documents from a passenger who found them on the train, and that it returned them to the police. It says the papers contain accounts of meetings where security measures were discussed, and details of contingency plans for the Olympics.

The Sun published an image of some of the documents in its print edition, and described in sweeping terms some of the complaints police had about communications systems.

Olympics experts deemed the breach embarrassing.

"It will do nothing but undermine confidence in the Olympics security operation, already brought into question by the prospect of riots and terrorist attacks," said Ellis Cashmore, a professor of culture, media and sport at Staffordshire University in England. "With so much scrutiny, it's almost beyond belief that someone in a responsible position would be guilty of such crass absentmindedness."

Security has been a top priority for the Olympics since 1972, when 11 Israeli athletes and coaches died during a hostage ordeal involving Palestinian extremists at the games in Munich. The nature of nations squared off against nations also opens up the Olympics to an array of political issues.

The incident comes only a few weeks after London police experts managed to smuggle a fake bomb into Olympic Park in a security test. Olympic officials declined to comment directly on the matter, saying such "testing is standard practice" in all major security operations.

Security experts said that while such testing is routine, it underlined the constant and ongoing struggle faced by security forces to create a system that will safeguard the July 27-Aug. 12 event without making London feel like an armed camp.

Authorities have already acknowledged they vastly underestimated the number of people needed to search spectators and otherwise secure venues and other Olympic sites, and have substantially increased the number of military, police and security guards taking part in the games.

U.K. authorities have been criticized over several mishaps involving the loss of sensitive information in recent years.

In January 2008, a computer carrying information on 600,000 prospective military recruits was stolen from the car of a Royal Navy recruitment officer in central England. The month before, the government's top transport official said a disc containing personal information of 3 million driving-test candidates was lost. The Department of Health also lost information on 168,000 patients in a separate incident.

Dwarfing all those incidents was the revelation in November 2007 that British tax officials lost computer discs containing information ? including bank records ? for 25 million people, nearly half the country's inhabitants.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-01-17-OLY-London-2012-Lost-Papers/id-e5a6f7c294a842d8909bba6976ce3927

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Night Vision Video of Concordia's Passengers Going Down the Hull After Captain Abandoned Ship (Updated) [Video]

This night vision video was taken by one of the first rescue helicopters to arrive to the sinking site of the Costa Concordia, the cruise ship that ran aground on the island of Giglio, Italy. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/aLQaCOATV2E/night-vision-video-shows-passengers-walking-through-side-of-sinking-ships-side

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Seal Plastic Bags with Aluminum Foil and an Iron [Macgyver Tips]

Seal Plastic Bags with Aluminum Foil and an IronOne of the best ways to keep food from spoiling is to seal it in an airtight bag, but you might want to reuse the same bag a food came in instead of putting it in a new Ziploc bag. To do this, reddit user gastropump suggests using an iron to cinch the bag the shut.

It's the same basic premise as a vacuum sealer and works great to keep food lasting longer. With your food inside the bag, fold a piece of aluminum foil over the opening of the bag. Then run the iron over the foil for a few minutes so the plastic melts together. Wait for it to cool and remove the aluminum foil. Now you have an airtight bag to keep your food from spoiling too quickly.

LPT: Seal plastic bags airtight with an iron and aluminum foil | reddit

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/cFrpjftTBt4/seal-plastic-bags-with-aluminum-foil-and-an-iron

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Monday, January 16, 2012

Environmental fears mount in Italian cruise wreck

An Italian firefighter helicopter airlifts a rescued passenger from the luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia which ran aground off the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2012. Firefighters worked Sunday to rescue a crew member with a suspected broken leg from the overturned hulk of the luxury cruise liner Costa Concordia, 36 hours after it ran aground. More than 40 people are still unaccounted-for. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

An Italian firefighter helicopter airlifts a rescued passenger from the luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia which ran aground off the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2012. Firefighters worked Sunday to rescue a crew member with a suspected broken leg from the overturned hulk of the luxury cruise liner Costa Concordia, 36 hours after it ran aground. More than 40 people are still unaccounted-for. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Italian firefighters' scuba divers approach the luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia which ran aground a day earlier off the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2012. The incident sent water pouring in through a 160-foot (50-meter) gash in the hull and forced the evacuation of some 4,200 people from the listing vessel early Saturday, the Italian coast guard said. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Italian firefighters scuba divers approach the cruise ship Costa Concordia leaning on its side, the day after running aground the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2012. A helicopter on Sunday airlifted a third survivor from the capsized hulk of a luxury cruise ship 36 hours after it ran aground off the Italian coast, as prosecutors confirmed they were investigating the captain for manslaughter charges and abandoning the ship. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Italian firefighters' scuba divers approach the luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia which ran aground off the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2012. The Costa Concordia cruise ship ran aground off the coast of Tuscany, sending water pouring in through a 160-foot (50-meter) gash in the hull and forcing the evacuation of some 4,200 people from the listing vessel early Saturday, the Italian coast guard said. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

A passenger from South Korea, top left, disembarks from an Italian Firefighter boat after being rescued from the luxury cruise ship Costa Concordia which ran aground the tiny Tuscan island of Giglio, Italy, Sunday, Jan. 15, 2012. The luxury cruise ship ran aground off the coast of Tuscany, sending water pouring in through a 160-foot (50-meter) gash in the hull and forcing the evacuation of some 4,200 people from the listing vessel early Saturday, the Italian coast guard said. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

(AP) ? Italy's cruise liner tragedy turned into an environmental crisis Monday, as rough seas battering the stricken mega-ship raised fears that fuel might leak into pristine waters off Tuscany that are part of a protected sanctuary for dolphins, porpoises and whales.

The ship's jailed captain, meanwhile, lost the support of the vessel's Italian owner as he battled prosecutors' claims that he caused the deadly wreck that killed at least six and left 29 missing.

Earlier, authorities had said 16 people were missing. But an Italian Coast Guard official, Marco Brusco, said late Monday that 25 passengers and four crew members were unaccounted for three days after the disaster. He didn't explain the jump, but indicated 10 of the missing are Germans. Two Americans are also among the missing.

At least three families of Italian passengers have said that despite their loved ones' being listed among those safely evacuated, they hadn't heard from them.

There still is "a glimmer of hope" that there could be survivors on parts of the vast Costa Concordia that not have been searched by rescuers, Brusco said. A search of the above-water portion of the ship last yielded a survivor, a crewman who had broken his leg, on Sunday.

Waters that had remained calm for the first three days of the rescue turned choppy Monday, shifting the wreckage of the Costa Concordia and temporarily suspending divers' searches for survivors. A search for bodies was suspended overnight.

Italy's environmental minister raised the alarm about a potential environmental catastrophe if any of the 500,000 gallons (2,300 tons) of fuel begins to leak into the waters off Giglio, which are popular with scuba divers and form part of the protected Tuscan archipelago.

"At the moment there haven't been any fuel leaks, but we have to intervene quickly to avoid an environmental disaster," Corrado Clini told RAI state radio.

Even before the accident there had been mounting calls from environmentalists to restrict passage of large ships in the area.

The ship's operator, Costa Crociere SpA, has enlisted Smit of Rotterdam, Netherlands, one of the world's biggest salvagers, to handle the removal of the 1,000-foot (290-meter) cruise liner. A study could come as early as Tuesday on how to extract the fuel safely.

Smit has a long track record of dealing with wrecks and leaks, including refloating grounded bulk carriers and securing drilling platforms in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. A spokesman for Smit did not immediately return calls seeking comment on the Concordia salvage.

The Italian cruise operator said Capt. Francesco Schettino intentionally strayed from the ship's authorized course into waters too close to a perilous reef, causing it to crash late Friday off the tiny island of Giglio and capsize.

The navigational version of a "fly by" was apparently made as a favor to the chief waiter who is from Giglio and whose parents live on the island, local media reported.

A judge on Tuesday is to decide whether Schettino should remain jailed.

"We are struck by the unscrupulousness of the reckless maneuver that the commander of the Costa Concordia made near the island of Giglio," prosecutor Francesco Verusio told reporters. "It was inexcusable."

The head of the U.N. agency on maritime safety said lessons must be learned from the Concordia disaster 100 years after the Titanic rammed into an iceberg, leading to the first international convention on sea safety.

"We should seriously consider the lessons to be learned and, if necessary, re-examine the regulations on the safety of large passenger ships in the light of the findings of the casualty investigation," said Koji Sekimizu, secretary-general of the International Maritime Organization.

Miami-based Carnival Corp., which owns Costa, estimated that preliminary losses from having the Concordia out of operation for at least through 2012 would be between $85 million and $95 million, though it said there would be other costs as well. The company's share price slumped more than 16 percent Monday.

Two of the missing are Americans, identified by their family as Jerry Heil, 69, and his wife Barbara, 70, from White Bear Lake, Minnesota.

Costa Crociere chairman and CEO Pier Luigi Foschi said the company would provide Schettino with legal assistance, but he disassociated Costa from his behavior, saying it broke all rules and regulations.

"Capt. Schettino took an initiative of his own will which is contrary to our written rules of conduct," Foschi said in his first public comments since the grounding.

At a news conference in Genoa, the company's home base, Foschi said that Costa ships have their routes programmed, and alarms go off when they deviate. Those alarms are disabled if the ship's course is manually altered, he said.

"This route was put in correctly upon departure from Civitavecchia," Foschi said, referring to the port outside Rome. "The fact that it left from this course is due solely to a maneuver by the commander that was unapproved, unauthorized and unknown to Costa."

Foschi said only once before had the company approved a "fly by" of this sort off Giglio ? last year on the night of Aug. 9-10. In that case, the port and company had approved it.

Residents, however, said such displays have occurred several times in the past, though always in the summer when the island is full of tourists.

Foschi didn't respond directly to prosecutors' and passengers' accusations that Schettino abandoned ship before all passengers had been evacuated, but he suggested his conduct wasn't as bad in the hours of the evacuation as has been portrayed. He didn't elaborate.

The Italian coast guard says Schettino defied their entreaties for him to return to his ship as the chaotic evacuation of the 4,200 people aboard was in full progress. After the ship's tilt put many life rafts out of service, helicopters had to pluck to safety dozens of people remaining aboard, hours after Schettino was seen leaving the vessel.

The captain has insisted in an interview before his jailing that he stayed with the vessel to the end.

Foschi defended the conduct of the crew, while acknowledging that passengers had described a chaotic evacuation where crew members consistently downplayed the seriousness of the situation as the ship lurched to the side.

"All our crew members behaved like heroes. All of them," he said.

He noted that 4,200 people managed to evacuate a lilting ship at night within two hours. In addition, the ship's evacuation procedures had been reviewed last November by an outside firm and port authorities and no faults were found, he said.

Once on land, the survivors complained that Costa was stingy with assistance.

Blake Miller, on board to celebrate his partner's 50th birthday, said Costa representatives rebuffed his efforts to get some reimbursement so he could buy a change of clothing.

"The Costa representative at our hotel told me, 'you might want to get a lawyer when you get back to the States,'" to pursue reimbursement, Miller told The Associated Press from his hotel in Rome Sunday night, where he was staying at his own expense.

Only passengers who had paid for special insurance to cover lost belongings would receive compensation to buy replacements, he said they were told.

Costa Crociere didn't immediately respond to a phone message or an emailed request for a response.

Miller, from Austin, Texas, said survivors were taken to a hotel near Rome's airport and told Costa would pay for one night's stay and their plane fare home only "if we pack up and leave the country" on Sunday morning.

Miller, who is director of business travel for Intercontinental hotels, said Costa representatives spoke to passengers about potential refunds or free cruise vouchers. But besides what he paid for the cruise, he said he paid several hundred more euros (dollars) for excursions during port calls and drinks on board.

Foschi, the Costa CEO, said he was certain "we'll be able to find a material solution that will make them happy."

Class action suits are a rare novelty in Italy, but Italian consumer advocacy organization Codacons said more than 70 passengers had indicated that they wanted to join a class-action approach to winning compensation from Costa.

"Our aim is to make every passenger obtain an indemnity of at least euro10,000 (more than $12,500) for the material damage suffered and for moral damage, such as the terror suffered, ruined vacations and the grave risks that they ran," said Codacons president Carlo Rienzi.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-01-16-EU-Italy-Cruise-Aground/id-05255f07531b4be78ca7ddaf14c54578

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'Contraband' swipes No. 1 spot at box office

In this film image released by Universal Pictures, Mark Wahlberg, left, and Ben Foster are shown in a scene from "Contraband." (AP Photo/Universal Pictures, Patti Perret)

In this film image released by Universal Pictures, Mark Wahlberg, left, and Ben Foster are shown in a scene from "Contraband." (AP Photo/Universal Pictures, Patti Perret)

In this film image released by Warner Bros., Queen Latifah, left, and Courtney B. Vance are shown in a scene from "Joyful Noise." (AP Photo/Warner Bros., Van Redin)

Cast member Dolly Parton arrives at the premiere of "Joyful Noise" in Los Angeles, Monday, Jan. 9, 2012. "Joyful Noise" will be released in theaters Jan. 13, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

(AP) ? "Contraband" managed to steal the top slot away from competitors at the weekend box office.

The Universal action drama film starring Mark Wahlberg as a reformed smuggler debuted above expectations at No. 1 with $24 million, while Disney's 3-D rerelease of "Beauty and the Beast" waltzed into the No. 2 position with $18.5 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. Both films helped boost Hollywood's business after a sluggish holiday season.

"It's great to have an uptick in the total box office, and Universal is thrilled that 'Contraband' was the driving force behind that," said Nikki Rocco, head of distribution for the studio. "I think it's combination of a great marketing campaign, audiences love Mark Wahlberg and (producer) Working Title made a terrific movie, particularly for the cost."

"Joyful Noise," the Warner Bros.' musical comedy starring Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton, opened below expectations with $11.3 million in the No. 4 spot behind Paramount's "Mission: Impossible ? Ghost Protocol," which earned $11.5 million in its fifth week, bringing the total haul of the fourth installment of the Tom Cruise action franchise to $186.7 million.

"The Devil Inside," Paramount's horror film that scared up a massive $33.7 million debut last weekend, experienced a steep 77 percent drop in its second weekend, coming in at No. 6 with $7.9 million. Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian said the film's terrifying plunge didn't matter because the independently produced movie already made a huge profit.

"Horror movies typically drop big, but that is a huge drop," said Dergarabedian. "It doesn't matter because 'Devil Inside' is a profit-making machine. If your budget is low enough, who cares if it drops big and you're making money? It's already one of the most profitable films of the past year, so there's nothing really to complain about there."

Overall domestic revenues totaled $114.5 million, on par with the same weekend last year, when "The Green Hornet" led with $33.5 million and the box office totaled $115 million, according to box-office tracker Hollywood.com.

___

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "Contraband," $24 million ($1.5 million international).

2. "Beauty and the Beast," $18.5 million.

3. "Mission: Impossible ? Ghost Protocol," $11.5 million ($16.8 million international).

4. "Joyful Noise," $11.3 million.

5. "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows," $8.4 million ($27.4 million international).

6. "The Devil Inside," $7.9 million.

7. "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," $6.8 million ($16.5 million international).

8. "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked," $5.8 million ($14.4 million international).

9. "War Horse," $5.6 million ($8.5 million international).

10. "The Iron Lady," $5.3 million ($3.4 million international).

___

Estimated weekend ticket sales at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada) for films distributed overseas by Hollywood studios, according to Rentrak:

1. "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows," $27.4 million.

2. "Mission: Impossible ? Ghost Protocol," $16.8 million.

3. "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," $16.5 million.

4. "Puss in Boots," $14.6 million.

5. "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked," $14.4 million.

6. "The Darkest Hour," $9.6 million.

7. "War Horse," $8.5 million.

8. "J. Edgar," $6.4 million.

9. "The Muppets," $3.5 million.

10. (tie). "The Adventures of Tintin," $3.4 million.

10. (tie). "The Iron Lady," $3.4 million.

___

Online:

http://www.hollywood.com

http://www.rentrak.com

___

AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-01-15-Box%20Office/id-ae2caed452a243528b6d76b2110ea033

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Tim Burton Talks 'Beetlejuice 2' Possibilities

Tim Burton is busy, as he always is. There's the Johnny Depp-ledadaptation of the soap opera "Dark Shadows," his long-running update of his "Frankenweenie" animated project, and his producing work on the live screen "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" (in case you forgot about that one, not that you could). All of those projects look exciting, [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2012/01/13/tim-burton-talks-beetlejuice-2-possibilities/

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Sunday, January 15, 2012

Lopez, Anthony promoting new project (omg!)

In this June 7, 2011 photo, Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez attend the Samsung Hope for Children Gala in New York. The stars, who announced last summer they were ending their marriage after seven years, appeared on a stage Saturday, Jan. 14, 2012, to talk briefly about a new music series they are doing together. "Q'Viva! The Chosen" premieres on Univision on Jan. 28. Anthony reached down to offer his hand and help Lopez climb three stairs to the stage, and later admired the four sparkling rings on her left hand. They sat side by side on director's chairs. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer)

PASADENA, California (AP) ? Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony were together again on Saturday ? at least to promote their new project.

The stars, who announced last summer they were ending their marriage after seven years, appeared on a stage Saturday to talk briefly about a new music series they are doing together. "Q'Viva! The Chosen" premieres on Univision on Jan. 28.

Anthony reached down to offer his hand and help Lopez climb three stairs to the stage, and later admired the four sparkling rings on her left hand. They sat side by side on director's chairs.

The two stars, along with Jamie King, travel throughout north and south America to search for artists who will come to the United States and participate in a live show of Latin music and entertainment. It airs in 12 weekly episodes in the U.S. and on Spanish-language stations across Latin America. An English-language version is planned later for Fox.

Anthony and Lopez were working this week to judge some of the contestants, Univision said.

"It was like any time that we work together," said Lopez, who wore a tight blue leather mini-dress for the morning news conference. "We have a great time working together."

Lopez, also a judge on Fox's "American Idol," said she'd be open to doing another season if the first one is successful.

Anthony said that there's been a misconception that "Q'Viva! The Chosen" is just a talent show.

"We're not judges," he said. "We're show producers. We're putting together a live show and we're documenting the process."

Their time on stage was limited. The news conference began 30 minutes late, and a reporter shouted down a talkative emcee to demand that journalists be allowed to ask questions.

Only two were allowed before Univision began a musical performance. Afterward, the stars were hustled offstage as Adele's hit about a breakup, "Rolling in the Deep," was played over the public address system.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_lopez_anthony_promoting_project172739514/44179345/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/lopez-anthony-promoting-project-172739514.html

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How a 1991 Disney Memo Predicted the Current State of the Movie Industry

On January 11, 1991, the then-head of Disney studios, Jeffrey Katzenberg, circulated an incredibly important memo about the state of the movie industry and the products they were making. It was called, ?The World is Changing: Some Thoughts on Our Business,? and it had a simple purpose: to locate the root of a growing problem and to take steps to avoid falling victim to it.

Katzenberg began the memo by stating:

?As we begin the new year, I strongly believe we are entering a period of great danger and even greater uncertainty. Events are unfolding within and without the movie industry that are extremely threatening to our studio.?

As we begin a new year two decades after this memo was written, it?s critical to look back at the points Katzenberg made to see that his period of great danger is now our period of great danger, to note that the same events unfolding within and without the industry still threaten the entire studio system in 2012, and to predict our future based on the past.

There are definite similarities between 1991 and 2012. The country was in a recession then and finds itself crawling out of one now. We were dealing with an Iraq invasion then, and we?re dealing with the aftermath of another now. The country was losing economic power while maintaining cultural dominance then, and it?s the same story now. Disney was the #1 studio then, and although they weren?t last year, they still busted $1b while coming in at #4.

Studios are still judging box office success against Batman.

Now, with all this talk about money, it might seem like fans have no stake in this game, but we all do. Imagine the top six studios from last year (Paramount, Warners, Sony, Disney, Universal and Fox) as players at a poker table. When the chip stacks are high, they can all afford to test the pot with some wild hands. They can get creative with what they play. Unfortunately, the stacks aren?t high, which means they can?t get as loose, and while some attractive cards may come their way, they?re all trying to get dealt a full house.

That means the same hand being played for fans, and for those that like variety in their life, these are the salad days. But we?ll get to that later when we optimistically predict the future.

The Katzenberg Memo

For now, let?s live in the past with Mr. Katzenberg. At its core, his 1991 memo has three major statements to make about how movies are made:

  1. The Blockbuster Mentality ? There is no middle ground anymore because massive resources are put into 1-3 movies per year that hold the fate of the studio hostage. Instead of making ten $30m movies, they make one $300m flick that has to succeed in record-breaking ways. To do that, all efforts must be focused on a giant opening weekend that will earn notoriety alongside a big chunk of the overall gross. Further, even if the film does well, it will be called a failure if it doesn?t make as much as Batman (1989). The result? Overspending on a dangerously difficult bar to clear while over projects go unfunded.
  2. The Movie Industry Isn?t Recession-Proof ? As Katzenberg points out, the reason movies appear to be recession-proof is because people have historically run to escapist entertainment during hard times. The facts might partially support the theory, but Katzenberg shows the theory itself to be misguided ? stating that, ?When there is fear and uncertainty, the people have craved bargain entertainment. During previous downturns, the best escapist entertainment value was at the movie theaters. But no longer.?
  3. The Rise and Fall of the Movie Star ? With the inflation of budgets and grosses, two things happened almost simultaneously. One, actors (and writers and directors and everyone) started (rightfully) demanding their fair share of the profits. Two, the concept of movie stars buckled. It?s unclear when ?movie stars? stopped being as bankable as they once were, but actors demanded more money while they had less to do with financial success.

All of these points could be made today.

Coupled with other fads, studios are scrambling hard to make sure that their tentpoles are safe. That?s why Sony is rebooting with The Amazing Spider-Man. It?s why Warners needed The Green Lantern to be a mad success (and why they?re automatically planning on continuing with Batman movies post-Nolan). It?s why the seven highest grossing movies of 2011 were sequels (and why 17 of the highest 20 were either already part of a franchise or the planned beginning of one). Studios can no longer afford to create name recognition ? it has to come built-in.

At the beginning of our most recent recession, analysts like The New Yorker?s James Surowiecki prematurely hailed movies for being recession-proof. Even as late as August of last year, Hollywood.com?s Paul Dergarabedian claimed erroneously that people only focus on price when they have a negative experience while citing it as part of the reason why summer ticket sales were up (further confusing the myth of movies in tough economic times). Of course, at the end of the year, the final numbers showed that ticket sales were about half-a-billion behind 2010 and attendance was at its lowest since 1995. There?s no point in believing a single year is proof of a trend, but it certainly injures the blind belief that movies always do well in times of trouble. They sure didn?t last year.

As for movie stars, the big names still exist, but there are fewer of them and they?ve lost the luster of being sure things. We?re too familiar with them for them to remain glamorous, studios have struggled to foist new unproven ?stars? like Channing Tatum and Sam Worthington on the public, and as Landon Palmer wrote back in 2009, our definition of what makes a movie star has shifted irrevocably and in a way that isn?t nearly as obviously beneficial to the people banking their shots off names and faces.

All of this to show that reading Katzenberg?s memo is a bit jarring because of how accurately it predicts the environment of filmmaking in 2012. Beyond the aforementioned echoes, he comments on theaters being choked by sequels; he shuns the idea that children?s movies are just for kids (something Pixar picked up and ran with); and he alludes to a partnership with Jerry Bruckheimer that won?t necessarily have to be about blockbuster building (which, fair enough, turned out to be a bit wrong). Still, it?s creepy.

True Then, True Now

Considering the current resurgence, it?s fascinating to note that Katzenberg?s negativity toward the Blockbuster Mentality in 1991 is sparked by two comic book movies. The first is Batman and its unforeseeable effect on the way other big movies were judged. The second is Dick Tracy ? Disney?s big budget blockbusting contender that year. In his own words, it was:

??a film that did very well, a film we were rightly proud of, a film that was critically acclaimed? and a film that is still being savagely disparaged as ?having failed to achieve Batman-like success at the box office.?

This is not a healthy situation. If every major studio release must aspire to repeat the 1989 success of Batman, then we will undoubtedly soon see the 1990?s equivalent of Cleopatra, a film that was made in the hope of repeating the 1959 success of Ben Hur.?

And so it goes.

Dick Tracy has a modern equivalent in The Green Lantern. Both are comic book-based and feature cocky heroes who fight crime while hanging out with bizarre-looking characters. Both are technically and visually interesting. Both should have been bigger hits based on the formula that existed. Both pulled in millions of dollars in ticket sales. However, they were both failures in their own ways. Katzenberg prophetically, of course, has an explanation for it. Here, he?s talking about Dick Tracy and The Rescuers Down Under?s inability to grow the ?legs? the studio wanted, but for our purposes, let?s pretend he?s talking about Dick Tracy and Green Lantern:

?In both movies, everything remained static for the main characters. At the end, nothing elemental had changed. To compensate for the lack of an emotionally driving core story, the two films showered the audience with dazzling and inventive ?business.? But much of this failed another test of storytelling ? i.e., the movies would still have made sense had many of these scenes been cut. Just like songs in a musical, no matter how beautiful the melody, if they don?t move the plot along, they don?t belong.?

Spectacle is nice, but it can never compensate for a lack of engaging characters and a compelling story. This is precisely the reason why both of these movies failed to be bigger successes, and it?s the reason (coupled with high pricing) why 3D is fizzling after a year where studios could have sworn it would save them.

What will save them (and save fans)? Writers who can write story. Filmmakers and actors who can deliver great character. Oh, and spectacle-makers who can make magic. They have a place too.

Katzenberg knew this in 1991, but it seems to be a lesson studios haven?t quite learned yet here in 2012. However, with the budget for a tentpole like The Amazing Spider-Man getting trimmed down, maybe they?re on the verge. Maybe they can still change.

The Money Quote

It?s difficult to pin down a singular point from this invaluable piece of writing because it?s so broad in its scope. It covets a principle, a philosophy about film production that can?t be broken up piecemeal. Katzenberg highlights storytelling as their most important job, but the businessman in him shines through as well. So, then, this might be the core message:

?Any film can fail at the box office. And that?s o.k. It?s part of our business. No one can know for certain what the public will want to see. So the basic problem with the above movies [a list of flopped sequels] wasn?t that they were ill conceived or misguided or even bad entertainments. The problem was that they were just too expensive.?

It may seem simple. It may seem to let producers off the hook. It may seem craven, but it gets to the heart of the problem. The Blockbuster Mentality that Katzenberg so fervently fought against has taken over the studio system, including Disney, and threatens fans in a major way. The behemoth idea is anathema to risk-taking, it steals money from the coffers for other movies, and it drives a world of creativity toward toy sales and stagnancy. It?s odd that in a time of panic, people will grab for anything to save them from sinking except solid ground. Maybe the studios have been adrift for so long that they?ve forgotten how to find the shore, but the building blocks of story haven?t changed; the reason the past few years of studio offerings have been so underwhelming is that they?ve been wrapped up in plastic, unable to see what audiences still want.

The answer isn?t more explosions; it?s characters we care about running away from more explosions.

Although he fought hard against a raging sea of change, Katzenberg left Disney a few years after writing this memo to found DreamWorks with Steven Spielberg and David Geffen ? a studio not without Blockbuster Mentality blame here in the future.

A Simple Prediction

What happened in the 1990s after Katzenberg expressed his fear at the laziness of studios? The independent industry grew to fill the void. Filmmakers like Kevin Smith, Ed Burns, Jim Sheridan, Spike Lee, Steven Soderbergh, and Quentin Tarantino led the Indie Movement to critical and commercial heights.

The same thing will happen in this decade. Now that the means to make a movie and the equally important tools to promote the thing are within arm?s reach, the Second Indie Movement that?s been talked about for half a decade is finally ripe for revolution. If quality is missing from studio pictures, audiences will seek it elsewhere (especially if they can find it on iTunes or on their own television screen for a smaller ticket price).

Of course, the studios bought out and co-opted the independent houses of the 90s, too. That will probably happen again as well, but for now, we?re on the cusp of a great change in power unless, and only unless, the studios can remove the rotten core of their production philosophy and replace it with an emphasis on fundamentals over flash. They must realize they?ve fallen victim to the very danger and uncertainty about which Katzenberg warned.

Fortunately, this is all reason to be optimistic for we fans who stand patiently in line at the box office hoping to be transported and transformed. The slump, either by indie takeover or big budget wake-up call, will be over soon.

Until the next one.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1924315/news/1924315/

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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Red Hot Chili Peppers tour delayed

Just when we thought they were revving up to hit the road, the Red Hot Chili Peppers are gonna have to cool their heels for a while.

The SoCal funk rockers have been forced to postpone their upcoming U.S. trek so frontman Anthony Kiedis could undergo an operation on his foot.

Let's hope there's not too much scar tissue.

MORE: Rock's Latest Immortals: Guns N' Roses, The Chili Pepperrs, Beastie Boys

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    4. Happy birthday, Howard Stern
    5. 'Chipwrecked' star: Producer a Jewish stereotype

The Peppers confirmed the news on its website, citing the need for the 49-year-old Kiedis to take care of "multiple foot injuries" that had been plaguing him recently.

"Anthony recently underwent surgery to remove a crushed sesamoid bone and correct a detached flexor tendon in his foot and he's expected to make a full recovery," read a statement on the band's website.

With their singer temporarily sidelined, the Chili Peppers have reshuffled the itinerary for their trek in support of I'm With You--their first new batch of material since 2006's double album Stadium Arcadium.

Instead of kicking off on Jan. 20 in Sunrise, Fla., the jaunt will now get underway on the other side of the coast at the Tampa Bay Times Forum in Tampa Bay on March 29. It's set to run through October with a pitstop in Cleveland on April 14, where the foursome will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame along with Guns N' Roses and the Beastie Boys.

Tickets for the postponed gigs will be honored at the rescheduled dates.

PICS: 2012 Grammy Nominations Concert

? 2012 E! Entertainment Television, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45959243/ns/today-entertainment/

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Friday, January 13, 2012

GOP candidates wade into food stamp debate

-- Politicians normally shy away from saying they want to cut food stamps, but this year's Republican presidential candidates are using domestic food aid as an example of a welfare state gone awry.

Supporters of the program say it is one of the most reliable safety nets for families who suddenly find themselves unable to pay for food, and politically the program has proved almost untouchable over many decades. More than 45 million people received the benefit last year at a $75 billion cost to the government, a record number as the economy has flailed.

Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich and fellow contender Rick Santorum, both heavily involved in congressional welfare reform efforts in the mid-1990s, say the government should stop promoting a welfare-like state and convert food stamp spending to block grants to states, a move that could freeze spending and cut the benefit to many who now receive it. A spokesperson for Republican Mitt Romney says the former Massachusetts governor also supports turning the nation's food stamp program into state block grants, though he rarely mentions it.

Both Gingrich and Santorum faced criticism this week when they spoke of overhauling food stamps and other welfare programs by seeming to equate food stamp recipients and blacks. Gingrich said he would encourage blacks to demand paychecks, not food stamps, and Santorum said that he did not want to "make black people's lives better by giving them somebody else's money. I want to give them the opportunity to go out and earn the money."

According to 2010 census numbers, about 26 percent of food stamp recipients are African-American, while 49 percent are white and 20 percent are Hispanic.

Gingrich often calls President Barack Obama "the food stamp president," a reference to the poor economy and the huge spike in food stamp costs since he took office. The program - now known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP - has more than doubled in cost since 2008, driven by high, sustained unemployment, rising food prices and a temporary expansion of the benefit in the 2009 economic stimulus bill.

Gingrich and Santorum have pushed similar agendas to House Republican leadership, which offered a budget last year that would have converted the food stamp dollars to block grants to states and made the assistance contingent on work or job training. Federal spending on the benefit is currently unlimited for those who qualify, prompting huge spikes in spending as the economy headed south in recent years and many people who had never used the program found themselves out of work and unable to feed their families.

The House passed the budget last year but it died in the Democratic-led Senate. Anti-hunger groups and many Democrats, not surprisingly, have vehemently opposed the idea of block granting food stamp money to states. They say block grants would feed fewer people and could cut as much as 20 percent from the program over a decade.

Romney said in November that he would send food stamps to the state level along with other government programs like Medicaid. He also disagreed with Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack when Vilsack said the aid can be a stimulus to retailers and the economy.

"I think that there's some folks like Tom Vilsack and President Obama himself that imagine that if you just throw money at people, that somehow that will make the economy better," Romney said in August. "But we're out there borrowing money from the Chinese, to hand out money here, and that is not going to get America working again."

Despite conservative sentiment to change the system - and the Republican candidates who are willing to speak out against it - it is unclear whether Congress will ever take on the issue. Gingrich and other Republicans proposed food stamp overhaul as part of the welfare reform signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996, but more moderate Republicans helped block it.

More than 15 years later, the issue has remained on the congressional back burner.

Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, has been working on welfare issues since Ronald Reagan was president. He says he believes there is a public misperception of the issue. While he says the 1990s welfare reform package is generally popular among current voters, many don't want Congress to touch the issue of food stamps.

But Rector believes many people think that recipients are required to look for work or enter job training in order to receive food stamps. When asked if able-bodied adults should be required to try and find work as a prerequisite for aid, many voters agree, he says.

"In the long term what you have to do is transform this program from being a cash entitlement program into a program that promotes work and self-sufficiency," he says.

Vicki Escarra, president of the anti-hunger group Feeding America, says the idea of fixing the deficit by cutting food assistance "lacks both compassion and reason."

"Food stamps and other anti-hunger programs give hope to struggling Americans and protect them from deeper crisis as they work to get back on their feet," she says.

Source: http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/2012/01/09/1886060/gop-candidates-wade-into-food.html

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Xperia HD: le prochain Xperia de Sony Ericsson se d?voile

Le prochain t?l?phone de Sony Ericsson, qui pourrait s'appeler le Sony Ericsson Xperia HD, a ?t? d?voil? par le site ITProPortal, quelques jours avant son lancement officiel au CES de Las Vegas. Si l'appareil offre une am?lioration certaine par rapport ? l'Xperia ARC et ? l'Xperia ARC S, il semble malheureusement que la compagnie n'ait toujours pas r?ussi ? devancer la meute.

En effet, le Sony Ericsson Xperia HD (qui pourrait bien porter un autre nom la semaine prochaine...) devrait offrir un processeur double c?ur MSM8660 cadenc? ? 1,5 GHz, un processeur que l'on retrouve dans des t?l?phones intelligents depuis l'?t? dernier. Malheureusement, celui-ci devrait aussi ?tre ?quip? d'Android Gingerbread ? son lancement.

Son ?cran est toutefois un peu plus prometteur, avec une r?solution de 720, et le t?l?phone sera ?quip? d'un appareil photo num?rique de 12 m?gapixels. L'APN est d'ailleurs la principale force des t?l?phones haut de gamme de Sony Ericsson depuis l'ann?e derni?re.

Pour les autres caract?ristiques, il semble que l'appareil sera ?quip? de 1 Go de m?moire vive. ITProPortal affirme que l'appareil n'offre qu'une capacit? de 8 Go, sans possibilit? d'ajouter de carte microSD, mais j'ai un peu de difficult? ? croire ce dernier point. J'imagine qu'on en aura le c?ur net la semaine prochaine au CES.

Notons finalement que le Xperia HD pourrait ?tre ?quip? d'une carte microSIM, comme l'iPhone, le Nokia Lumia 800 et le Motorola Razr.

Source: http://www.branchez-vous.com/techno/blogues/mobilite/2012/01/xperia-hd-le-prochain-xperia-d.html

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4 dead after standoff in Hocking County, Ohio (AP)

LOGAN, Ohio ? The Hocking County Sheriff's Office says a man shot and killed his wife's two sisters and his son before turning the gun on himself.

Deputies were called to a house about 5 miles north of Logan at about 5:30 p.m. Monday for a possible hostage situation. They stormed the house at about 9 p.m.

According to The Columbus Dispatch (http://bit.ly/x3USV6) a Kentucky man confirms his 63-year-old brother was the shooter. The man says his brother was stressed over caring for his terminally ill wife. He says his brother killed his two sisters-in-law and his son and then killed himself.

Authorities wouldn't confirm the names of those dead.

The newspaper says the wife's son from another marriage escaped. The wife, who has cancer, remained in the home and wasn't shot.

Logan is about 50 miles southeast of Columbus.

___

Information from: The Columbus Dispatch, http://www.dispatch.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120110/ap_on_re_us/us_hostage_standoff_shootings

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

CES 2012: Sony Xperia Ion resmiyet kazand?; 4.6-in? HD ekran, 12 MP kamera ve dahas?

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Source: www.donanimhaber.com --- Monday, January 09, 2012
Las Vegas'da d?zenlenen T?ketici Elektroni?i Fuar? (CES 2012) t?m hareketlili?iyle s?rerken Sony firmas?, ?zerinde bir s?redir konu?ulan Xperia Ion'a resmiyet kazand?rd?.Sade tasar?m?yla ?n plana ??kan Xperia Ion'a, 1.5 GHz saat h?z?nda ?al??an ?ift ?ekirdekli Qualcomm MSM8260 Snapdragon S3 i?lemci, Adreno 220 grafik birimi ve 1 GB RAM hayat veriyor; ak?ll? telefon Google'?n mobil i?letim sistemi Android'in Gingerbread versiyonunu kullan?yor. ...

Source: http://www.donanimhaber.com/CES_2012_Sony_Xperia_on_resmiyet_kazandi_46inc_HD_ekran_12_MP_kamera_ve_dahasi-31215.htm

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Sony keeps on rocking the Cyber-shot with three new models

Sony's beefing up its Cyber-shot line with three new point-and-shoots, the similarly named DSC-W610, -W620 and -W650. The low-end W610 rocks 14.1 megapixels, 4x optical zoom and a 2.7 inch LCD for $110. For $10 more, you can be the proud owner of the W620, which adds in 720p video capture and built-in effects. The $150 W650, meanwhile, brings 16.1 megapixels and a three-inch LCD. All three models feature Steadyshot image stabilization, intelligent auto mode and the 360 degree Sweep Panorama mode, which gives you stitched together panoramic shots with the push of a button. Press release and remotely related Beastie Boys music video after the break, because they got more hits than Rod Carew.

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