Monday, December 31, 2012

NYT's Chris Buckley Expelled From China - Business Insider

New York Times journalist Chris Buckley was forced to leave China today after his annual media accreditation and residence visa were denied, John Garnaut of the Sydney Morning Herald reports.

While the official reason behind Buckley's apparent expulsion were not apparent, it is widely believed that Buckley was forced to leave due to a Times expose written by David Barboza that revealed the vast family fortunes of outgoing Chinese premier Wen Jiabao.

According to tweets from Beijing-based writer and Baidu employee Kaiser Kuo, Barboza and other members of the Times staff in China have not had problems with new visas.

Wen has strongly denied the accusations that his family were worth over $2 billion, and his lawyers had hinted at legal action against the Times. The New York Times' website has been blocked in China since the article.

A similar article about incoming President Xi Jinping's family finances resulted in Bloomberg being blocked, and reports of death threats against the authors.

Buckley, an Australian, had been working as a journalist in China for 12 years. His entire family were forced to leave the country. Garnaut describes Buckley as having a "a reputation in China for balance and rigour".

Earlier this year Al Jazeera's Melissa Chan was also refused a new visa for work in China. It is widely believed it was due to the strength of her reporting from the country.

UPDATE: The New York Times' own report on the situation clarifies the situation a little. Buckley had applied to transfer from Reuters to the Times for 2013, but the accreditation process had taken an unusually (suspiciously?) long time, forcing Buckley to leave.

The Times' new Beijing bureau chief, Philip P. Pan, is also waiting for his new accreditation, the Times reports.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/nyts-chris-buckley-expelled-from-china-2012-12

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What consumers can expect in 2013

I don?t have a crystal ball, but I am in contact with a lot of experts in consumer protection, marketing and fraud prevention. Based on information provided by these trusted sources, here are some predictions about what you can expect in 2013.

Anticipated price hikes
The U.S. Department of Agriculture predicts grocery bills will rise 3 to 4 percent in 2013. Higher feed costs will continue to push up prices for animal-based products, especially dairy. In its Food Price Outlook Report, USDA noted that inflation should be ?above the historical average? for cereals and bakery products.

Banks will keep looking for ways to raise revenue without inciting customer backlash. This could mean higher overdraft fees and charges for using an out-of-network ATM. It could also mean higher minimum balances to avoid a monthly service charge.

??We?ll continue to see banks emphasize customer relationships, rewarding those customers that have more accounts, bigger balances, or other products and services by waiving checking account fees,? said Greg McBride, senior financial analyst at Bankrate.com.

Good news for home buyers and home builders: Bankrate expects mortgage rates to remain low.

?The Fed is aggressively buying bonds with the goal of keeping mortgage rates low,? McBride explained. ?Because of this, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate should stay below 4 percent for much of the year ? even if the economy continues to improve.?

The editors at dealnews.com predict a number of things will be more expensive in 2013. These include: smartphones and some other electronics, cars and many luxury goods.

Dealnews also expects higher shipping costs. It predicts a jump of 4.5 to 4.9 percent from both UPS and FedEx. This could seriously hurt small businesses and people who sell things on the Internet. It might also affect which orders qualify for ?free shipping? at some online stores.

And here?s a surprising one: Dealnews says copper prices could rise. That would have a ripple effect, because copper is used in all sorts of consumer products: wire, pots and residential water pipes. It?s also needed for industrial equipment that brews beer, distills liquor and makes candy.

On the bright side: Gasoline prices should continue their slow decline, barring unforeseen circumstances. The U.S. Energy Information Administration expects retail prices for regular-grade gasoline to average $3.43 a gallon in 2013. That would be down from this year?s average of $3.63.

More consumer-friendly regulations
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) went after unfair practices in the financial marketplace with gusto in 2012. That is sure to continue in the New Year.

My best guess is that we?ll see new regulations proposed for payday loans, prepaid cards and credit reporting agencies. The CFPB is already investigating complaints about errors in credit reports and the difficulty or sometimes inability to have them corrected.

As of Jan. 2, the agency will regulate the country?s large debt collectors, an industry that has been widely criticized for harassment, deception and other illegal tactics to get people to pay ? whether they owe the debt or not, in some cases.

?Millions of consumers are affected by debt collection, and we want to make sure they are treated fairly,? CFPB director Richard Cordray said in a statement.

I wouldn?t be surprised to see some civil penalties levied and new rules proposed to prevent abusive collection tactics.

New and changing digital threats
Cybercriminals are sure to step-up their game again in 2013. In a new report, Sophos (the giant digital security company), predicts businesses will be hit with more malware attacks that give the intruders ?long-term, high impact access? to those companies.

Digital extortion should increase with more ransomware malware attacks. ?(See ConsumerMan: Latest ?ransomware? attacks are scarily sophisticated.) This new generation of malicious software can encrypt the data on your hard drive and hold it for ransom. It?s often exceptionally hard or impossible to reverse the damage. This makes it critical to back-up your data on a daily basis.

Mobile devices, with GPS location, social media apps and new technology (such as near field communication) will give cybercriminals new opportunities to compromise your security and privacy.

?This trend is identifiable not just for mobile devices, but computing in general,? the Sophos report warns. ?In the coming year, watch for new examples of attacks built on these technologies.?

Men, millennials in the grocery store
Men have become more comfortable in the kitchen and more active in planning meals and food shopping. A survey by Cone Communications found that more dads than moms (52 percent compared to 46 percent) plan meals for the week ahead.

Industry analyst Phil Lempert, who runs the website SupermarketGuru, predicts grocery stores will focus more on the male shopper this year and in the future.

?Some supermarkets are experimenting with ?man aisles? ? locations in the store that feature male-oriented foods and other products to make shopping and impulse buying more targeted,? he said.

Lempert also expects supermarkets and food companies to go after the millennial shoppers (those born between 1982 and 2001) who want flavorful and ethnically diverse food that is also affordable. By 2020, millennials will represent about 20 percent of the population and compared to the general population, they?re expected to have twice the buying power for food they eat at home.

?Millennials are deal seekers,? Lempert pointed out. ?They are much more focused on finding the lowest price over brand loyalty.?

Herb Weisbaum is The ConsumerMan. Follow him on Facebook and Twitter or visit The ConsumerMan website.

Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2012/12/31/16220329-what-consumers-can-expect-in-2013?lite

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Oil steady as 'fiscal cliff' deadline approaches

(AP) ? Oil prices were little changed Monday as a U.S. budget deadline neared with rival politicians still at odd over key issues.

Benchmark oil for February delivery was down 8 cents late morning London at $90.72 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 7 cents to finish at $90.80 per barrel in New York on Friday.

The focus over the rest of the day will continue to focus on developments in Washington D.C. The Senate has to agree a deal by the end of Monday to avoid the so-called "fiscal cliff" of automatic tax increases and spending cuts.

Republicans and Democrats remained divided over tax and spend, raising the real prospect that financial markets will start 2013 without a clear idea over the budget policy of the world's largest economy. The main sticking point appears to be what level of income higher taxes are imposed.

Economists have warned that the U.S. economy could be thrown into recession if the tax hikes and spending cuts go into effect ? $536 billion in tax increases that would touching nearly all Americans and a loss of $110 billion in government spending.

If the deadline passes without a deal, the U.S. won't immediately sink into recession. Lawmakers can repeal the tax hikes and spending cuts retroactively if a deal is reached a few weeks after the New Year's deadline.

In London, Brent crude, used to price various kinds of foreign oil, fell 43 cents to $110.19 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange.

In other energy futures trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange:

? Wholesale gasoline fell 0.4 cents to $2.7958 a gallon.

? Heating oil fell marginally to $3.020 a gallon.

? Natural gas fell 0.02 cents to $3.460 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-12-31-Oil%20Prices/id-2b8f07bf68b843699f10bc3139de626e

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Study Finds Flaws in Pipeline Leak Detection Systems

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The forthcoming federal report found that members of the general public are more likely to identify oil and gas spills than the pipeline companies? leak detection systems.

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/22/us/study-finds-flaws-in-pipeline-leak-detection-systems.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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[VIDEO] Meet the Puerto Rican banjo player in Philadelphia?s New Year?s Day Parade

Every New Year?s Day for the past decade, Carl Sanchez has been strumming his banjo in the 113-year-old Mummer?s Parade ? a tradition in which 10,000 men and women dressed in bright, colorful costumes, march and twirl for two miles up one of Philadelphia?s main streets.

The term ?Mummer? is German and means ?to costume or masquerade.? In the 1600s, Swedish settlers to Philadelphia?s outskirts celebrated Christmas by asking their neighbors for dessert and liquor by dressing up, and chanting and shooting firearms. The party eventually moved to New Year?s Day and evolved into a series of neighborhood parades. As more immigrants moved to the area, each group added their own cultural flair to the local customs. In 1901, the tradition of the first recognized and judged Mummers Parade began.

?It?s a unique parade,? says Sanchez, 45, who travels from New Jersey to Philadelphia every year. ?There?s nothing else like this in the U.S. It?s steeped in the tradition of Philadelphia?A whole year?s worth of work all for one day ? it?s really something special.?

Sanchez is one of the only Latinos in the parade. Although his dad was born in Puerto Rico, he is a part of the 64-member Polish-American String Band ? a band that has been performing in the Mummer?s Parade for the past 80 years, and has won 11 first place prizes within that time.

?I am one of the few Latinos in the Parade,? says Sanchez who recently found out that a friend of his father?s son from Puerto Rico also plays in one of the string bands of the parade. ?It?s a strange coincidence.?

Although Sanchez grew up in New Jersey, he says he feels a bond to Philadelphia, because that?s where his parents lived when they first got married in the 1950?s, and it is the city where his wife is from.

Carl Sanchez as a WWII fighter pilot in the 2012 Salute to the Military-themed Mummer's Parade.  (Courtesy Carl Sanchez)

Carl Sanchez as a WWII fighter pilot in the 2012 Salute to the Military-themed Mummer?s Parade. (Courtesy Carl Sanchez)

He?also enjoys?the?fact that?even though?he plays in a Polish-American band, due to his father-in-law recruiting him, every year they have a different theme. This year, it?will be Brazilian.

?I?ll be in a?Carmen Miranda suit ? lots of sequins and feathers like a Rio celebration,? says Sanchez, excitedly. ?We?re going to make it just like that on New Year?s Day.?

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Source: http://nbclatino.com/2012/12/30/video-meet-the-puerto-rican-banjo-player-in-philadelphias-new-years-day-parade/

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

Texas rallies late to beat Oregon State in Alamo Bowl

SAN ANTONIO ? Texas offensive guard Mason Walters said he didn't see David Ash's momentum-turning escape and touchdown throw to Johnathan Gray ? "I had my hands full at the time trying to keep a couple more from getting after him" ? but that didn't stop him from sensing the play's impact.

"I did catch it on the Jumbotron afterwards," Walters said. "It was impressive and I don't know how he did it.

"It was huge. I've said it all year: college football is really just a game of momentum. And when you have it, you have it. When you don't, it's tough to get back."

That play, a 15-yard scoring pass with 8:18 left to go in the fourth quarter, cut the Oregon State lead to 27-24. But more importantly, it saturated the No. 23 Longhorns with enough momentum to close out a 31-27 Valero Alamo Bowl victory.

"We challenged all of our players to make sure that our seniors left happy and had a happy dressing room," Texas coach Mack Brown said. "And that's happening in there tonight."

Through three quarters, No. 13 Oregon State built a 27-17 lead by running the ball and keeping the Texas offense off balance. Texas entered the fourth quarter with 201 total yards, and Ash was just 12 of 22 for 95 yards with an interception. But in the final 15 minutes, Ash caught fire, completing 9-of-11 passes for 146 yards, and hitting on his last seven passes as Texas scored on its final two drives to pull out the comeback victory.

"You just kind of keep plugging away and you kind of wait for that play that sparks," Ash said. "This game, we started getting them, and we got the momentum back and we started playing well."

Texas's Major Applewhite faced a challenge in his first game as offensive coordinator and primary play-caller. First, he had just two weeks to game plan and make any necessary adjustments. Second, he faced a stingy Oregon State defense that excels at stuffing runs between the tackles ? exactly what Texas wanted to accomplish offensively. And third, Applewhite's backup quarterback, Case McCoy, was suspended for violation of team rules on Friday prior to the game.

"I'd like to forget that," Applewhite said of facing a difficult backup situation. "I spent about two hours with (true freshman) Jalen Overstreet in Conference Ballroom 15 trying to get ready for the game, and it was a little nerve-wracking."

Applewhite said that because of the quarterback situation, Texas was hesitant to run Ash too early and leave him susceptible to injury. But in the third quarter, with Texas trailing 20-10, and with no running game to speak of, the Longhorns called two designed quarterback draws in three plays. The first, called on a third-and-4, picked up 5 yards and a first down. On the second, Ash rushed for an 11-yard touchdown, leaping over an Oregon State defender into the end zone and providing that first spark.

"David really gained a lot of confidence, especially on the one where he ran it in and jumped over a guy in the end zone," said Texas wide receiver Jaxon Shipley. "You could see it. You could feel it. Everybody was fired up, especially him. From that point on, I felt like he definitely had a feeling that we were going to win the game."

Applewhite was also helped by a monster game from Alamo Bowl Offensive MVP Marquise Goodwin. Early in the second quarter with the Longhorns stymied offensively, Goodwin took a reverse 64 yards for a touchdown. And the speedster who competed in this past summer's London Olympics as a long-jumper burst past his defender to haul in the game-winning, 36-yard touchdown pass with 2:24 left.

"When you get those guys that have exceptional speed, they can do things outside of the design of the play so you don't have to be perfect, there's a little bit more margin for error," Applewhite said.

But Goodwin's speed wasn't the only speed that had a major effect on the game. The Longhorn offense went up-tempo through the second half and wore down the Beavers late.

"We probably were on the field too much . . ." said Oregon State coach Mike Riley. "We didn't sustain enough, didn't get enough first downs to give our defense a chance."

That was the result of a freshly dialed-in Texas defense, which gave up 228 yards and 20 points in the first half. Beavers running back Storm Woods ? in a homecoming of sorts ? rushed for 98 yards on 15 carries and a touchdown. In all, the Pflugerville native combined with fellow running back Terron Ward and receivers Markus Wheaton and Brandin Cooks to gash the Longhorns for 151 yards in the first half.

"The first half, we felt like we played great sound football," Woods said. "And the second half felt like Texas just made some adjustments and they came out and they just?. . .?I guess they wanted it more or something."

Texas defensive coordinator Manny Diaz said afterward that the Texas defense had a decision to make at halftime.

"To me, it was whether they wanted to fight their way out of it or sort of accept their fate," Diaz said. "I'm so proud of the way that they fought, the way that they battled in the second half."

Buoyed by the tremendous pass rush from Defensive MVP Alex Okafor, Texas rattled junior Cody Vaz and shut down the running lanes that were so easily accessible in the first half. Vaz entered the game with an 11-to-1 touchdown-to-interception ratio, but he finished 15 of 28 for 194 yards and no touchdowns to two picks. More impressively, he was sacked 10 times, with Okafor's Alamo Bowl-record 4.5 sacks providing the primary damage. Woods ran six times for 20 yards in the second half, as the Beavers had just 69 total second-half yards.

And when it came down to the end, after the Longhorns took the lead, the defense closed things out. On third-and-8, Okafor made the last of his sacks in bullying his way to tackle Vaz. And on fourth-and-14, linebacker Kendall Thompson pulled Vaz to the turf to end any hope of a Beaver rally.

"It's always great to end the season on a good note," said Okafor, who ended his senior season with 12.5 sacks. "We're going to use this game as a stepping stone, and Coach Diaz just talked about that we have to demand more from ourselves. That was kind of the mindset going into this game, and that's what we did."

For the second consecutive year, Texas ended with a victory, and the Longhorns finished 9-4. Oregon State, which entered the postseason with a 9-3 mark, finished with an identical record.

Walters said that momentum gained from that play, and the ensuing win, could also be applied on a more macro scale. The Longhorns won at least 10 games per season in Brown's first 12 seasons, but have failed to hit that standard in the three seasons since. Now, Texas is looking to morph the season-ending victory into a strong offseason and, eventually, a comeback of another kind ? the restoration of the Texas program as a whole.

"That's big. We experienced it last year and obviously?. . .?if you look at it at the end of the year, and we judge wins and losses, we've improved from where we were last year.

"However, this is not where we want to end up," Walters said. "This isn't going to be good enough. I wouldn't accept 9-4 next year. I wouldn't take that deal right now. We're just going to have to ride it. I know I've already talked to a lot of guys that are going to be on the team next year, we're excited to get back to work and get back together with everybody and get back on the grind."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Foxsports/rss/CFB/~3/AKKvN5cxAGQ/texas-longhorns-beat-oregon-state-beavers-alamo-bowl-122912

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

UN envoy says Syrian collapse threatens region

MOSCOW (AP) ? The United Nations envoy for Syria warned Saturday that the country's civil war could plunge the entire region in chaos by sending an unbearable stream of refugees into neighboring countries, but his talks in Moscow brought no sign of progress toward settling the crisis.

Lakhdar Brahimi and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov both said after their meeting that the 21-month Syrian crisis can only be settled through talks, while admitting that the parties to the conflict have shown no desire for compromise. Neither hinted at a possible solution that would persuade the government and the opposition to agree to a ceasefire and sit down for talks on political transition.

Brahimi, who arrived in Moscow on one-day trip following his talks in Damascus with Syrian President Bashar Assad earlier this week, voiced concern about the escalation of the conflict, which he said is becoming "more and more sectarian."

Brahimi warned that "if you have a panic in Damascus and if you have 1 million people leaving Damascus in a panic, they can go to only two places ? Lebanon and Jordan," and that those countries could break if faced with half a million refugees.

Brahimi said that "if the only alternative is really hell or a political process, then we have got all of us to work ceaselessly for a political process."

Russia has been the main supporter of Assad's regime since the uprising began in March 2011, using its veto right at the U.N. Security Council along with China to shield its last Mideast ally from international sanctions.

Lavrov reaffirmed that Russia would continue to oppose any U.N. resolution that would call for international sanctions against Assad and open the way for a foreign intervention in Syria. And while he again emphasized that Russia "isn't holding on to Bashar Assad," he added that Moscow continues to believe that the opposition demand for his resignation as a precondition for peace talks is "counterproductive."

"The price for that precondition will be the loss of more Syrian lives," Lavrov said.

Both Brahimi and Lavrov insisted that peace efforts must be based on a peace plan approved at an international conference in Geneva in June.

The Geneva plan called for an open-ended cease-fire, a transitional government to run the country until elections, and the drafting of a new constitution, but it was a non-starter with the opposition because on Russian insistence it left the door open for Assad being part of the transition process and didn't contain any mention of possible U.N. sanctions.

Brahimi said that while some "little adjustments" could be made to the original plan, "it's a valued basis for reasonable political process."

With the opposition offensive gaining momentum, there was little hope that the initiative would have more chance for success than it had when it was approved.

Lavrov has said that Moscow is ready to talk to the main Syrian opposition group, even though it has earlier criticized the United States and other Western nations for recognizing the Syrian National Coalition for Opposition and Revolutionary Forces as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people.

On Friday, coalition leader Mouaz al-Khatib rejected the Russian invitation for talks and urged Moscow to support the opposition call for Assad's ouster. Lavrov said Saturday that al-Khatib's statement was surprising after his earlier contacts with Russian diplomats in Egypt in which they tentatively agreed on a meeting in a third country.

Lavrov argued that the coalition leader should "realize it would be in his own interests to hear our analysis directly from us."

Lavrov rejected the opposition claim that Russia's continuing weapons supplies to Assad's regime made it responsible for the massacre, saying that Moscow bears no responsibility for the Soviet-era weapons in Syrian arsenals. He said that defensive weapons like anti-aircraft missiles that Russia has continued to supply to Damascus couldn't be used in the civil war.

"We aren't providing the Syrian regime with any offensive weapons or weapons that could be used in a civil war," Lavrov said. "And we have no leverage over what the regime has got since the Soviet times."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/un-envoy-says-syrian-collapse-threatens-region-104613564.html

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Indian rape victim surviving against the odds, Singapore hospital says

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - An Indian gangrape victim whose assault in New Delhi triggered nationwide protests earlier this month has suffered "significant brain injury" and is surviving against the odds, the Singapore hospital treating her said on Friday.

The 23-year-old medical student, who was severely beaten, raped for almost an hour and thrown out of a moving bus in New Delhi, was airlifted to Singapore on December 26 for specialist treatment.

"The patient is currently struggling against the odds, and fighting for her life," Mount Elizabeth Hospital Chief Executive Officer Kelvin Loh said in a statement.

"Our medical team's investigations upon her arrival at the hospital yesterday showed that in addition to her prior cardiac arrest, she also had infection of her lungs and abdomen as well as significant brain injury."

The victim had already undergone three abdominal operations before arriving in Singapore where her condition on Thursday was described as "extremely critical".

Demonstrations over the lack of safety for women erupted across India after the December 16 attack on the unnamed victim, culminating last weekend in pitched battles between police and protesters in the heart of the capital.

Should the woman die, it could trigger fresh outrage over the case, which caught Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's government off-guard and triggered a blame game between politicians and the police.

"We share the anguish and anger with the country over this heinous crime," Singh told reporters on Friday. "Our prayers are with the brave young girl and best possible medical care is being provided to her."

New Delhi has the highest number of sex crimes among India's major cities, with a rape reported on average every 18 hours, according to police figures. Government data show the number of reported rape cases in the country rose by nearly 17 percent between 2007 and 2011.

(Reporting by Kevin Lim in Singapore and Satarupa Bhattacharjya in New Delhi; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/indian-rape-victim-surviving-against-odds-singapore-hospital-061357017.html

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Will health insurance be more affordable under Obamacare

Quick! Name three major provisions of the new health reform law? Well?

I?m not sure which three popped into your mind (if, indeed, you were able to come up with that many), but I?d suggest that the three most far-reaching changes for consumers are the following:

  • The ?mandate? requiring most people without health insurance to buy coverage on their own
  • The rule making it impossible for anyone to be declined coverage based on a pre-existing medical condition
  • The availability of federal government subsidies to help those who qualify afford health insurance

None of these come into effect until January 1, 2014. On that date the health insurance market in the United States will be a very different place than it is today. With an eye to 2014, we recently saw someone on Yahoo Answers ask a really terrific question:

Will Obamacare make health insurance more affordable for me?

Here?s the eHealthInsurance answer:

Not necessarily. The health reform law mandates improved benefits for most health insurance plans and richer benefits usually means higher costs. Though total costs may increase, however, the health reform law provides subsidies for people making up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level, to help them afford coverage. Depending on how much money you make, the government subsidies may limit what you?re personally required to pay for coverage to between 4 and 9 percent of your adjusted gross income. So, though the cost of health insurance may increase overall, some people may find health insurance is more affordable for them personally.

You can bet we?ll be talking a lot about this and other reform-related issues in 2013!

Image by Flickr user DorkyMum

Source: http://blog.ehealthinsurance.com/2012/12/will-health-insurance-be-more-affordable-under-obamacare-consumer-qa/

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Russia's Putin signs anti-U.S. adoption bill | FOX6Now.com ... - WITI

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(CNN) ? Aaron and Jenny Moyer already consider a Russian orphan named Vitali as their own. But a controversial Russian law that bans the adoption of Russian children by U.S. families may keep the boy from his new home in the United States.

The Moyers have photos of their visits with Vitali in Russia, and the adoption process was under way.

?He?s our son,? Aaron Moyer said. ?In our hearts, he is our son.?

Russian President Vladimir Putin may have put an end to that when he signed the controversial measure Friday.

The action could affect hundreds of American families seeking to adopt. Americans adopted close to 1,000 Russian children last year, according to U.S. State Department figures.

Though the number has been dropping in recent years, Russia remains the third most popular country for U.S. citizens to adopt, after China and Ethiopia.

The U.S. State Department said it ?deeply regrets? the new Russian law.

?The Russian government?s politically motivated decision will reduce adoption possibilities for children who are now under institutional care,? it said in a statement. ?We are further concerned about statements that adoptions already underway may be stopped and hope that the Russian government would allow those children who have already met and bonded with their future parent to finish the necessary legal procedures so that they can join their families.?

Jenny Moyer says she knows there is an orphan crisis in Russia, especially for children with special needs, an undertaking she is willing to accept. The boy she wants to adopt, Vitali, has Down syndrome.

The couple, who have two biological children and one adopted American child, said they are relying on their faith to see them through this tough time.

?We want not just our son, but all the kids over there to have families and to grow up and know the love of a mom and dad,? Aaron Moyer said.

The Russian measure also bars any political activities by nongovernmental organizations receiving funding from the United States, if such activities could affect Russian interests, Russia?s semiofficial RIA-Novosti news agency said.

It also imposes sanctions against U.S. officials thought to have violated human rights.

The law, which goes into effect on January 1, envisages the drafting of a list of U.S. citizens who will be prohibited from entering Russia, and will suspend the activity of any legal entities controlled by these individuals in the country.

A vote this week in the Federation Council, Russia?s upper house, was unanimous, but Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov criticized the bill ahead of its signing.

Lawmakers in the State Duma, Russia?s lower house of parliament, adopted it last week.

The move by Russian politicians is widely seen as retaliation for a law that U.S. President Barack Obama signed on December 14. That bill, called the Magnitsky Act, imposes U.S. travel and financial restrictions on human rights abusers in Russia.

The Magnitsky Act is named in honor of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who uncovered the largest tax fraud in the country?s history in the form of rebates claimed by government officials who stole money from the state. Magnitsky died in 2009 after a year in a Moscow detention center, apparently beaten to death.

The Russian bill?s implementation nullifies a recent agreement between the United States and Russia in which the countries agreed to additional safeguards to protect children and parties involved in inter-country adoptions.

Backers of the Russian bill said American adoptive parents have been abusive, citing 19 deaths of Russian children since the 1990s.

In 2010, an American woman caused outrage after she sent her adopted son back to Russia alone on a one-way flight, saying the boy, then 7, had violent episodes that made her family fear for its safety.

Konstantin Dolgov, the Russian Foreign Ministry?s special representative for human rights, said Wednesday on Twitter that Russians are ?well aware of, and have pointed out more than once, the inadequate protection of adopted Russian children in the US.? He also said the United States is one of three nations that have not signed the 1989 U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Anthony Lake, executive director of the U.N. Children?s Fund, touted the importance of ?inter-country adoption.?

?While welcoming Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev?s call for the improvement of the child welfare system, UNICEF urges that the current plight of the many Russian children in institutions receives priority attention,? he said.

UNICEF asked that Russia let children?s ?best interests? guide the ?design and development of all efforts to protect children.?

?We encourage the government to establish a robust national social protection plan to help strengthen Russian families. Alternatives to the institutionalization of children are essential, including permanent foster care, domestic adoption and inter-country adoption,? he said.

The United States has signed but not ratified the convention, which has sparked concerns from conservatives about its effect on U.S. sovereignty and parental rights.

Groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch had urged lawmakers to reject the bill.

?This bill hits back at Russia?s most vulnerable children and could deprive them of the loving families they desperately need,? Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said last week.

John Dalhuisen, Amnesty International?s Europe and Central Asia program director, has said that ?this bill is frankly a childish response to the Magnitsky Act.?

Source: http://fox6now.com/2012/12/28/russias-putin-signs-anti-u-s-adoption-bill/

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Cold Weather? Hot Coffee at Ghostlight ! | Dayton Most Metro

Published on December 27th, 2012

Written by: Food Adventures with Superfry and the Big Ragu

Fig Vanilla Black Pepper Latte

Fig Vanilla Black Pepper Latte

Where can you warm up with this cold weather?? May we suggest a Latte with the ladies?? How about a Mocha with the Mayor? Ghostlight Coffee on 1201 Wayne Ave is just the place for a Food Adventure that will heat up your winter months.? Opened in 2011 by owner Shane Anderson, it is a ?must drink? on our list of locally owned spots.? This coffee house already has a cult following, and deservedly so.? Great beverages are the cornerstone of Ghostlight Coffee.? The storefront of glass windows in the dining room, overlooks a bustling Wayne Avenue.?? the walls are adorned with local art, and music usually fills the air.? The place has a warmth to it, and we are not just talking about the coffee.?? The Big Ragu and Superfry find the inviting atmosphere very appealing.?? Another attraction is that the menu has a variety of choices to please almost anyone.

Ghostlight uses the ?pour over? method to prepare many of their brews.? It is a manual method of making coffee, and a secret to great taste.? The hot water is poured just enough to wet all of the coffee grinds and seeps through a filter into a cup.? The hot water is poured slowly, starting in the middle and moving toward the outside in circles.? Free entertainment with each order!? The ?Baristas? (coffee making staff), know what they are doing and the benefit from their expertise is in each flavorful cup.

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Big Ragu, Ghostlight Owner Shane Anderson, and Superfry

Being a coffee connoisseur and frequent customer at Ghostlight,? Superfry has a couple of recommendations to beat the cold.? The Fig Vanilla Black Pepper Latte is Superfry?s favorite.?? Black pepper in a latte?? trust us, it works.? The fig and vanilla flavor makes it one of the better and more unusual lattes that we have tasted.? Every sip is incredible, and at the end you taste the black pepper.? It is one of those drinks that makes you wonder, in a good way.? Superfry also suggests the Balsalmic Walnut Latte.? Again, with this coffee, Ghostlight creates yet another unique, creamy latte, with a nutty finish.? The Big Ragu goes for simple pleasures at Ghostlight like the hot chocolate, or a cappuccino.? The hot chocolate is creamy and rich, and the same goes for the cappuccino.? Other menu offerings include Chai Teas, Espresso, French Press Coffees, and Rishi Organic Teas.

The menu also includes many locally made pastries.? Depending on the week, the selection will vary with seasonal choices or standard favorites.? One of our favorite snacks available are the packaged toffees from Sweet Nothings, a local Dayton confectioner.?? Their Sea Salt Toffees are so good and addicting that they should be illegal.

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Sweet Nothings Sea Salt Toffee

Ghostlight is not only coffee and snack central.?? There are many other activities going on in this vivacious venue.?? Events include live music, poetry, story slams, and the venue is available for scheduling special private parties.?? Ghostlight Coffee is such an eclectic spot with a local flair.? It is a great place to bring friends, or go solo.? The friendly staff and patrons make it a joy to meet and see people from all walks of life, who are enjoying a good cup of coffee.? If you love what life in Dayton has to offer, than Ghostlight Coffee is a wonderful place to ?get your drink on.?

For more of SUPERFRY and THE BIG RAGU ? ?like? their Facebook Page HERE .

Ghostlight Hours are 7am-7pm Monday thru Friday and 8:30a-7p Saturday & Sunday.? Check the Ghostlight Facebook Page for ?After Hour? Events.

Tags: adventure, Big Ragu, cappuccino, coffee, Dayton, DaytonDining, food, Food Adventures, ghost light, ghostlight, ghostlight coffee, hot chocolate, latte, mocha, Superfry, tea, wayne ave

Source: http://mostmetro.com/dayton-dining/cold-weather-hot-coffee-at-ghostlight.html

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US cancer screening rates decline over the last 10 years, finds new study

Dec. 27, 2012 ? The rate of people who seek preventive cancer screenings has fallen over the last ten years in the United States with wide variations between white-collar and blue-collar workers, according to a University of Miami Miller School of Medicine study published on December 27 in the open-access journal Frontiers in Cancer Epidemiology.

While earlier diagnoses and improved treatments have increased the number of survivors, cancer remains one of the most prominent chronic diseases and, last year alone, claimed the lives of more than 570,000 people in the U.S.

"There is a great need for increased cancer prevention efforts in the U.S., especially for screening as it is considered one of the most important preventive behaviors and helps decrease the burden of this disease on society in terms of quality of life, the number of lives lost and insurance costs," said lead author Tainya Clarke, M.P.H., research associate in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health.

"But despite this," Clarke continued, "our research has shown that adherence rates for cancer screenings have generally declined with severe implications for the health outlook of our society."

For their NIH-funded study, Clarke and her team evaluated the cancer screening behaviors of the general public and cancer survivors to see if government-recommended screenings goals were achieved.

The study looked at cancer screening adherence rates for colorectal, breast, cervical and prostate cancers and compared the screening rates among the general public to all cancer survivors and to the subpopulation of employed survivors.

Results showed that the general public did not meet government recommendations for cancer screenings for any cancer types except colorectal cancer. About 54 percent of the general public underwent colorectal screenings, exceeding the 50 percent goal of the government's "Healthy People 2010" national health promotion and disease prevention initiative.

By contrast, cancer survivors, who are at an increased risk of developing the disease, had higher screening rates and underwent the recommended cancer screenings for all types except cervical cancer, which decreased to 78 percent over the last decade. The study also showed a decline among cancers survivors who sought cancer screenings over the last three years.

The researchers used the recommended cancer screening rates set by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and looked at data from the National Health Interview Survey between 1997 and 2010. In total, 174,393 people were included in the study analysis, with 7,528 employed cancer survivors and 119,374 people representing the general population.

In addition, the study showed that among survivors, white collar workers had higher screening rates than blue collar workers -- a crucial discovery that Clarke hopes will help change current job-related policies and overcome disparities within different professions of working cancer survivors.

The researchers speculated that ongoing disagreements among the United States Preventive Services Task Force, American Cancer Society and others over screening guidelines, as well as the decrease in worker insurance rates over the decade may have influenced the decline in screening rates.

Clarke hopes that more comprehensive research will assess the combined factors affecting screening rates and lead to more effective workplace interventions and increase screening within each occupational sector.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Frontiers, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Tainya C. Clarke, Hosanna Soler-Vila, Lora E. Fleming, Sharon L. Christ, David J. Lee, Kristopher L. Arheart. Trends in Adherence to Recommended Cancer Screening: The US Population and Working Cancer Survivors. Frontiers in Oncology, 2012; 2 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2012.00190

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/0xGCgb7eTeM/121227080108.htm

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Friday, December 21, 2012

Iran sidesteps sanctions to export its fuel oil

Iran sidesteps sanctions to export its fuel oilIran is becoming increasingly creative in dodging Western sanctions, managing to sell a rising volume of fuel oil to generate revenue equal to up to a third of its crude exports, which have been badly hit by restrictions.

Compared with the first half of the year, Iran has on average exported more fuel oil per month since July, when European Union oil and shipping insurance sanctions came into effect and more than halved its crude exports.

channeled into a nuclear program that Iran says is for peaceful purposes but the West fears is to enable it to make weapons.

into a nuclear program that Iran says is for peaceful purposes but the West fears is to enable it to make weapons.

Even for companies with no link to the EU, sanctions on financing and shipping insurance discourage would-be customers.

Iran uses fuel oil for electricity generation and to power ships, but unlike other more valuable refined products such as diesel or gasoline, it has a surplus to export from the 70,000 tonnes a day it produces.

The July sanctions slashed the OPEC member?s fuel oil sales initially, traders and analysts say, as term customers cancelled contracts, but sales have since rebounded thanks to the innovative methods of Gulf-based middlemen and Iran?s market-savvy oil officials.

The Islamic Republic sold an average 648,000 tonnes of fuel oil monthly from July to October, up from 636,000 tonnes for January to June, according to data from a company that tracks Iran?s oil shipments.

That brought in an average of $410 million per month. August income was more than double that figure, helping Iran to recoup a portion of the $3.8 billion it has lost in monthly crude export revenues since July.

Salar Moradi, oil analyst at FACTS Global Energy, said Iran fuel oil exports have risen from lows of around 400,000 tonnes a month this summer.

?The National Iranian Oil Company has been very successful in finding new strategies to circumvent sanctions and sold its fuel oil to Asia in August and September. Now we think Middle Eastern buyers of Iranian fuel oil have reappeared,? he said.

Using ship-to-ship transfers, discharging and loading at remote ports and blending the Iranian fuel oil with other fuels to disguise the origin have become popular tactics for the Gulf-based middlemen and helped keep sales steady, several trading and industry sources familiar with the region said.

Data from the firm tracking Iran shipments showed sharp fluctuations in fuel oil flows, which sources said could be attributed to shipping delays and tanker availability. Exports dived to zero in July and then jumped to 1.389 million tonnes in August, with a third of the sales going to the Middle East.

Iran?s fuel oil exports stayed above 1.1 million tonnes in September, and the Middle East received nearly 900,000 tonnes of this. In October, exports plunged to about 35,000 tonnes.

Reuters data for Iranian fuel oil flows to East Asia showed a new record of around 1.4 million tonnes in September and 1.1 million tonnes in October.

Requests for comment from officials at the NIOC were not answered.

CREATIVE WAYS

Iran is no stranger to international sanctions, and one common tactic to skirt them has been to cooperate with small Gulf-based oil traders who act as middlemen for buyers who might be unaware that the cargo is of Iranian origin.

Several Middle Eastern traders said they had been approached by small UAE-based companies offering a type of fuel oil dubbed in the market as ?Iraqi special blend? that included a combination of different fuel oil blends from the Middle East, or with an origin described as Iraqi.

The specification indicates this is a cocktail of products blended in storage tanks and usually offered from the quiet Gulf port of Hamriyah and bunkering hub Fujairah mostly via ship-to-ship transfers (STS), trading sources said.

?This Iranian fuel oil, disguised as Iraqi origin, has been flooding the market in Fujairah and depressing both cargo and bunker premiums in September,? said a Middle East-based trader.

Some oil traders afraid of falling foul of western sanctions said a close examination of the so-called ?Iraqi special blend? gives them reason to be suspicious.

A certificate of quality for one such cargo showed the density of the product to be around 0.9655 kilogrammes a liter ? a level suggesting it was probably Iranian, the traders said.

The Islamic Republic usually exports 280 cst viscosity straight-run fuel oil from its Bandar Mahshahr port, with a density of around 0.965.

AIS Live shiptracking data on Reuters showed that tankers were regularly shuttling towards Iran?s main fuel oil export terminals of Bandar Abbas and Bandar Imam Khomeini, then turning off their satellite signals before reappearing soon afterwards next to the UAE storage hub Fujairah.

In another tactic, small barges have left the port of Bandar Imam Khomeini, near Iran?s largest refinery Abadan, and then transferred their cargo onto bigger tankers destined for Fujairah, two industry sources said.

Separately, Chinese e-commerce website Alibaba showed an Iranian seller offering volumes of at least 100,000 barrels of Iraqi fuel oil for sale.

Reuters previously reported that Iran had exported its own fuel oil to Malaysia on a National Iranian Tanker Company vessel, before transferring it at sea to a Vitol-chartered tanker.

COVER STORY

Refinery upgrades planned for late 2012 or early 2013 at the Arak and Bandar Abbas plants should curb the amount of fuel oil Iran has for export, but refinery runs have been on the rise this year. Reducing them is seen as an unattractive option, since this would also cap production of gasoline badly needed for domestic use, shortages of which can stir up social unrest.

Oil traders say disguising Iranian exports as Iraqi is the perfect cover story, since in reality a small volume of Iraqi fuel oil is smuggled over the border and out of Iranian ports.

?Some fuel oil does come out of Iraq overland smuggled in trucks. I imagine that some of the Iranian volumes may be piggy-backing on this trend,? said a senior source at a Swiss-based trading house familiar with the region.

Another sign that the special blend cargoes are likely to be Iranian is the suspiciously cheap price.

?They?re being offered at ridiculously low prices, with a huge discount to the market. Like $10-15 discounts,? said the Middle East-based trader.

Traders said that from Fujairah, the ?Iraqi special blend? cargoes are then transferred onto larger vessels such as Suez Max tankers and VLCCs and then sent to Asia.

A partner at a law firm who asked not to be named said the confusion over the origin of fuel oil was causing havoc in the Singapore bunker market ? the ultimate destination for most Iranian fuel oil volumes.

?It?s becoming a big issue in Singapore as there?s a lot of bunker fuel there which may have Iranian fuel in it. People are very aware of the issue and they are trying to get warranties for the product,? he said.

?The Singapore bunker market is a black hole,? said another Swiss-based trader.?You never know where it has really come from once it gets there.?

(Reuters)

Source: http://updatednews.ca/2012/12/20/iran-sidesteps-sanctions-to-export-its-fuel-oil/

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NBA Highlights: Lebron James Top 10 Plays [Video]

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To celebrate Lebron James becoming the first player to get 20+ points in his first 22 games of the season since Karl Malone AKA The Mailman did it in 1989-90 let?s shout out the?NBA Lebron James Top 10 Plays from?his MVP/Championship 2011-12 season! Check out the video above!

Source: http://thatsenuff.com/index.php/2012/12/nba-highlight-lebron-james-top-10-plays-video/

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Florida Man Convicted in Wiretapping Scheme Targeting Celebrities Sentenced to 10 Years in Federal Prison

You Are Here: Home ? FBI ? Florida Man Convicted in Wiretapping Scheme Targeting Celebrities Sentenced to 10 Years in Federal Prison

Flag of the United StatesA Florida man who hacked into the personal e-mail accounts of more than 50 people associated with the entertainment industry?including actors Scarlett Johansson, Mila Kunis, and Renee Olstead?was sentenced this week to 120 months in federal prison.Christopher Chaney, 36, of Jacksonville, Florida, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge S. James Otero, who also ordered the defendant to pay $66,179 in restitution. At the hearing, Judge Otero said Chaney?s conduct demonstrated a ?callous disregard to the victims??particularly, two non-celebrity victims, each of whom was stalked by Chaney for more than 10 years. Judge Otero noted that with the increase in cybercrime, it is important to realize that extreme emotional distress can be as devastating as a physical injury.

Chaney has been in custody since March, when he pleaded guilty to nine felony counts, including wiretapping and unauthorized access to protected computers.

?Illegal wiretapping gave Mr. Chaney access to every e-mail sent to more than four dozen victims and allowed him to view their most personal information,? said U.S. Attorney Andr? Birotte, Jr. ?Mr. Chaney is responsible for causing dozens of illegally obtained, private photographs to be posted on the Internet, where they were available for all to see. This case is a sobering reminder that cybercrime poses a very real threat to every American, and everyone should take steps to safeguard their identities and personal information on the Internet.?

Bill Lewis, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI?s Los Angeles Field Office, commented, ?For many victims, Mr. Chaney?s actions were tantamount to breaking and entering of their private homes by a thief in the night. Mr. Chaney methodically targeted his victims based on their celebrity without regard for the law or the impact the theft of personal and intimate details would have to their lives. This case illustrates the need for cybersecurity vigilance by computer users and, in addition, may serve as a deterrent for anyone contemplating similar intrusions.?

When he pleaded guilty, Chaney admitted that from at least November 2010 to October 2011, he hacked into the victims? e-mail accounts by clicking on the ?Forgot your password?? feature and then re-setting the victims? passwords by correctly answering their security questions he guessed by using publicly available information he found on the Internet. Once Chaney gained exclusive control of the victims? e-mail accounts, he was able to access all of their e-mail boxes. While in the accounts, Chaney also went through their contact lists to find addresses of potential new hacking targets.

In relation to the wiretapping charges, Chaney admitted that for most victims, he changed their e-mail account settings by inserting his own e-mail address into the forwarding feature so that he would receive, without the victims? knowledge, a duplicate copy of all incoming e-mails. Most of the victims did not check their account settings, so even after they regained control of their e-mail accounts, Chaney?s e-mail address remained in their account settings.

Chaney admitted that as his hacking scheme became more extensive, he began using a proxy service called ?Hide My IP? because he wanted to ?cover his tracks? and not be discovered by law enforcement agents. Even after his home computers were seized by law enforcement, Chaney used another computer to hack into another victim?s e-mail account.

As a result of his hacking scheme, Chaney obtained private photographs and confidential documents, including business contracts, scripts, letters, driver?s license information, and Social Security information. On several occasions, after hacking into victims? accounts, Chaney sent e-mails from the hacked accounts, fraudulently posing as the victims and requesting more private photographs. Chaney e-mailed many of the stolen photographs to others, including another hacker and two gossip websites. As a result, some of the stolen photographs were posted on the Internet.

The investigation of Chaney and his hacking activities was conducted by the FBI.

Source: FBI

Net News Publisher for FBI News


Source: http://www.netnewspublisher.com/florida-man-convicted-in-wiretapping-scheme-targeting-celebrities-sentenced-to-10-years-in-federal-prison/

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Distance Education Librarian at George Washington ... - LLAM Online

Lead in the development and delivery of research and user services for online and off-campus communities at The George Washington University. The person in this position assesses the needs of students, faculty and administrators in order to determine and provide instruction, outreach and library services to GW?s off-campus population. The librarian serves as a liaison to the College of Professional Studies, the Teaching and Learning Collaborative, and to departments serving GW?s off-campus locations. S/he coordinates activities of staff in providing library materials and services and will be the contact person for library staff and university departments regarding services and collection development for off-campus education students.

This position participates as a member of the Research Services Group within Gelman Library and serves as a member of the Education and Instruction Group, advocating for off campus and online student needs within each group.

This position serves on library and university committees as needed. Some travel and evening/weekend hours are required. This position reports to the Coordinator, Instruction Services.

Specific Duties and Responsibilities:

* Facilitates the planning, development, promotion, delivery, and assessment of library services to students and faculty at off-campus sites and for online courses.

* Provides course-integrated, online andin-person library instruction

* Works with the Web Services Team, Reference Service Team, the Education and Instruction Group to maintain outreach and instructional materials for off- campus students and faculty.

* Participates in collection development to develop print and electronic library collections to support distance education programs.

* Works closely with the College of Professional Studies, the Teaching and Learning Collaborative, the Online Learning Initiative, and other GW entities to assess departmental needs and identify opportunities for collaboration on new services.

* Collaborates with Access Services, Resource Sharing, and other library departments to develop policies and procedures for library services to off- campus students.

* Provides general and specialized reference, research and consultation services in traditional and online environments.

* Travels to off-campus centers.

Minimum Qualifications:

* ALA accredited MLS and a minimum two years post-MLS experience

* Experience providing reference services and/or coursework in providing library reference services.

* Teaching experience and/or coursework in library instruction, information literacy, or education.

DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS:

* Experience with Blackboard or other course management systems.

* Experience evaluating and implementing web-based technologies for outreach, reference and instruction.

* Experience delivering library services online, either synchronously or asynchronously.

* Demonstrated leadership in managing or coordinating group projects

* Demonstrated understanding of key issues, ideas, and trends in distance or online education.

* Ability to work effectively with co-workers in a collaborative, cross functional, team-based organization.

* Excellent oral and written communication skills.

* Working knowledge of standard computer office applications such as Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or other productivity software. Working knowledge of video creation tools such as Captivate, Camtasia, or Jing.

* Advanced degree in Educational Technology.

* Educational background or collection development experience in Education, Engineering, or other field related to offerings of our College of Professional Studies. (See http://cps.gwu.edu/academicprograms)

Brought to you by code4lib jobs: http://jobs.code4lib.org/job/5136/

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Source: http://llamonline.org/2012/12/19/distance-education-librarian-at-george-washington-university/

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Thursday, December 20, 2012

THQ Files For Chapter 11 Bankruptcy - Nintendo Life

THQ will hope to survive

THQ will hope to survive

Upcoming games are safe

THQ has been sailing through some stormy seas recently. The developer currently has $16.4 million outstanding on its facility and recently entered into a forbearance agreement with the finance company Wells Fargo Capital Finance.

The waves don?t seem to be easing up for the company as it has today filed for Chapter 11 bankrupcy protection in a U.S. Federal Court in Delaware. THQ says this is to facilitate the sale of the publisher's owned studios and current games in development. The company has entered a purchase agreement with a bidder.

CEO Brian Farrell said in a press release from THQ:

The sale and filing are necessary next steps to complete THQ's transformation and position the company for the future, as we remain confident in our existing pipeline of games, the strength of our studios and THQ's deep bench of talent.

We are grateful to our outstanding team of employees, partners and suppliers who have worked with us through this transition. We are pleased to have attracted a strong financial partner for our business, and we hope to complete the sale swiftly to make the process as seamless as possible.

The bankruptcy proceedings won?t put the brakes on any upcoming games in development, including Metro: Last Light and South Park: The Stick of Truth ? none of which are on a Nintendo console.

The last game to be released on a Nintendo system was Darksiders II on Wii U, hopefully it won?t be the last release we see from the developer.

What are your thoughts on this news? As ever, let us know in the comments section below.

Source: http://www.nintendolife.com/news/2012/12/thq_files_for_chapter_11_bankruptcy

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Friday, December 14, 2012

Screenwriters Rehab: Don't Keep Knocking On The Door When You ...

? ? ?A big mistake screenwriters make is waiting for someone to help them. I don't mean with your screenplays, but with what I like to call the "maintenance" of your career. Once your screenplay is ready (meaning you've done several drafts, gotten positive feedback and you're confident it's as good as it can be), it's like a child being sent out into the world.

? ? ?Unfortunately, the world doesn't care and it won't be a welcoming place for your baby to enter into.

? ? ?That's where you come in. Unless you have contacts in high places or a referral to someone who can help you, you and only you are responsible for finding a contact in a high place and getting your own referrals.

? ? ?Too many new screenwriters are helpless.?

? ? ?They act like foreigners in a country who don't speak the language.

? ? ?They are timid about asking for help.?

? ? ?They are lazy. They feel that the hard work was in getting their screenplay in shape. I won't say that that's the easy part, but finding an agent, manager or producer who will even read your script is almost as difficult.

? ? ?Whatever discipline and work habits you used to write your screenplay, you must do the same in your pursuit of representation or an interested producer.?

? ? ?Allocate an hour day (more if you can spare it) to surfing the Internet for screenwriting sites and contests with the hope of finding a name who will be receptive to reading your script or at least reading a synopsis.

? ? Get to know people, especially other screenwriters or people working in the business. Join writers support groups. Go to symposiums on screenwriting or breaking into the business. Everywhere you go talk to people. Schmooze. You never know where you'll find someone who knows someone who knows someone else.

? ? ?And keep writing query letters and query emails. Find ways to nail down the exact email address of someone important. Or even of someone not important, but who may know someone who is.

? ? ?The thing you should do least of all is to wait for someone to knock on your door, out of the blue. Or wait for someone who said they would help you, but didn't. If you encounter someone who seems positive and receptive, be thankful, but also be mistrustful. They may be lying or just yessing you to death so you'll stop bugging them.

? ? ?Be relentless, be polite, be cautious and be smart enough to know who has your best interests at heart and who doesn't.

? ? ?And hope for some luck!

Source: http://screenwritersrehabbydbgilles.blogspot.com/2012/12/dont-keep-knocking-on-door-when-you.html

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Video: Dealbook Conference; Apple TV on the Way?

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50180831/

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Beagle - Beetle - Medium - Senior - Female - Dog | Port Saint Joe ...

Beagle - Beetle - Medium - Senior - Female - Dog

This is Beetle a wonderful senior 8yr Beagle/Lab mix. She has lived in a senior home and would do well as a companion. Because Beetle has always gone on daily walks with her dad, she now walks very well on her leash. She gets along well with other dogs and cats and loves everyone. This girl misses her dad and would love to have a home with a new dad and mom. This pet qualifies for a Pets for Patriots supported adoption.

If you are interested in any of our wonderful pets, please do not hesitate to contact us.

If you are unable to adopt at this time, perhaps you could foster or make a Donation <http://www.sjbhumanesociety.org/> . All pets adopted from SJBHS will be current on vaccinations and spayed/neutered. Please do not hesitate to email [email removed] or [email removed] or call the St. Joseph Bay Humane Society at 850-227-1103 and ask for Melody or Debbie! Online applications are available at http://www.sjbhumanesociety.org <http://www.sjbhumanesociety.org/> and will be emailed to our office or you can print and fax to 850-227-1191.

SHBHS is a proud member of http://www.petsforpatriots.org <http://www.petsforpatriots.org/>

We require all potential adopters to complete an application form. Adoption fees include our cost of spay/neuter and current vaccinations. In some cases donations may be requested to offset cost of pets requiring any additional medical care.

CHARACTERISTICS:
Breed: Beagle
Size: Medium
Petfinder ID: 24828430

ADDITIONAL INFO:
Pet has been spayed/neutered

CONTACT:
St. Joseph Bay Humane Society | Port Saint Joe, FL | 850-227-1103

For additional information, reply to this ad or see: http://www.petfinder.com/petnote/displaypet.cgi?petid=24828430

Brought to you by Petfinder.com

Source: http://tallahassee.ebayclassifieds.com/dogs-puppies/port-saint-joe/beagle-beetle-medium-senior-female-dog/?ad=25002718

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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Kids&#39; dental clinic fields new complaints - TODAY Health

By Talesha Reynolds and Lisa Myers, NBC News

Visits to the dentist can be upsetting for little children, but when Autum Archuleta took her son Nathan to a Small Smiles dental clinic in February 2010, it was beyond anything she could have imagined. The dentist gave Nathan, then almost 3, three crowns, two baby root canals and six silver fillings in 25 minutes.

While in the waiting room, Archuleta says she heard her son screaming and burst into the treatment room. She says Nathan was crying and struggling to move while being held down by three clinic employees and wrapped from his head to his feet in a stabilization device called a papoose board. She thinks he wasn't properly numbed.

"He wasn't the same for a long time after we brought him home," Archuleta said. "He cried a lot...He wasn't my little boy. He didn't smile...The night terrors were the worst. I mean it was a lot of sleepless nights."

A dentist who later reviewed Nathan's records said the work was shoddy and many procedures unnecessary. A dentist who saw Nathan the following year wrote that he had "severe situational trauma."

"To me I think they did it for the money," Archuleta said of Small Smiles. "Flat-out did it for the money. Because it was Medicaid and Medicaid would pay them."

An NBC News investigation of the performance of Small Smiles' 63 dental clinics over the last three years found repeated allegations of substandard work and unnecessary procedures which drove up the cost to taxpayers. The allegations came from anguished parents, government investigators and former employees around the country.

Such practices violate a settlement the company reached with the Justice Department in January 2010, following allegations that it was bilking taxpayers by doing unnecessary and substandard procedures on low-income children. ?

At the time, Tony West, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division of the Department of Justice said, "We have zero tolerance for those who break the law to exploit children in need."

The company that managed Small Smiles and affiliated clinics agreed to significantly alter its practices and subject itself to independent monitoring. It also agreed to pay $24 million, without admitting wrongdoing.

But three years later, records show the company has not cleaned up its act. ?

"This company sees dollar signs in the eyes of every child they bring in," Senator Chuck Grassley told NBC News. Grassley has been investigating dental organizations whose primary source of revenue is Medicaid. He says Small Smiles practices assembly-line treatment, focused more on quantity than quality.

"This whole investigation kind of leads us to two things. To a conclusion that the tax payers are being fleeced, and children are being abused." Grassley said.

Small Smiles clinics are managed by a private corporation called CSHM, LLC, which was until June called Church Street Health Management.?

The Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General (HHS OIG) is responsible for monitoring the clinics and rendering penalties when appropriate.

Lisa Re, a branch chief who heads an HHS OIG team of attorneys, says CSHM is improving since it emerged from bankruptcy in June 2012 with a new CEO and leadership.

"Recently, under new management, I would say that it is getting much better."

But according to letters from HHS OIG to Church Street, the compliance has been inconsistent and sometimes alarming.

In May, the office required CSHM to temporarily close a facility in Oxon Hill, Maryland to train staff on "the appropriate use of mouth props, patient stabilization practices, appropriate use and administration of anesthesia," among other things. Nine of 30 records the independent monitor reviewed "did not provide any documentation or radiographic evidence to support the medical necessity for the treatment provided. Six of those nine records showed baby root canals were performed "without medical necessity."

The OIG required the company to divest from a location in Manassas, VA in March because of "flagrant violations." A 2011 audit at that clinic found 104 of 244 baby root canals performed by the lead dentist to be medically unnecessary. In a sample of 34 records, 20 patients were restrained and given baby root canals with insufficient anesthesia. The monitor expressed concern that the children "were resisting treatment because they were being hurt."

In June the office fined CSHM 100,000 dollars after an audit found multiple breaches at an Ohio clinic, including treatments performed without medical necessity, incomplete or poorly done root canals, crowns places on "non-restorable" teeth and "poor techniques of administering local anesthesia." Six of seven dentists performed root canals on children that were not needed.

Last year, the agency issued a 230,000 dollar penalty, the largest it has ever levied, for multiple failures to comply with provisions of the government agreement. Among the breaches, the company failed to meet training and education requirements.

Still, Small Smiles continues to rake in millions in Medicaid dollars. Despite multiple threats to exclude the company from receiving federal funds, it made 150 million dollars in revenue from Medicaid in 2011.

The HHS OIG has given Church Street multiple chances to keep the clinics in business, levying penalties against the company and threatening to exclude them from receiving federal dollars. But the threats generally come with an out ? a way to repair the breaches and avoid being exclusion.

Senator Grassley believes that cycle should come to an end.

"The inspector general has given this group a lot of second chances. Every time they get their hand in the cookie jar. All sorts of excuses. So you get back to how long can this go on ? the fleecing of the tax payers, the abuse of children? And you get back to the point that maybe it's about time for the inspector general to disqualify this company from Medicaid."

DENTAL CARE VACUUMS CREATE LIMITED OPTIONS IN LOW-INCOME NEIGHBORHOODS

Small Smiles treats about 500,000 children a year. Jamier Brown, 4, was one of them. His mother Jasmine brought him to Small Smiles in Dayton, Ohio at the end of 2011 because she couldn't afford her other options.?

"I knew that his mouth needed attention. And he was complaining that his teeth were hurting, so I just couldn't wait around to see when I could get the money. I had to go as soon as I could," she said.

Jamier received caps and fillings in most of his mouth in January.? Months later, he is still in pain.? The gum line is discolored where his front teeth we capped and Jamier says, "It hurts all the time."

Two dentists who reviewed Jamier's records said he should have been treated by a pediatric dentist, most likely in the hospital under general anesthesia. One called the treatment on his front teeth "inadequate."

At the time Jamier was treated, Jasmine was in Job Corps and living with her mother. She blames herself for what happened to her son.?

"It's kinda my fault," she said as tears rolled down her face, "Because if I would have had the money, he probably wouldn't have felt any of that pain that he had to go through."

The guilt Brown feels is common among parents who spoke with NBC News and claimed their children were hurt at Small Smiles. They all said they didn?t know where else to go.

According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 31.5 million children were eligible for dental coverage through Medicaid in fiscal year 2011, but only 14.7 million children utilized a dental or oral health service.

Four out of five dentists don't take Medicaid, some because they just don't treat children but others complain of low reimbursement rates. Dr. Warren Brill is the president elect of the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD). He has his own practice in Baltimore, MD and 85 percent of his patients are on Medicaid.?

"Reimbursement rates are a large factor in terms of dentists not accepting children on Medicaid, because the fees that they get are often times lower than the cost of providing the care," he said.

According to AAPD 70 percent of its members accept Medicaid. But only 3.5 percent of all professionally active dentists practice that specialty. ??

Nevertheless, Dr. Brill says parents of children on public insurance can find quality care.

"It's a question of learning how to make the appointment, getting referrals from state health departments, from dental associations, from friends and relatives. Parents that find those avenues should be able to find a dentist for their children."

DOES PROFIT MODEL PUT CHILDREN AT RISK?

Because Medicaid reimbursement rates are lower than what dentists charge other patients, critics say to make a profit, the clinics rely on volume.

Dr. Kianor Shah worked for Small Smiles briefly in 2011.? He says he left after witnessing disturbing practices. The dentist showed NBC News notes he took about treatments he observed during his time there. Scattered across several pages were words like "restraint brutal," "unnecessary" and "no way."

"I observed excessive use of the papoose board and excessive use of force to restrain children as well as overtreatment for procedures that could have been done with much less invasive approach."

Shah claims dentists were coerced into abusing children and overcharging Medicaid by the promise of bonuses and pressure from management.?

"I was advised, quote unquote, 'The dentists eat what they kill.' That means that they're gonna get paid for as much work as they do on those Medicaid kids. And that was about the last straw for me."

Senator Grassley's investigation involves dental management companies that are controlled by corporate investors. Many states require dentists to own the clinics but the management companies, like CSHM, effectively control the operations.

"Our investigation has found a lot of private equity money being invested in companies that are doing everything they can in the most sophisticated way to take as much money out of Medicaid as they can. And in the process of just milking the Medicaid program, we're finding a lot of abuse of children."

PROGRESSIVE IMPROVEMENT AT SMALL SMILES

The Inspector General's office says the Small Smiles clinics have progressively improved, and while that improvement has been "uneven," the company is providing essential care to a vulnerable population. The agency maintains that it is better to aggressively monitor the company than to shutter it. ?

"If we had closed down Small Smiles last year, there would have been an uncontrolled shut down of this company leaving half a million kids scrambling for dental care," said Lisa Re.

The issue is further complicated by the states, which are responsible for administering Medicaid. The OIG surveyed states about the impact of closing the clinics and got a strong reaction.

"Some of the states were alarmed that we were even considering closing any of the clinics because they simply didn't have enough dentists to provide any care to these kids," said Re.

The attorney said in the last couple of years the office found five clinics to have the most significant problems.

"It's important to understand that not every clinic is providing bad care. If that were the case, this is an easy decision."

According to an affidavit in the Church Street bankruptcy filing earlier this year, "more than 1.5 million patients have been served during the past five years, improving overall dental health and access to care in many low-income areas in the 22 states in which the Company has had a?presence."

Chris and Loretta Trujillo are grateful for the care the Small Smiles in Denver provides their children. They say it is very difficult to find dentists who take Medicaid and their children, Jordan, Jazmin and Faith, have never had a bad experience.

"My kids have never been scared coming here," said mom Loretta. "They're excited to come."

The Inspector General's office is taking on Small Smiles on a clinic-by-clinic basis, vigorously monitoring them and assessing penalties when appropriate.

"We have taken targeted and aggressive action against the clinics that provided bad care while allowing the company to provide good necessary care at the other clinics," she said, adding that the clinics are showing marked improvements since a new CEO, David Wilson, came on in June.

"The company as it operates today is simply not the same as the company that was repeatedly violating the agreement," Re insists.

In a statement to NBC News, CSHM's Wilson wrote, "Patients are at the center of everything we do at CSHM. CSHM LLC supports our affiliated dental centers so that they can continue to provide access to quality dental care. Our dental centers serve approximately one million patient visits per year, primarily to children in communities with under-served access to dental care."?

Following an alarming audit of the Small Smiles clinic in Youngstown, Ohio that found substandard and unnecessary care, the new management company, which had just been formed, fired nine dentists there. The Inspector General's office called that action encouraging.

CSHM stressed its commitment to quality care. "Under the new management team, more than 50 new dentists have joined CSHM affiliated centers and the company continues to support their ongoing efforts to recruit qualified dentists."

That is simply not enough for Jasmine Brown. "I don't want anybody else's child to have to go through what my son went through, especially being that young. That's traumatic. That's something that could follow him the rest of his life."

Jasmine is now holding down two jobs ? one as a pharmacy tech at CVS, the other as a security guard at a men and women's shelter. She says she can now afford to get Jamier the care he needs.?

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Source: http://todayhealth.today.com/_news/2012/12/11/15839314-kids-dental-clinic-fields-new-complaints

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