Wednesday, December 28, 2011

After 3-month break, Mubarak trial resumes

Nile TV via AFP - Getty Images

A still image taken from Egypt's Nile TV shows Hosni Mubarak being wheeled on a hospital stretcher into court for the resumption of his trial on Wednesday.

By Ayman Mohyeldin, NBC News
CAIRO -- The trial of former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, his two sons, the former minister of interior and six senior security officials resumed in a Cairo court on Wednesday after nearly a?three-month recess.

Egyptian TV showed 83-year-old Mubarak, covered by a green blanket and lying on a hospital gurney as he was brought from a helicopter and taken to an ambulance for the short ride to the courthouse.


The men are all facing murder charges for ordering security forces to kill demonstrators while trying to suppress an 18-day popular uprising against the 30-year rule of Mubarak that began on Jan 25, 2011.

The trial was in recess for close to three months because a separate petition had been filed to replace the presiding judge. That petition was not granted and the same judge will continue to preside over the trial.

On Wednesday, defense attorneys asked the judge to call senior members of the intelligence services and other branches of Egypt's Armed Forces who were serving during the revolution and since then to testify.

The defense is arguing the security forces were acting within the law to contain the uprising but were never given specific orders to "kill" demonstrators.

So far, the most critical testimony of the trial has come from Field Marshall Mohammed Hussien Tantawi, the Commander of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, the ruling military council. His testimony has been sealed for security reasons. The defense has also requested the judge hear the testimony of SCAF second-in-command Field Marshall Sami Annan, Chief-of-Staff of the Armed Forces.

The defense believes the two men and other senior officials will testify that they were never given orders by the former president to kill protestors.

The trial has been adjourned until Monday, Jan.?2.

Journalist are allowed to attend the trial under very strict rules as to what they can publish. Egyptian State TV, which was originally allowed to broadcast the trial, has since been barred from broadcasting the trial live.

Revolutionary groups have had a long-standing demand that Mubarak and his aides stand trial for the killing of protestors. The delay in the start of trial and it's lack of transparency has led many to criticize the SCAF that it was?never serious about bringing the former president to justice.

Source: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9765436-after-3-month-recess-mubarak-trial-resumes-in-cairo

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CTVOlympics: Happy Holidays from the #CTVOlympics team! We are just days away from an Olympic year- London 2012.

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Happy Holidays from the #CTVOlympics team! We are just days away from an Olympic year- London 2012. CTVOlympics

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Source: http://twitter.com/CTVOlympics/statuses/150969524747907072

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Set Up and Get to Know Your New Tech Gifts [Merrychristmahanukwanzaakkah]

Set Up and Get to Know Your New Tech GiftsYou've unwrapped your presents and received everything you'd hoped you'd get. But now what? We've got you covered this holiday season with several guides to help you get acquainted with your brand new gadgets.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/vlzWw8mT0qU/set-up-and-get-to-know-your-new-tech-gifts

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

UpTo Lands Seed Funding To Go ?Beyond Status Updates And Check-ins?

uptoA new, relatively stealth startup called Rock City Apps is gearing up for the launch of a mobile application called UpTo, and has raised an undisclosed amount in seed funding from Detroit Venture Partners and Ludlow Ventures to finance the development of the product. The company, which is based in Detroit, Michigan, plans to launch its first iPhone app 'soon' and lets you indicate your interest by inviting you to sign up to receive an invitation to the private beta. You can do that here.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/8G7K8FB2Oco/

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98% Le Havre

All Critics (54) | Top Critics (23) | Fresh (53) | Rotten (1)

'Tis the season, so the saying goes. And when it comes to Aki Kaurism?ki, it holds true. The Finnish writer-director arrives bearing a gift wrapped in a contemporary immigration fable.

If the bummers and ambiguity of some of this season's movies are getting you down - or, hey, just the bummers and ambiguities of life - make your way to Le Havre. You won't be sorry.

The Finnish director's sense of humor is dry and dark as pitch, as he consistently finds moments of absurdity in the midst of strife and tragedy.

Kaurism?ki wrote the script, I think, with secret credit from Mother Goose and some fabric softener.

"Le Havre" is a small bit of movie magic, a story that plays more as a fable even as it deals with something as topical as immigration.

The film is especially comforting if you love old movies, as Kaurismaki does.

While the film never reaches any hugely profound revelations with its parable-styled stories of compassion and community, and occasionally feels a little slight, it's also enormously enjoyable and gorgeous to watch.

It's a puzzle, and an intriguing one.

In two stories of evolving trust and secrets, Le Havre reflects the essential simplicity of the moral choices made in its simple-seeming camera set-ups.

Kaurismaki's movie about a shoeshine man and an illegal immigrant is nothing less than a joy

A wonderfully concise, unfussy movie; it is "easy" by the director's standards, which is to say that it doesn't leave any significant ellipses in the narrative up until the aggressively darling ending.

...an upbeat little tome that leaves a good feeling to the spirit.

Kaurism?ki can almost restore your hope in humanity.

Kaurismaki dives into French film culture in 'Le Havre'

You almost become a citizen of Le Havre, watching this film and rejoicing at the end as two newfound, unexpected friends share a drink.

It's a straightforward yet completely artificial scenario, with welcome overtones of Italian Neo-Realism.

Unlike the director's typical hero, Wilms's spare performance conveys confidence rather than defeat. He and the kid warm the heart, thawing Kaurism?ki's usual icy aplomb.

Heart-wrenching but ultimately inspirational.

Le Havre is not the filmmaker's best work (see La Vie de Boh?me for that), but no matter the storm, we should be grateful to dock in this port.

More Critic Reviews

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/le_havre_2011/

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Are You Watching This?! sports tracker for Android adds remote control for DirecTV, TiVo, Google TV

The Are You Watching This?! app has a long history of making sure sports fans don't miss the big games with its bookmarklets and apps that popped up notifications or emailed reminders. Now a new upgrade on Android, along with a few connected TV platforms, has taken things to the next level. In its newest iteration, the free app ties into DirecTV, TiVo or Google TV setups with IP control for one click switching to the appropriate channel -- key when a game is coming down to the last play and you're not sure where the remote is or which channel NBA / NFL / MLB etc. action is on. There's varying levels of filtering options so users can see alerts just when their team is playing, any decent matchup or just the must-see finishes.

We gave it a shot and found it worked as advertised, only requiring the app to be installed and enabled on the Google TV and our Android phone (DirecTV and TiVo boxes should be ready to go), however even though we already had our local channels set up on the TV, we had to enter our ZIP and cable provider on the remote app as well. We're starting to see similar companion technology built into apps from DirecTV, TiVo and Comcast, as well as Dijit's software, however the RUWT? game tracker algorithm and focus on live scores gives it a leg up for sports freaks. Check out the video trailer embedded above for a quick look or hop over to the Android Market to install it on phone, tablet and/or TV.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/EngadgetHd/~3/51FkOizkohQ/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Falcons Hit the Community During Holidays

The Atlanta Falcons are always looking for ways to give back to the community, especially during the holiday season. In the coming days, AtlantaFalcons.com will feature several community highlights, including a very special community episode of D-Block. Below are some of the things players have been involved in and will continue to be involved in this week.

  • Running back Jason Snelling treated five families to a special night at Dave & Busters at Discover Mills Mall in Duluth, Ga. The families had an opportunity to participate in all the games and ate dinner. Snelling surprised each family with gifts for the holidays.
  • The Atlanta Falcons linebackers, led by LB Mike Peterson and the Mike Peterson Foundation, treated children from the Hall County Boys & Girls Club and Wednesday?s Child to a shopping spree for the holidays at the Walmart in Oakwood, Ga. The players shopped with the children, giving them an opportunity to not only shop for themselves, but also for family members. Video of D-Block?s shopping event will be on AtlantaFalcons.com on Friday.
  • The Atlanta Falcons defensive line gave 40 children from the Atlanta Urban Ministries to a shopping spree for the holidays at a local Walmart in Suwanee, Ga. Atlanta Urban Ministries works in Midtown Atlanta to assist homeless and financially challenged women and children to break the cycles of hunger, homelessness, and poverty that entrap them. It provides them with meal assistance, financial aid, empowerment through pre-employment and life skills training, and educational programs for children. This assistance helps families meet their most basic needs as they transition out of homelessness and poverty.
  • The Atlanta Falcons Rookie Club, sponsored by United Healthcare of Georgia, gave 25 children from the Metro Atlanta Boys & Girls Club a shopping spree for the holidays at a local Dick?s Sporting Goods in Buford, Ga.
  • Tight end Tony Gonzalez hosted ?Shop with a Jock,? a program offering underprivileged and homeless children the opportunity to bond with professional athletes and shop during the holidays. Gonzalez, joined by his Falcons teammates, accompanied children from the Atlanta Mission, which offers six emergency housing shelters in the metro area, for an unforgettable shopping experience. Held this year at the Walmart in Suwanee, Ga., more than 30 children receiveed dinner courtesy of Walmart. Additionally, the Tony Gonzalez Foundation and Walmart partnered to provide each child with a $100 gift card. Finally, each child received a backpack filled with overnight supplies and a Tony Gonzalez Shadow Buddy doll, courtesy of the Shadow Buddies Foundation. Video of Gonzalez?s event will be on AtlantaFalcons.com on Christmas Day.
  • Wide receiver Harry Douglas hosted his third annual Holiday Treat Festival in his hometown of Jonesboro, Ga. At the event, families and children received free toys, haircuts, health screenings, dinner and participated in several other activities. Douglas was joined by Falcons teammates.
  • Fullback Mike Cox and his wife Dana, hosted a holiday party at the Walter Boys & Girls Club in Gainesville, Ga., for 20 families. The party included a holiday dinner, gifts, music and many other fun-filled activities.
  • Inspirational Falcons Stories

    Source: http://www.atlantafalcons.com/2011/12/falcons-hit-the-community-during-holidays/

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    Thursday, December 22, 2011

    Researcher uncovers Windows 7 flaw via Safari browser

    The vulnerability, described in a tweet by webdevil, was confirmed by Secunia, which it categorized as a ?highly critical? flaw providing remote system access to an attacker.

    ?A vulnerability has been discovered in Microsoft Windows, which can be exploited by malicious people to potentially compromise a user's system?, Secunia said.

    ?The vulnerability is caused due to an error in win32k.sys and can be exploited to corrupt memory via, e.g., a specially crafted web page containing an IFRAME with an overly large 'height' attribute viewed using the Apple Safari browser. Successful exploitation may allow execution of arbitrary code with kernel-mode privileges. The vulnerability is confirmed on a fully patched Windows 7 Professional 64-bit. Other versions may also be affected?, it warned. Secunia stressed that ?no effective solution is currently available.?

    Microsoft told Kaspersky Lab that they are looking into the reported vulnerability. "We are currently examining the issue and will take appropriate action to help ensure the customers are protected", said Jerry Bryant, group manager of response communications in Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing Group.

    Source: http://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/view/22823/researcher-uncovers-windows-7-flaw-via-safari-browser/

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    Monday, December 19, 2011

    Time short for S&P to end 2011 higher (Reuters)

    NEW YORK (Reuters) ? With two weeks left in the trading year, the euro zone debt crisis will remain the primary impediment to pushing the S&P 500 index into positive territory for 2011.

    Uncertainty over progress in the region, along with the potential for credit rating downgrades on euro zone countries, have kept investors on edge and market volatility high.

    Even with a fairly busy U.S. economic calendar, which includes a batch of data on the housing market, the final reading on gross domestic product and durable goods orders, markets will focus on developments from Europe.

    "What everybody is going to look at is the same thing they've been looking at -- every time a German official opens their mouth we get crushed," said Paul Mendelsohn, chief investment strategist at Windham Financial Services in Charlotte, Vermont.

    "I'm keeping my fingers crossed that Santa Claus is out there. But we've got to see something."

    The benchmark S&P 500 index (.SPX)(.INX) is down about 3 percent for the year and would need to climb above 1,257.64 in order to end higher for the year.

    A rally by stocks on Friday fizzled, and the market ended with only modest gains after the latest credit warning about possible downgrades of European nations. For the week, the Dow fell 2.7 percent, the S&P lost 2.9 percent and the Nasdaq was down 3.5 percent.

    Italy's prime minister urged European policymakers on Friday to beware of dividing the continent in the effort to contain the debt crisis, warning against a "short-term hunger for rigor" in some countries, in a swipe at Germany.

    Stocks have been whipsawed as investors weigh the threat from the euro zone crisis against modest improvement in U.S. economic data and stocks that many regard as cheap.

    "There do appear to be some improving economic indicators domestically, but it's hard to see how they win the day if Europe continues to be a big concern. It's not like the valuations are at such bargain-basement prices that it becomes a one-way bet," said Stephen Massocca, managing director at Wedbush Morgan in San Francisco.

    As volumes begin to dry up and market moves become more exaggerated during the holiday period, the volatility may help lift the stock market into the plus column.

    CHANCE OF RALLY

    "Can you see an upside rally? Certainly, because you are going to have some asset managers in the end who are going to try and just push it so the market ends at the very least flat on the year, if not higher," said Ken Polcari, managing director at ICAP Equities in New York.

    "If there is going to be a rally at all, it will happen on light volume because there will be fewer and fewer participants. When there is less volume, you do have the ability to have those exaggerated moves, but people will take advantage of that."

    Volatility in individual shares could also be affected by corporate earnings preannouncements. There have been 97 negative earnings preannouncements issued by S&P 500 corporations for the fourth quarter, compared to 26 positive preannouncements, resulting in a negative-to-positive ratio of 3.7. That's the highest in 10 years, according to Thomson Reuters data.

    Companies that have provided outlooks in recent weeks include DuPont (DD.N), Intel Corp (INTC.O), United Technologies Corp (UTX.N) and Texas Instruments Inc (TXN.N).

    Unexpected management shakeups could also be on the horizon and increase the tumult in stocks. Both Cablevision Systems Corp (CVC.N) and the New York Times Co (NYT.N) saw high-level executives suddenly leave their posts.

    But stock movements next week will ultimately be dictated by actions taken in Europe, with the light volume exacerbating market swings.

    "The only thing that is going to be of any interest is certainly the continuing headlines on Europe, whether or not they come any closer to what looks like a potential agreement," said Polcari.

    "You may get a little bit of a push to the 1,250 to 1,270 range, but much beyond that I don't see why it would go any higher unless you get some explosive announcement out of Europe."

    (Reporting By Chuck Mikolajczak; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111217/bs_nm/us_usa_stocks_weekahead

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    Saturday, December 17, 2011

    Managing Your Significant Other When Working from Home [Productivity]

    Managing Your Significant Other When Working from HomeHome office veteran David Tate knows a thing or two about working from home without going insane, but there's one management challenge that can be particularly tricky: No matter how sound your relationship, a work-from-home lifestyle can be tough on your significant other. Here's how he handles it.

    When you start working from home you have to prepare those around you for the inevitable consequences of this new lifestyle. I'd recommend telling your neighbors, kids, pets, imaginary friend(s), team of personal therapists, and parole officer. Of course, the absolute most important person to prepare is your Significant Other (SO). A lot of people who try working from home give up after about a month and when you ask them why they say "I was driving my SO crazy so she threw a burrito at my face". If you do not properly handle the work from home transition (aka "The Great Move Away From Pants") you will eventually have a burrito thrown at you.

    When you start working from home your SO's life is going to change in unexpected ways and they need to be prepared for this shift. The way you communicate, interact, and smell are all going to change in ways that they don't expect.

    Why? Because of mismatched expectations about the benefits to their lives. The sad reality is that working from home does not offer many benefits to the significant other. Well maybe you will look at them more and be able to do cool things like eat lunch with them sometimes or do them small favors. But the reality is that telecommuting (i.e. riding your phone to work) has certain realities that lead to other not so pleasant realities for your SO:

    Change for you Consequence for your spouse
    You can achieve higher productivity because you don't have to deal with others slowing you down You are less patient
    Less physical interaction with others Your SO now lives with a slightly crazy person who thinks that eating cereal with eggnog instead of milk is totally normal
    Cooler coffee breaks, low key lifestyle They slowly begin to become jealous of the fact that you get to listen to music/watch Oprah while working
    No longer have to shave or get all dressed up They now live with a person who thinks track suits are a good look
    Full-time access to Internet and kitchen Live with 120% more juvenile and fatter version of you
    You are always around You are 140% more annoying

    You can see these realities and mismatched expectations when you announce your transition:

    Honey, I'm going to start working from home.

    Your SO hears other things:

    Sweetheart, I am now available to wait for packages and repairmen for you full-time.

    Organic maple syrup, we can now talk on the phone for four hours a day divided up into separate conversations spaced 17 minutes apart even when I'm in the bathroom.

    French Toast sticks you can eat on the go, We are going to save $400 a month that we used to spend on gas and soap so feel free to spend that guilt-free by yourself on something that upgrades our lifestyle permanently without chatting with me first.

    Peanut Butter M+M Gift Basket, I have achieved more freedom in my life and you should let your jealousy boil slowly like in a rice cooker until it burns our intimacy like if you picked up a rice cooker and it was crazy hot so you dropped it on your head and wow that hurt.

    Never-ending pancakes from IHOP, you know how when you call me at work you say I'm sort of a jerk and are different and sound stressed - you now live with that version of me!

    The SO Management Plan

    You need to make sure that your SO knows what working from home actually is and establish the below ground rules.

    You wouldn't like me when I'm working from home but will like what it makes me.

    Tell your SO what working from home is: a risky challenge with a high payoff. Working from home is stressful - you have to work much harder at staying in the loop, reading between the lines, networking, and focusing to get things done. Managing the tension of working out of your home - where you used to just relax - is not easy. Let them know that focused/work version of you isn't chill/at home version of you.

    You working from home may offer no direct benefit to your SO but does offer massive benefits to both of you.

    Working from home successfully is not easy and might not be all roses and free burritos for your spouse, but it does offer them some good overall relational benefits:

    • When you work from home you are more in control of your environment and schedule thus leading to an overall happier version of you
    • They no longer have to listen to you complain about co-workers (because cats are not co-workers)
    • You can, if managed properly, save an amazing amount of money
    • You can, if managed properly, have free time in the middle of the day to do other things (if you have a typical commute you can gain 10 hours a week to spend with your family, level up in your favorite video game, work on your novel, tweak your karaoke robot - whatever. For those of you doing the math at home with an abacus: 10 hours is more than a typical workday that you gain.)

    Separating work from home is a critical component of telecommuting success and is the only one they can help you with

    Your SO can't help you communicate effectively, stay organized, stay professional, and get more things done, but they can help you separate working from non-working. There are two common complaints that affect worker and SO: the SO complains that the worker continues working past normal work hours (since the office is right there) and the worker complains of being constantly interrupted by their SO during the day. Both of these common failures are just cases of work and home not being separated aggressively.

    How to separate work from home is a separate topic, but the attitude should be that during established work hours you simply aren't there. Any interruption should be run through the filter of "Would you have called me during work for this?". I for one had my SO text me just like she would have if I had been at work - don't knock on the door.

    I'd also suggest a month trial run in which you have very hard and fast rules about work hours, communication, and availability so that you set expectations firmly - i.e. as the worker don't be helpful in the beginning. The space this creates allows them to realize that after they leave you alone for a while you are able to establish yourself as a reliable telecommuter that you will be a more relaxed version of yourself.

    Being left alone and in charge leads to super-productivity if you are intentional about it, and having more control means more freedom, means more happiness, and will allow the sort of things that they desire. When the Cheetos-dust clears most SOs, when given the choice, prefer a happy slightly crazy/stinky spouse to a clean miserable one.

    Photo by Karlova Irina/Shutterstock.

    I'm writing a book about successfully working from home; click here if you want to know when it is complete.

    Managing Your Significant Other When Working from Home | Certain Extent


    David Tate does eat cereal with eggnog and is writing a book about successfully working from home. You can follow him on Twitter, Google+, or signup to hear when the book is complete.

    Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/TD7AZuhM2Ag/managing-your-significant-other-when-working-from-home

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    Recession Hurt Parent-Child Ties, Survey Finds (HealthDay)

    THURSDAY, Dec. 15 (HealthDay News) -- The recent recession took a toll on parent-child ties, with parents who were under financial strain reporting that they felt less connected to their kids and kids saying they were less likely to act with generosity, a new study finds.

    Researchers from University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Brigham Young University analyzed data from a survey done in 2009 and then again a year later of about 500 families in the Seattle area about their feelings of depression, economic stress and family relationships.

    The families were mostly white, middle- to upper-middle-class and college educated. The children were young adolescents, aged 10 to 14.

    From one year to the next, parents who reported increasing financial pressure were also more likely to report symptoms of depression, according to the study. In turn, depressed parents were more likely to report feeling less connected and less close with their child.

    Likewise, parental financial strain and depression also affected the children. Children whose parents were struggling were less likely to say they volunteered, helped their friends or their families, found enjoyment in doing small favors for others, or tried to cheer up people who were feeling blue -- a group of positive behaviors researchers call "pro-social behaviors."

    "The effects of the economic strain are present and having an impact on families that we consider middle-class and upper-middle-class," said lead study author Gustavo Carlo, currently a professor of human development and family studies at the University of Missouri. "These are families you'd think maybe aren't feeling the effects of the economic crisis in the way that other communities are, or that might have access to resources that other families might not have easy access to."

    And the families interviewed were from the Seattle area, which wasn't even as hard hit during the downturn as other regions of the country, Carlo added. "One can only imagine how these effects are being felt by families in areas where the communities have really suffered tremendously from the economic situation," he said.

    The study appears online and in the December print issue of the Journal of Research on Adolescence.

    To be sure, not every parent experiencing economic strain will become anxious and depressed, said Velma McBride Murry, a professor of human and organizational development at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.

    "If you enter this situation having an increased vulnerability to depression and anxiety, economic strain elevates it, or sets it off to where you are more likely to experience greater devastation than people who are much more mentally stable," Murry said.

    But the current study adds to a large body of evidence that cuts across income levels and racial and ethnic groups and shows that economic stress can have a "cascading effect" on the whole family, Murry said. When under financial stress, parents who are used to being able to give their children a cellphone or new clothes suffer mentally when they can no longer do so. As money worries mount -- they're not sure they can pay the mortgage, or the utility bill, or a medical expense that comes in -- parents can become overwhelmed, irritable, short-tempered, depressed and withdrawn.

    "Then it erodes communication in the family, and reduces the connectedness that parents have with their children," Murry said.

    The kids feel it, too, and their attitudes and behavior can also suffer. Prior research has shown that the kids aren't bothered by the loss of the material goods -- the new cellphone or the clothes -- but by the impact it's having on their family, she added.

    "Prior studies have found that kids will say, 'it's not the stuff that I miss. I miss my relationship with my parents. That has shifted and the environment in my family has shifted,'" Murry said.

    Parents who are feeling economically strained and depressed should seek out emotional support, whether it's from family and friends, their church or from a mental health professional, Carlo urged.

    "They may have to pay some extra attention to work on the quality of the relationship with their child," he said.

    More information

    The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health has more on depression.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111216/hl_hsn/recessionhurtparentchildtiessurveyfinds

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    Friday, December 16, 2011

    Gunman kills 2 in market in Florence (AP)

    ROME ? An Italian man with extreme right-wing views opened fire in an outdoor market in Florence Tuesday, killing two vendors from Senegal, then critically wounded three other Senegalese immigrants in another Florence market before killing himself, authorities said.

    Florence prosecutor Giuseppe Quattrocchi said the man shot himself in the head in an underground parking lot under the covered market of San Lorenzo, in the heart of the Tuscan capital, as police were approaching him.

    Investigators identified the attacker as 50-year-old Gianluca Casseri. RAI state TV said he was known to police for having participated in racist marches by an extreme right-wing group. It said he used a .357 Magnum revolver.

    Italy's president, Giorgio Napolitano, decried what he called the "barbarous killing of two foreign workers" and denounced "this blind explosion of hatred." In a statement, Napolitano called on Italian authorities and society to "combat in the bud every form of intolerance and to reaffirm the tradition of openness and solidarity in our country."

    Florence Mayor Matteo Renzi described the assailant as a "clear-headed, mad and racist killer," the Italian news agency ANSA said. Renzi added: "Florence is weeping."

    After the attacks, Senegalese immigrants in Florence started spontaneously marching toward the center of the city, yelling "Senegal, Senegal."

    Many Senegalese work as vendors, selling scarves, wallets, belts, handbags and other items to locals and tourists near monuments in several Italian cities, including Florence and Rome.

    The attacks in Florence while many people were out for lunch came on the same day as a grenade attack on a crowd of holiday shoppers in the Belgian city of Liege. There, a man armed with grenades and an assault rifle attacked the crowd, leaving three people and the attacker dead and 75 wounded, authorities said.

    Last summer in Norway, a Norwegian man apparently motivated by a hatred of immigrants went on a bomb and shooting spree that killed 77 people,

    ___

    AP Video on YouTube: http://apne.ws/tlVi1t

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111213/ap_on_re_eu/eu_italy_shooting

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    Antarctica: Secrets of a frozen world

    One hundred years ago this week, on a fine summer afternoon, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen and four travel-weary companions plunged a bright flag atop a spindly pole into the Antarctic ice, marking their claim as the first humans to set foot at the bottom of the world. The South Pole was theirs.

    "That moment will certainly be remembered by all of us who stood there," Amundsen wrote in his account of the arduous trek. On Dec. 14, 1911, two months after they set out from the continent's coast, the men had reached their goal ? a frozen plain of endless white in the middle of the highest, windiest, coldest, driest and loneliest continent on Earth.

    A century after Amundsen planted the flag ? beating out Englishman Robert Falcon Scott's doomed expedition by a full month ? an explosion of technological progress has transformed the scope of human knowledge of Antarctica.

    Watchful satellites sail overhead; probing radar and lasers have allowed scientists to peer beneath the thick ice. And yet, in spite of the reach of these new tools, the continent still holds its secrets close. Many mysteries remain, and they are far more intricate and nuanced than the uncharted wilderness Amundsen and Scott confronted.

    What is emerging from the research is that Antarctica is a far more dynamic place than anyone could have imagined a century ago ? and that what happens there can have dramatic consequences for millions of people around the world. Now, instead of mapping new geographical discoveries, scientists are seeking to map the inner workings of the strange forces at play in Antarctica, from the biological mechanisms that allow tiny organisms to seemingly awake from the dead, to the little-understood forces that are gnawing away at the continent's ice ? with increasing vigor.

    Ice queen
    Antarctica is home to about 70 percent of the planet's fresh water, and 90 percent of the planet's freshwater ice. Two massive ice sheets, nearly 3 miles (4 kilometers) thick in some places, cover about 99 percent of the continental landmass. Including its islands and attached floating plains of ice, Antarctica is roughly 5.4 million square miles (14 million square km), about one-and-a-half times the size of the United States.

    Not surprisingly, most Antarctic research is focused on the ice ? what is happening under it, in it and to it.

    And it was beneath the ice that scientists made one of Antarctica's most screenplay-worthy discoveries: a sweeping kingdom of rocky slopes and liquid lakes, secreted under the ice for millennia. ?

    During a 1958 mapping expedition, a Soviet team was trekking from the coast across the interior of the eastern half of the continent, and detonating explosives every hundred miles to measure the thickness of the ice.

    In the middle of the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, the team was traveling across ice 2 miles (3 km) thick, when something strange started to happen, according to Robin Bell, a geophysicist and professor at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

    What's under there?
    "They suddenly found this very thin ice in the middle of the ice sheet, and they said, 'Hey, there are mountains here,'" Bell told OurAmazingPlanet.

    Big mountains. The team had stumbled upon what were later dubbed the Gamburtsev Mountains, a range of steep peaks that rise to 9,000 feet (3,000 meters) and stretch 750 miles (1,200 km) across the interior of the continent.

    "It's really hard to imagine that there are mountains under there. It doesn't matter which way you spin ? it's pretty flat," said Bell, who has studied the area for years. Yet, she added, the truly mysterious part of the hidden mountains is not that they exist, but how they still exist. The inexorable march of geological time erodes mountains away (if we came back in 100 million years, the Alps would be gone, Bell said) and the Gamburtsevs, at the ripe old age of 900 million to a billion years old, should have been worn down eons ago.

    However, recent research indicates the mountains are a kind of geological do-over.

    "They were born a long time ago, but somewhere between 100 (million) and 200 million years ago, they had a renaissance," Bell said.

    It happened during a rifting event, Bell said, when tectonic forces were wresting apart continental masses during the breakup of Gondwana, the ancient supercontinent. At the time, the eroded mountains' heavy roots apparently underwent a density change ? as though a bar of solid chocolate suddenly morphed into the fluffy stuff inside a Three Musketeers bar ? which buoyed the mountain range back up, "like a life preserver," Bell said.

    Exactly how that change in the Gamburtsevs' root happened is a mystery.

    "That's the biggest thing that has us scratching our heads," Bell said. "We don't know if the rifting added a little heat, added a little water ? we know the rifting happened, and (the mountain range) popped up, but we're still working on the question of how you make that phase change," she said.

    Land o' lakes
    In among the Gamburtsev Mountains lies another enigmatic feature of the Antarctic: Lake Vostok ? a pristine freshwater lake buried beneath 2.5 miles (3.7 km) of solid ice. About the size of Lake Ontario, it is the largest of the more than 200 liquid lakes strewn around the continent under the ice.

    The lakes are largely created when heat from the Earth's core melts the bottom of the ice sheet; the thick blanket of ice on top acts as insulation. Some of the lakes have been isolated for hundreds of thousands to millions of years, and scientists are racing to collect water samples; the sequestered lakes could be bastions of biological discovery, full of never-before-seen microbial life.

    So far, nobody has managed to directly sample an Antarctic lake, but at least three projects ? a Russian team, a British team and an American team ? are tackling the problem. The Russians, at Lake Vostok, and the British, at Lake Ellsworth, may have samples by 2012.

    And although lake water has so far eluded capture, scientists do have samples of the ice sheet itself, which, it turns out, sparks biological mysteries of its own.

    Who's in there?
    "I think this entire ice sheet is alive. That has yet to be proven," said John Priscu, a professor at Montana State University, who has been doing field work in Antarctica for 27 years.

    What is proven, Priscu said, is that bacteria are in the ice. Not many, by microbial standards ? 300 cells in 1 milliliter of ice vs. 100,000 cells in seawater ? but they're there, in tiny veins of liquid water that crisscross the solid ice and serve as "little houses," Priscu said, which also contain nutrients that could feed a hungry microbe.

    "The question is, are they living there? Is it a functional ecosystem?" he said. In the lab, ancient bacteria from ice samples 420,000 years old, retrieved from more than 2 miles (3 km) inside the ice sheet, have quickly shown signs of life. "We melt the water, and they grow," Priscu told OurAmazingPlanet.

    However, it's not clear if the ice is simply acting as a preservative, and keeping the same microbes intact until they're given a warm meal, or if an active microbial community is plodding along inside the ice sheet.

    "Either they're in a suspended state of animation during that half-a-million year trip, or they're living very slowly. We don't know that. We just don't know," Priscu said.

    Who's out there?
    Another spot of biological intrigue is the ocean that surrounds Antarctica. "If you picked up a handful of Antarctic animals, you wouldn't mistake them for creatures from anywhere else on the planet," said David Barnes, a scientist with the British Antarctic Survey.

    Barnes, speaking from a research vessel just off the Antarctic Peninsula, said one of the biggest mysteries is, "why do we see the types of animals we see?"

    Leggy sea spiders the size of dinner plates rule Antarctic waters, yet other creatures common to the rest of the Earth's oceans, such as slugs, are strangely absent. Some creatures grow to enormous size, while others are unusually small.

    "Many things make sense. Fish evolving antifreezes, that's a sensible thing to do," Barnes said. "But why we get the strange groups of animals, and why we get some animals doing so well and others doing so badly ? that's part of the great charm of this place. It's so different. And understanding why this is and how it works is a great challenge."

    "There are a lot of mysteries. The more things you find out about Antarctica, the more questions it raises than answers," said Huw Griffiths, a marine biologist with the British Antarctic Survey.

    Griffiths said that one area of great interest is the virtually unexplored ocean beneath the ice shelves that ring the continent. The outlets of glaciers, ice shelves are many hundreds of feet thick, and they are colossal. The largest, the Ross Ice Shelf, is 197,000 square miles (510,680 square km), or 3.7 percent of the total area of Antarctica.

    "Basically we know very little to nothing about what lives underneath them, and the only places we have a glimpse of this is at a couple of the smaller ice shelves that have collapsed," Griffiths told OurAmazingPlanet.

    A British-made oceangoing robot, dubbed AutoSub, made some of the first-ever observations beneath an ice shelf in 2009, during several dives in western Antarctica. Although the robot didn't offer a glimpse of anything living there ? it's not equipped with cameras or a sampling arm ? it did provide invaluable data for scientists studying the swift-moving Pine Island Glacier ice shelf, which might be thought of as ground zero for the biggest Antarctic mystery of all, in the minds of many scientists: What is happening to the ice?

    Icy disappearing act
    Time and again, researchers return to this question. The ice that is of most concern is the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, which is undergoing unprecedented changes, and is likely the biggest potential player in future global sea level rise.

    Research over the last 25 years has revealed that the ice sheet rests on gooey sediments that can allow glaciers to slide more easily than if they were flowing over a hard, rocky bed. Also, large portions of the bottom of the ice shelf are below sea level ? these two factors make the ice shelf particularly vulnerable, according to Robert Bindschadler, a glaciologist and NASA scientist emeritus.

    All of this has come as something of a surprise to the scientific community. As recently as the 1980s, ice sheets weren't even taken into account when researchers modeled how climate change might affect sea level, Bindschadler said.

    "People thought, 'Ice sheets, oh, they don't matter ? it takes millennia,'" Bindschadler said.

    The data tell a far different story: "The observations in the last 10 years are, whoa, ice sheets change far more dramatically, both in terms of magnitude of change and timescale, than we experts ever thought possible," Bindschadler said. "We were talking about big changes on the order of a century, and we are observing big changes on the order of a decade."

    Now that scientists know swift changes are occurring, they're trying to figure out how it's happening ? and all the evidence has revealed that the ocean is the culprit.

    "I think the most critical interaction is this ocean-ice interaction," Bindschadler told OurAmazingPlanet. "Certainly that is the one that is setting off all the alarms if you look at recent changes in ice sheets. That's the big sledgehammer that's hitting the ice sheets right now, and the details of what is going on are hidden."

    That's because it appears that most of the action is happening beneath the ice shelves ? those giant plains of floating ice that cling to the continent's edges. Satellites and other observational tools can't get a detailed look at what's happening under them.

    "We've known for some time that relatively warm water is getting underneath some of these ice shelves. What we don't know yet is exactly where, how often and how variable its access is," said Stan Jacobs, an oceanographer at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

    "What controls that access and how it's changing with time is another issue," Jacobs told OurAmazingPlanet.

    Researchers do know that ice shelves act as giant door stops for glaciers. When ice shelves get thinner or collapse altogether, glaciers speed up and dump more water into the ocean, raising sea levels.

    Now, Bindschadler and other researchers are heading out to fetch some of the first temperature data from under the Pine Island Glacier ice shelf, the outlet of one of the largest and fastest moving glaciers in Antarctica, in hopes of understanding what is happening beneath it.

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    "The more measurements we get, the more questions we have," Bindschadler said. "I think the overall mystery is the specific nature of these interactions that we have discovered."

    The overarching goal for Bindschadler and many other Antarctic researchers is to hand off enough data to modelers so they can figure out how the Antarctic ice is going to change in the coming decades, and how those changes will affect the rest of the world.

    If the West Antarctic Ice Sheet melted entirely, it would raise global average sea levels by 16 feet (5 meters), according to some estimates. Although that is unlikely to happen for many thousands of years, the ice sheet has increasingly lost mass over the last two decades, and the glaciers that serve as its outlet to the sea are accelerating. Even comparatively small changes in the world's three ice sheets (the Greenland, the East Antarctic and the West Antarctic) would have dramatic effects. A 1 percent volume change in all of them would raise sea levels by about 26 inches (65 centimeters), Bindschadler said.

    To get the data that modelers need still requires sleeping out in tiny tents on windswept plains of ice, and working long hours in the perpetual daylight of the Antarctic summer.

    "We're still explorers," Priscu said. "The early explorers like Scott and Shackleton had to explore the limits of human existence, but we're now exploring the limits of life in general. We have major global hypotheses ? we've been able to accomplish a lot in 100 years ? but we still have a long way to go, and we still have a lot of questions to answer."

    Reach Andrea Mustain at amustain@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @AndreaMustain. Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet and on Facebook.

    ? 2011 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45655282/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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    Wednesday, December 7, 2011

    Dems: US Chamber altered Ohio sen's photo in ads (AP)

    COLUMBUS, Ohio ? Ohio Democrats are accusing a leading national business federation of altering a photo of U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown and misrepresenting one of his votes in TV ads airing statewide.

    Brown is a Democrat facing re-election next year. Democrats say the U.S. Chamber of Commerce made him look haggard and unshaven in an Associated Press photo that was used in the ad. The AP says it authorized use of the photo but not alterations.

    Chamber spokesman J.P. Fielder said Democrats says the organization didn't doctor the photo. He says Democrats are distracting from the message of the $1 million-plus ad buy, which casts Brown's vote to end $4 billion in government subsidies for five large oil companies as an energy tax hike.

    Brown calls the ad cynical, with "outright lies."

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111206/ap_on_el_se/us_ohio_senate_altered_photo

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    Tuesday, December 6, 2011

    EPA Relaxes Industrial Boiler Emissions Standards (ContributorNetwork)

    According to the Wall Street Journal, the Environmental Protection Agency is easing its proposed regulatory rules regarding boilers used in refining and chemical plants and other industrial facilities. The change comes after numerous criticism from industry groups and Republicans who argued that it would cost companies billions of dollars.

    The new proposal applies to less than 1 percent of all boilers in the U.S., with the remaining boilers being up to the standards already. Overall, the EPA's goal is to reduce toxic emissions, including soot and mercury, and the agency estimates the rules could prevent as many as 8,100 premature deaths per year by 2015. Here are some facts about the fight for and against the EPA's boiler emissions standards:

    * The standards came in response from a September 2009 court order in which the EPA issued the initial standards in April 2010.

    * After the release, the agency received more than 4,800 comments from the public, including businesses and communities, all over the country and used the feedback to draft the changes.

    * The original proposal also covered boilers at both small and large sources of air emissions and solid waste incinerators and for every dollar spent to cut emissions from these sources the EPA estimated the public would receive between $10 and $24 in health benefits.

    * Reuters reported that the relaxed rules will have significant economic impacts and will ultimately reduce the costs by $1.5 billion per year, dropping the costs to $2.3 billion from $3.8 billion.

    * The new proposed standards would also help some companies by allowing them to perform maintenance on their boilers instead of completely replacing them or installing expensive controls.

    * In May, the EPA delayed its boiler pollution regulations indefinitely following pressure from industry groups even after stating in Feb. that it would make changes to reduce the costs, noted the Huffington Post.

    * Prior to the alterations announced this Friday, the rules would have impacted 13,000 large industrial boilers instead of 9,000.

    * An article from Platts added the EPA's new rules will sustain the original intended health benefits by focusing regulations on the boilers that produce the majority of the emissions.

    * The changes have not been received with favor by all industry groups and the National Association of Manufacturers stated that the rules will still pose a threat to job growth and investments by companies.

    * The EPA also estimates that the standards will help avoid 5,100 heart attacks and 52,000 cases of aggravated asthma.

    Rachel Bogart provides an in-depth look at current environmental issues and local Chicago news stories. As a college student from the Chicago suburbs pursuing two science degrees, she applies her knowledge and passion to both topics to garner further public awareness.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111206/sc_ac/10586273_epa_relaxes_industrial_boiler_emissions_standards

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    California shoppers pepper sprayed in purse section

    By NBC News and news services

    WALNUT CREEK, Calif. ? Holiday shoppers pepper sprayed by a purse thief managed to subdue the parolee running from a Walnut Creek department store with $10,000 worth of handbags.

    Walnut Creek police said Bryan Black, 42, and a female accomplice snatched 17 high-end purses at a Nordstrom store Saturday night and ran for a getaway car.

    Lt. Steve Gorski said the woman escaped with a couple of purses. But Black, an Oakland parolee armed with a knife, was grabbed by a shopper and tackled by another. Black showered the shoppers with pepper spray, but they managed to hang on until police arrived, investigators said.


    Black was booked for investigation of robbery, burglary, assault and possession of stolen property.

    The incident happened 10 days after a woman spewed pepper spray on a crowd of Black Friday shoppers at a Wal-Mart store in the San Fernando Valley.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report by NBC station KSBW of Santa Barabara, Calif.

    More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

    Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/05/9227370-california-shoppers-pepper-sprayed-in-purse-section

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    Monday, December 5, 2011

    McCready's ex says she's pushing luck over son

    FILE - In this undated file photo, country singer Mindy McCready performs in Nashville, Tenn. A missing persons report has been filed for McCready and her 5-year-old son Zander. The Department of Children and Families says the report was filed with Cape Coral Police Tuesday night after McCready took Zander from McCready's father's home. McCready doesn't have custody of her son ? her mother does ? and was allowed to visit the boy at her father's home. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, file)

    FILE - In this undated file photo, country singer Mindy McCready performs in Nashville, Tenn. A missing persons report has been filed for McCready and her 5-year-old son Zander. The Department of Children and Families says the report was filed with Cape Coral Police Tuesday night after McCready took Zander from McCready's father's home. McCready doesn't have custody of her son ? her mother does ? and was allowed to visit the boy at her father's home. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, file)

    (AP) ? Country singer Mindy McCready is pushing her luck with the legal system by not following a judge's order to return her 5-year-old son to the care of her mother in Florida, her ex-boyfriend and father of the boy said Friday.

    McCready said Thursday she would not bring her son back from Tennessee, despite violating a custody arrangement.

    McCready took the boy during a recent visit at her father's Florida home, and a judge signed an order Thursday ordering authorities to take the boy into custody and return him. It's not yet clear whether the singer could face criminal charges.

    "I'm doing all this to protect Zander, not stay out of trouble," McCready wrote in an email to The Associated Press on Thursday. "I don't think I should be in trouble for protecting my son in the first place."

    McCready says she is in Tennessee and cannot travel because she's nearly seven months pregnant with twins.

    The judge's order means law enforcement anywhere can pick up the boy and bring him back to Florida.

    The boy's father, Billy McKnight, told the NBC "Today" show Friday he spoke on the phone with McCready and their boy after the judge's deadline expired.

    "He did sound healthy and ok. He wasn't crying or scared," McKnight said about their son.

    "I think she believes she has a case and doesn't realize she's pushing her luck on this one," he said.

    McCready and her mother have had a long custody battle over the boy. The boy was living with McCready's mother, who was awarded guardianship in 2007. McCready says her son has suffered abuse at her mother's house; her mother, Gayle Inge, denies the abuse allegations.

    "Once the child is located, we will pick him up and bring him back to Florida," said Terri Durdaller, a spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Children and Families. "Although these circumstances are unfortunate for a young child, his safety and well-being are our number one priority."

    McCready provided a series of emails to the AP with Lee County Judge James Seals' ruling to return the boy.

    "Mom has violated the court's custody order and we are simply restoring the child back into our custody," the judge wrote. "Nothing more. Nothing less. The court makes no judgment about whether Mom will or will not competently care for the child while in her custody. It only wants the child back where the court placed him."

    McCready found fame in the mid-1990s and has lived a complicated life in recent years.

    In August, she filed a libel suit against her mother and the National Enquirer's parent company, American Media Inc., over a story published in the tabloid newspaper that quoted Inge.

    And in 2008, McCready was admitted to a hospital after police said she cut her wrists and took several pills in a suicide attempt.

    During the TV show "Celebrity Rehab 3" in 2010, McCready came off as a sympathetic figure, and host Dr. Drew Pinsky called her an angel in the season finale.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-02-US-People-McCready/id-4c1577aecf3d47f9ae50e819088d235f

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    Sari Eckler Cooper: Teacher's Firing Over Alleged Porn Career: A Teaching Moment for Parents (Huffington post)

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

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/169762239?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    Sunday, December 4, 2011

    Kardashians fire back at 'Teen Mom' Farrah

    Farrah Abraham cannot keep up with the Kardashians.

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    The 20-year-old "Teen Mom" star tweeted that she was "shocked" Kourtney Kardashian "is pregnant again," and a slew of other insults directed at the mom-to-be. But the extended Kardashian crew was quick to snap back at the MTV reality star.

    PHOTOS: Look back at Kourt's first pregnancy

    "Why would I have anything to do with 'Teen Mom'?" Kourtney tweeted. "I'm 32 years old! I may look young, honey, but don't get it twisted."

    Abraham, who is mom to 2-year-old Sophia, wasn't shy about slamming E!'s famous family. "Did she not learn anything from Teen Mom?" she tweeted. "Maybe it's a fake pregnancy like Kim's wedding. SAD."

    PHOTOS: Kim's wedding album

    Scott Disick, 28, who is father to Kourtney's 23-month old Mason and baby-to-be, pointed out to Abraham that, "We're not teenagers, ya f**king moron."

    Khloe, 27, asked Disick on the microblogging site how he knew who Abraham was. His blunt reply? "I just thought she was some sh*t stain on Twitter, no?"

    PHOTOS: More adorable pics of Mason

    "Guess what! Age and money honestly do not change a person's poor choice," Abraham tweeted after slamming Kourtney. "Quit making excuses."

    Khloe dutifully noted that she has "never met a better mother than Kourtney."

    Copyright 2011 Us Weekly

    Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45530502/ns/today-entertainment/

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    TSX ends lower but posts big weekly gain (Reuters)

    TORONTO (Reuters) ? Toronto's main stock index closed lower on Friday as investors booked some profits after the TSX notched its biggest weekly gain in more than two years on optimism that steps were being taken to resolve Europe's debt crisis.

    The mining-heavy materials sector dragged the index lower, as shares of gold miners slid despite spot gold edging higher to post its largest weekly gain in more than a month.

    This was countered by strong financials, which were lifted by better than expected earnings from two of the country's largest banks.

    Also helping investor sentiment was data that showed the U.S. unemployment rate fell to a 2-1/2 year low of 8.6 percent in November as companies stepped up hiring, further evidence the U.S. economic recovery was gaining momentum.

    "I would have to think we've had a good week," said Fred Ketchen, director of equity trading at ScotiaMcLeod. "It's Friday and people don't want to go home without locking in some profits. I think we have seen that take place today."

    The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index ended down 38.20 points, or 0.32 percent, at 12,075.09. Four of the index's 10 sectors were in positive territory.

    Goldcorp, Canada's second largest gold producer, was the biggest weight on the index, slipping 3.7 percent to C$52.33. Barrick Gold, the world's No. 1 producer, also dragged on the materials sector, falling 3 percent to C$51.88.

    Technology issues also fell, as Research In Motion plunged 9.2 percent to C$17.08 after the BlackBerry maker warned it would fall short of its financial targets after taking a huge charge to write down inventories on its underwhelming PlayBook tablet.

    The Bank of Nova Scotia was another big drag on the index, falling 2.49 percent to finish the session at C$48.99, despite announcing a 10.7 percent rise in fourth-quarter profit.

    Other banks fared better. The Royal Bank of Canada was the most heavily weighted gainer, up 3.7 percent at C$48.77, after Canada's biggest lender reported a quarterly profit that beat expectations.

    No. 2 lender, Toronto-Dominion Bank, was the second top advancer, up 1.18 percent at C$72.75, after announcing stronger than expected results on Thursday.

    Despite Friday's slide, the index posted a healthy 5.3 percent gain on the week. On Wednesday, the TSX had its biggest single-day gain since March 2009, jumping more than 4 percent.

    Markets also latched on to chatter that policymakers appeared to move a step closer to tackling Europe's debt crisis.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel reiterated her strong support for the euro, and called for a rapid European Union treaty change to remedy the root causes of the euro zone's debt crisis. She warned, however, that Europeans faced a long, hard "marathon" to restore lost market credibility.

    Equity strategists and fund managers polled by Reuters predict stocks will continue to grind higher in 2012 as policymakers iron out the euro zone's sovereign debt crisis and improving economic data in Canada and the United States soothes investor concerns about global growth.

    "If the next big move is an up move, hold on to your hats, because this will be a run that lasts a number of months," said Brendan Caldwell, president and chief executive of Caldwell Investment Management Ltd.

    "The fact that we haven't had a big down move to follow the up move (is) a very, very positive sign."

    ($1=$1.02 Canadian)

    (Additional reporting by Jon Cook; editing by Rob Wilson)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111202/wl_canada_nm/canada_us_markets_canada_stocks

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