Saturday, December 31, 2011

High school sports: The week that was and the week ahead

Teams of the week

SWIMMING ? South boys: Amid a light holiday week, the longtime Premier Athletic Conference power Rebels edged Mentor, 94-90, last week in a tri-meet that also included Andrews Osborne. Mike Bixel took the 50 freestyle and was on the winning 200 medley and 200 free relays.

WRESTLING ? Kenston: Coach Brian Malloy's squad dominated in a 58-21 win over Riverside just before Christmas. The Bombers have lost some big-name wrestlers since last year, including state-placer Tre Smith, but they are a deep and talented team with a lot of room for growth.

Lake Catholic: The Cougars got a five-point move from Sean Fee in the final bout of the night to defeat Mentor on criteria, with both teams tied at 31. It's a huge shot of adrenaline for the Cougars, who started the season with injury and illness problems.

BOYS BASKETBALL ? North: The Rangers won a pair of PAC games, defeating Madison and Riverside on the road by a combined 43 points, to improve to 5-1.

Games and events to watch

BOYS BASKETBALL ? Brush Holiday Tournament finals (Today, 7:30): The South-Euclid winner will take on the Brush-Berea winner in what should be an entertaining tournament championship game tonight.

BOYS BASKETBALL ? Kirtland at Berkshire (Wednesday, 7:30): The bitter CVC Valley rivals will hook up for the first of two matchups that should decide the league title.

GIRLS BASKETBALL ? Lake Catholic at Hathaway Brown (Jan. 5): A rematch of a regional final from last year. The Blazers are the reigning Division II state champions.

SWIMMING ? University in nonconference duals (Today and Jan. 5): US coach Brian Perry isn't about to let his three-time Division II state team champions have it easy during the holiday break, with showdowns at Carmel (Ind.) today and at Akron Firestone on Jan. 5. Continued...

WRESTLING ? Brecksville Holiday Tournament (today, 10 a.m., finals at 6:30 p.m.): If you didn't catch the opening round on Thursday, it's not too late to see Day 2 of this spectacular tournament.

WRESTLING ? NOC head-to-heads (Jan. 5): Mayfield travels to Elyria and Normandy invades Brush. Both duals will begin at 6 p.m. NOC wrestling is some of the best in the area.

WRESTLING ? Kirtland Triangular (Jan. 5, 6 p.m.): The Hornets welcome VASJ and Mentor's B team for a triangular.

Stats of the week

SWIMMING ? 7: Events at the Perry Invitational on Thursday in which a Turk girl had a hand in a Riverside win. Jodi Turk won the 50- and 100-yard freestyle, Kelsi took the 500 free, Marla was first in the 200 free and 100 butterfly and all three were on the Beavers' winning 200 medley and 400 free relays.

Boys basketball ? 50 percent: That's the amount of the schedule that South will have already played prior to the first of the year. In the first four weeks of the season, the Rebels will have played half of their regular-season schedule. Tonight will already be South's 10th game of the 2011-2012 season, meaning there will be a lot of down time in January and February as the Rebels gear up for the postseason. Over the next nine weeks leading into the tournament, they will play another 10 games.

WRESTLING ? 42.5: Margin between first-place Perry and second-place Crestwood going into the final round of the Kenston Invitational Tournament (191-148.5). Said Perry coach Dave Rowan, who was surprised how far his team was ahead, "I told them it was close so they would still wrestle hard."

? Theresa Audia, Chris Lillstrung, Bill Tilton, John Kampf

Source: http://news-herald.com/articles/2011/12/30/sports/nh4907687.txt

apple store academy barnes and noble nook 12 days of christmas a christmas carol arkansas football player dies anne mccaffrey

Figures show more young people are resorting to debt relief orders

Motors

Search for a car

Source: http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/figures_show_more_young_people_are_resorting_to_debt_relief_orders_1_4102058

cp3 lakers news rachel crow rachel crow steelers browns albert pujols pau gasol

Friday, December 30, 2011

Egypt's Mubarak back in court as trial resumes (AP)

CAIRO ? The trial of Hosni Mubarak resumed Wednesday after a 3-month break, with the ousted Egyptian leader returning to the metal defendants' cage in a Cairo courtroom for the latest proceedings.

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.

Mubarak is charged with complicity in the killings of more than 800 protesters in the crackdown on a popular uprising in January and February that forced him out of office. He could face the death penalty if convicted. He has been under arrest since April, but he has never gone to prison and instead has been confined to hospitals the entire time. His lawyers and doctors say he is suffering from heart ailments.

Mubarak and his two sons, who are in prison, also face corruption charges.

Wednesday's session lasted for only a few hours and then the judge adjourned the trial again until Jan. 2. The judge received new requests from defense lawyers to expand the case to include other incidents of violence and deaths of protesters since Mubarak's ouster. Mubarak's lawyers argued that killings of protesters continued even after he stepped down and asked for this to be considered evidence that he is not the one responsible for the killings.

Protests and unrest have continued throughout the year, with pro-democracy activists keeping up pressure on the ruling military for reforms. Clashes between protesters and security forces have killed more than 100 people since Mubarak's ouster.

Relations between the mostly youthful activists and the military rulers have steadily worsened, hitting a new low this month when soldiers brutally beat and stomped on protesters, including women, in Cairo clashes that left at least 18 people dead and dozens wounded.

Mubarak's trial began in August, with many in the country riveted by the sight of the longtime authoritarian ruler lying in a hospital bed inside the defendant's cage, flanked by his two sons who formerly wielded tremendous power.

During early sessions, the trial was bogged down by frequent commotion and arguments in the courtroom between lawyers representing both sides. Eventually, the judge banned the media as he summoned high-ranking officials to testify.

In September, Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, the head of Egypt's ruling military council that took power after Mubarak's fall, testified under a total media blackout.

Journalists were barred from the court and forbidden to report any leaked details of his testimony. Many believe Tantawi ? who was Mubarak's defense minister for two decades ? can address the key question of whether Mubarak ordered the use of lethal force against protesters, or at least knew about it and didn't try to stop it.

Also on trial with Mubarak and facing the same charges are his former Interior Minister Habib el-Adly and six senior former security officials. Mubarak and his two sons, Alaa and Gamal, also face corruption charges.

The prosecution's case depends heavily on accounts of members of the former president's inner circle including ex-spy chief Omar Suleiman, who was appointed vice president by Mubarak during the uprising.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_egypt_mubarak_trial

day light savings day light savings us geological survey us geological survey oklahoma fall back time change

Around the Web?

It’s Hump Day! Give Wednesday’s links a click: Four-year-old rants about pink princess toys aimed at girls ? ABCNews.com Enfamil formula pulled off shelves after 10-day-old baby dies ? MSNBC.com Angered moms stage nurse-in at Target ? TIME.com VIDEO: President Obama gets surprised by a grabby baby ? CBSNews.com Are your breasts off-limits while breastfeeding? [...]

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/7HTpwT0Jpa4/

verizon galaxy nexus verizon galaxy nexus lawrence lessig lawrence lessig time magazine person of the year 2011 time magazine person of the year 2011 good morning america

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Chelsea: Visit Mexico

Generic Profile Pic Tweet

Added: December 28, 2011
Status: Completed on December 28, 2011

No story for this item (yet)

Comments

There are no comments on this item, but you can be the first.

You must be logged in to leave comments.

Source: http://bucketlist.org/i/byA5/

pabst blue ribbon mac miller omarion gabby gabby marcel the shell with shoes on ecu

Airline pollution permits in Europe have angered the US and Chinese governments

Airline pollution permits in Europe have angered the US and Chinese governments

File photo of Air France planes on the tarmac at Orly airport, outside Paris. Airlines flying in Europe will only have to pay for 15 percent of their emission allowances in 2012, amounting to 256 million euros under current market prices. They will have to pay for 18 percent from 2013.

Source: AFP - Copyright AFP 2008, AFP stories and photos shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium

Source: http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=iafpCNG.a8635b15b68bf9aeb87b85f601aa964d.1c1p1&show_article=1

andy williams nyc marathon nyc marathon coriolis effect coriolis effect giants patriots yolo

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

New Solar Energy Monitoring Application for Android-Powered Smart Phones

?

The options offered by smart phone technology and apps are virtually limitless. We?ve featured a number of green apps here on CleanTechnica, but I can?t remember hearing or reading about one for monitoring solar panel performance.. until now.?SunPower has just unveiled one for its customers.

Last week,?SunPower, a world-leading producer of solar cell, solar panels, and solar systems (& California?s most popular solar panel last I checked), announced ?a new solar energy monitoring application for Android?-powered smartphones to its SunPower Monitoring System portfolio.?

Basically, customers can track both their home energy use and environmental savings and the performance of their solar power system with the app. They can look at such data in real-time or historically. They can also share that info with friends and family.

The app is free and can be downloaded from Android Market. Check it out if you have a SunPower system and drop us any comments you have about it!

I imagine there are other apps like this out there (but maybe not) ? drop a note in the comments if you know of and recommend any.

Source: http://feeds.importantmedia.org/~r/IM-cleantechnica/~3/prJT8CMuyoo/

etta james keystone xl pipeline bowl games idaho potato bowl cagayan de oro cagayan de oro bowl schedule 2011

Minister: Spain to fall back into recession

In this photo taken Friday Dec. 23, 2011, Spain's new Economy Minister Luis de Guindos arrives at the Moncloa Palace for the new Spanish government's first cabinet meeting. De Guindos said Monday Dec. 26, 2001 that Spain will slide back into recession early next year with the current quarter and the first of 2012 both registering negative growth. Last Thursday he said he was confident the country would emerge from its severe economic crisis. (AP Photo/Paul White)

In this photo taken Friday Dec. 23, 2011, Spain's new Economy Minister Luis de Guindos arrives at the Moncloa Palace for the new Spanish government's first cabinet meeting. De Guindos said Monday Dec. 26, 2001 that Spain will slide back into recession early next year with the current quarter and the first of 2012 both registering negative growth. Last Thursday he said he was confident the country would emerge from its severe economic crisis. (AP Photo/Paul White)

(AP) ? Spain will slide back into recession early next year with the current quarter and the first of 2012 both registering negative growth, new Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said Monday.

De Guindos said he expects the economy ? the eurozone's fourth largest ? to contract by between 0.2 percent and 0.3 percent on the previous quarter in the final three months of this year and again in the first quarter of next year. He said the outlook for next year was poor.

If the Spanish economy were to contract by between 0.2 percent and 0.3 percent for an entire year, it would shrink roughly 1 percent.

"Let nobody be fooled, the next two quarters are not going to be easy either in terms of growth or employment," de Guindos said.

Spain began to emerge from a near two-year recession last year. It had two successive quarters of growth in 2011 before posting zero growth in the third period.

De Guindos took office last week as part of the new conservative Popular Party government. He said then he was confident the country would emerge from its severe economic crisis and return to prosperity and its former status as a job creator.

Spain has the highest unemployment rate of the 17 countries that use the euro, with 21.5 percent joblessness, and is running a swollen budget deficit following the recession that started with the collapse of a real estate bubble.

The Popular Party won a landslide victory in Nov. 20 elections on a promise to get the economy moving again.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has pledged austerity cuts totaling euro16.5 billion ($21.6 billion) and promised labor reforms.

His government is to begin approving urgent measures Friday, including a freeze on filling new civil service vacancies. except in key areas such as the security forces.

Spain has already made sharp cuts to its national spending and introduced several reforms under the former Socialist government, but the economy has failed to respond.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-26-EU-Europe-Financial-Crisis/id-ebbcb08a53df4419990f82b8f281d07c

marlins sugar bowl kourtney kardashian pregnant kourtney kardashian pregnant wormwood bcs bowl games jose reyes

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Bored On Christmas? Follow These 9 Hilarious Fake Sports Twitter Accounts Now

Summary

Twitter is a free microblogging and messaging service created by Jack Dorsey, Evan Williams, and Biz Stone in 2006. A developer who helped build the platform, Noah Glass, came up from obscurity in April 2011 to reveal that he... More ?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/businessinsider/~3/2EUEG0bibbM/best-fake-sports-twitter-2011-12

stevie williams steve williams koch brothers dash diet weather phoenix dippin dots triumph the insult comic dog

Hackers target US security think tank

(AP) ? Hackers on Sunday claimed to have stolen 200 GB of e-mails and credit card data from United States security think tank Stratfor, promising a weeklong Christmas-inspired assault on a long list of targets.

Members of the loose hacking movement known as "Anonymous" posted a link on Twitter to what it said was Stratfor's secret client list ? including the U.S. Army, the U.S. Air Force, Goldman Sachs and MF Global.

"Not so private and secret anymore?," the group taunted in a message on the microblogging site.

Anonymous said it was able to get credit details, in part, because Stratfor didn't bother encrypting them ? an easy-to-avoid blunder which ? if true ? would be a major embarrassment for any security company.

Stratfor said in an email to members that it had suspended its servers and email after learning that its website had been hacked.

"We have reason to believe that the names of our corporate subscribers have been posted on other web sites," said the email, passed on to The Associated Press. "We are diligently investigating the extent to which subscriber information may have been obtained."

The email, signed by Stratfor Chief Executive George Friedman, said the company is "working closely with law enforcement to identify who is behind the breach."

"Stratfor's relationship with its members and, in particular, the confidentiality of their subscriber information, are very important to Stratfor and me," Friedman wrote.

Stratfor's website was down midday Sunday, with a banner saying "site is currently undergoing maintenance."

Wishing everyone a "Merry LulzXMas" ? a reference to spinoff and fellow troublemakers Lulz Security ? Anonymous also posted a link on Twitter to a site containing the email, phone number and credit number of a U.S. Homeland Security employee.

The employee, Cody Sultenfuss, said he had no warning before his details were posted.

"They took money I did not have," he told The Associated Press in an email. "I think why me? I am not rich."

Anonymous warned it has "enough targets lined up to extend the fun fun fun of LulzXmas through the entire next week."

The group has previously claimed responsibility for attacks on companies such as Visa, MasterCard and PayPal, as well as others in the music industry and the Church of Scientology.

____________

Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-25-EU-Hacker-Christmas/id-33415f50756348b7ad45a3f42416baf0

heather locklear bob costas krzyzewski childish gambino sandusky interview with bob costas sandusky interview with bob costas live oak

Monday, December 26, 2011

Obama marks Christmas with gifts, carols, church (AP)

HONOLULU ? President Barack Obama exchanged gifts with his family, sang carols and attended church services as he celebrated Christmas in Hawaii.

The president and his family woke up early Sunday to exchange gifts, the White House said, then had breakfast and sang Christmas carols at the multimillion-dollar house they rent in Kailua Beach, near Honolulu.

Later in the morning, the Obamas made the short trip to the chapel at Marine Corps Base Hawaii for Christmas church services. The president dressed casually in dark khaki pants and a short-sleeve blue shirt, and his wife and daughters donned sundresses for Christmas services on a bright and breezy day on the island of Oahu.

The White House said the president and Michelle Obama would return to the base later in the day to visit with service members and their families, as they have done in past years. Many of the Marines stationed at the base have deployed to Afghanistan, as well as Iraq, where the last American troops were withdrawn earlier this month.

The president also called 10 service members stationed around the world ? two from each branch of the military ? on Christmas Eve. The White House said he thanked them for their service and the sacrifice of being away from their families at the holidays.

The Obamas planned to wrap up their Christmas festivities with dinner at the rental home with friends and family. Among those joining the first family in Hawaii are the president's sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, who lives on Oahu, and several friends Obama has known since high school.

The president has kept a low profile since arriving in Hawaii on Friday evening to start a vacation delayed by the stalemate in Washington over extending payroll tax cuts. He has no public events planned, and his only outings are expected to be to the golf course or to take his daughters for shave ice, a Hawaiian snow cone.

The Obamas are expected to return to Washington shortly after New Year's Day.

___

Associated Press writer Jaymes Song in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama

black dahlia drew drew lady gaga marry the night video lady gaga marry the night video pac 12 championship game pac 12 championship game

feedreadnews: #fnserv50 Microsoft news: Microsoft Is going to be Holding Last CES Keynote ? http://t.co/zb2E4OO8 #freedomnews

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
#fnserv50 Microsoft news: Microsoft Is going to be Holding Last CES Keynote ? bit.ly/vX7C2t #freedomnews feedreadnews

Feed Read News

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/feedreadnews/statuses/150900152297717760

ron paul pro bowl voting kindle fire update college board pasco county rooney mara solstice

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Matt Barkley skips NFL Draft, returning to USC

Posted by Chip Patterson

Even with a projected Top 10 draft stock, USC quarterback Matt Barkley has decided to return for another season with the Trojans.

The junior from Newport Beach made his decision official on Thursday, making his announcement in the shadows of the USC greats in Heritage Hall.

"I am prepared to play quarterback in the NFL," Barkley explained. "It is my dream to play quarterback in the NFL. I intend to make that dream a reality.

"But I also know that I came to the University of Southern California to compete, and have a rare journey as a USC football player, to earn a degree from this exceptional university, and forge life-long bonds with the Trojan family.

"I will earn my degree, the bonds have been forged, but I know in my heart that I have not yet finished my journey as a Trojan football player. Our USC football team has been through some tough times, and we have persevered. The 2012 has some serious unfinished business to attend to, and I intend to play a part in it."

The crowd erupted, the band began playing, and the junior from Newport Beach flashed a smile as he confirmed what many USC fans had hoped.

Barkley threw for 3,528 yards, 39 touchdowns and just seven interceptions while completing 69.1 percent of his passes and leading the Trojans to a 10-2 record in 2011. He returns to Southern Cal with his two favorite receivers from the past season - Robert Woods and Marquise Lee - and will bring lofty expectations to the program for the first time since the Pete Carroll era.

Barkley was projected by many to be a Top 10 selection in the 2012 NFL Draft, but the lure of one more season as the Trojans starting quarterback was enough to bring him back to school. With the way USC finished the season in 2011, they will likely be early favorites to compete for a National Championship in 2012. ?Barkley grew up dreaming of playing for USC, and with the NCAA sanctions lifted he will get the opportunity to lead the Trojans to a Pac-12 title - or possibly more. ?

For much more on Barkley's decision to return, check out Trojans RapidReports from CBSSports.com's Chris Huston

Keep up with the latest college football news from around the country. From the regular season all the way through the bowl games, CBSSports.com has you covered with this daily newsletter. | Preview

Source: http://feeds.cbssports.com/click.phdo?i=863902b68922b389c1e093f0e82800d9

3 10 to yuma west virginia football west virginia football black friday violence black friday violence il postino il postino

Windows 8 Details Seep Out

The big news this week regarding Microsoft's upcoming Windows 8 software was that it features picture passwords, something that drew widespread attention but also some skepticism. Otherwise it was a week of rumors about what other features Microsoft's next big software release might contain and devices that might be coming out specifically to support it.

Picture Password

Microsoft has revealed a number of details on the Building Windows 8 blog regarding a new feature coming to Windows 8 dubbed "Picture Password." Upon hearing the name of the feature, you may assume (incorrectly) that it's some sort of integrated face recognition technique, but that couldn't be further from the truth.

In fact, the contents of the picture used for the login password are somewhat irrelevant. It's actually touch gestures overlaid over the photo that are the foundation of Windows 8's picture password feature.

QUIZ: 2011 Tech News Quiz

A Microsoft product manager says, "At its core, your picture password is comprised of two complementary parts. There is a picture from your picture collection and a set of gestures that you draw upon it. Instead of having you pick from a canned set of Microsoft images, you provide the picture, because it increases both the security and the memorability of the password.

You get to decide the content of the picture and the portions that are important to you. Plus, you get to see a picture that is important to you just like many people do on their phone lock screen."

Picture Password is a Toy

The major downside of the picture password is that drawing a finger across a photo on a touch screen is easy to video record from a distance -- making it relatively easy to compromise, says Kenneth Weiss, who invented SecurID tokens and now runs a three-factor authentication business called Universal Secure Registry. Designers of alpha-numeric passwords recognize this danger and have responded to it by having password characters appear as dots on the screen so the password can't be copied down.

"I think it's cute," he says. "I don't think it's serious security."

Windows 8 to Drive Touchscreen Sales

According to unnamed sources, makers of LCD touchscreens are expecting a spike in sales toward the end of 2012 in part thanks to the expected release of Windows 8, which capitalizes on touchscreen navigation and commands, including the above-mentioned picture password.

Screen makers ViewSonic and Asustek say they expect vendors will be eager to launch touch monitors next year, all according to Digitimes.

Nokia Tablet for Windows 8 Rumor

Nokia is rumored to be making a tablet designed for Windows 8 that it will unveil at Nokia Connection 2012 in mid-June. That's the extent of the rumor as repeated by Stefan Constantinescu at intomobile.com.

He says he's relaying what was posted at the DGui blog, which has since been hacked and remains down. The source of this rumor? Someone with a Finnish IP address who claims to work for Finland-based Nokia.

Nokia Tablet for Windows 8 Concept Design

Over at concept-phones.com a posting lays down specs for a Windows 8 tablet designed by someone identified as Cameron McKinnon. Here's a taste of what he calls for: "Nokia Tab uses a massive 14.3 inch display, a 12 megapixel camera with Xenon flash and Carl Zeiss lens, plus Microsoft Kinect motion capture support through a front camera. The gadget is 12mm in thickness, it has 1GB of memory, a 64GB or 128GB HDD and it will be available in WiFi or WiFi + 4G models, if it's ever made."

Windows 8 a Top Tech for 2012

IEEE Spectrum Magazine has listed Windows 8 among the Top Tech for 2012, alongside 4G wireless, 3D printers, Chinese supercomputers, LED lighting and electric vehicle charging stations. Of Windows 8, IEEE Spectrum writes: "Microsoft has so far been sidelined by the industry-wide move to mobile platforms, such as smart phones and tablets. This new operating system is the Redmond, Wash., company's last, best hope to turn things around."

Read more about wide area network in Network World's Wide Area Network section.

For more information about enterprise networking, go to NetworkWorld. Story copyright 2011 Network World Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=54ac4942c7039173fff94726605e7f86

craigslist nc chronicle baked alaska baked alaska battlefield 3 release battlefield 3 release battle field 3

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Wineries, Restaurants, Golf Courses, Festivals, Outfitters and More Wanted for 2012 Passport Program

Filed Under: All Posts on December 22, 2011

Applications are now being accepted for the 2012 Passport Program. The program is expanding next year to include 72 stops featured within nine categories: golf courses, wineries, festivals, culture/history, water recreation/adventure, parks, unique accommodations, family fun and culinary. The Passport program, coordinated by the Department of Economic Development?s Travel & Tourism Division, encourages travelers to visit attractions statewide, collect stamps at designated stops and earn prizes in the process.

To be considered as a featured destination in the 2012 Nebraska Passport Program, please complete the application at industry.visitnebraska.org/pdfs/2012PassportApplication.pdf, and e-mail it to Public Relations Coordinator Shannon Peterson at shannon.j.peterson@nebraska.gov by 5 p.m. Friday, Jan 13.

All applicants will be notified as to whether or not they are selected by Jan. 30. By submitting an application you agree to:

  • Be open regular and reasonable hours, including at least one weekend day.
  • Staff your attraction with a friendly person who can stamp passports during listed business hours and share information about things to do in your area.
  • Positively promote the program by displaying materials, such as posters and passports at your attraction.
  • Pay a $100 participation fee if selected as a featured attraction.
  • Abide by Nebraska state law that prohibits charging participants for stamps.

Being featured in the Nebraska Passport program provides exposure to potential new visitors. In a follow-up survey, 94 percent of previous
participants said they visited at least one Nebraska attraction they wouldn?t have otherwise visited because it was a Passport stop. In addition,
71 percent of respondents said they spent at least three nights away from home while visiting Passport sites.

Source: http://www.growneb.com/blog/?p=3018

snow storm reggie bush ufc 137 boston news matilda new jersey weather halloween movies

Clooney, Keibler vacationing in Mexico again

George Clooney and Stacy Keibler are staying in Cabo San Lucas for a sun-drenched pre-Christmas break with friends including Cindy Crawford and her husband Randy Gerber.

The holiday comes less than a month after they spent Thanksgiving in Mexico with pals Alex Rodriguez, Cindy Crawford and Molly Sims and also celebrated Stacy's 32nd birthday in Cabo in October.

Although the couple are reportedly set to spend their first Christmas together with Stacy's parents, George recently revealed he is too dedicated to his career to have children and has no plans to ever marry again.

The 50-year-old star, who was married to actress Talia Balsam from 1989 to 1993, said: "I've always known fatherhood wasn't for me. Raising kids is a huge commitment and has to be your top priority. For me, that priority is my work. That's why I'll never get married again."

George also revealed he has no plans to dye his greying hair and is embracing it instead.

He said, "I hear all this talk about how grey I'm becoming, but I can't imagine ever dyeing my hair. My dad has a full head of white hair and I think it looks pretty good."

Source: http://movies.ndtv.com/newstory.asp?id=ENTEN20110190649

ufc on fox juan manuel marquez juan manuel marquez penn state stanford oregon joe paterno velasquez vs dos santos

Friday, December 23, 2011

'The Iron Lady' shows Thatcher still divides Brits

(AP) ? With hairdo, handbag and hubris, she dominated ? and divided ? Britain for a decade. Now a film about Margaret Thatcher is doing it all over again.

"The Iron Lady" stars Meryl Streep as Britain's first female prime minister, whose neo-Victorian values and free-market ideology helped transform a battered post-imperial country into an economically dynamic but industrially depleted and increasingly unequal society.

But it's the film's focus on the personal, rather than the political, that has made Thatcher's enemies apprehensive and her allies unhappy.

"The Iron Lady" depicts Thatcher, now 86, as a frail, elderly figure with dementia, holding imaginary conversations with her dead husband Denis (a genial Jim Broadbent) as she looks back on her life as a double outsider ? both a woman and a lowly grocer's daughter in a male-dominated, patrician Conservative Party.

Streep's eerily evocative, pitch-perfect performance looks likely to earn her a 17th Academy Award nomination and possibly a third acting Oscar. But the intimacy of the movie's portrait has led some Conservatives to accuse it of being disrespectful, distasteful, even faintly idolatrous. One lawmaker has demanded a parliamentary debate, telling the House of Commons he was disturbed by the film.

"I just wonder why the filmmakers had to go so heavily on the mental illness, the dementia side, when Baroness Thatcher has had a very important life in the politics of this country and the world," said Conservative legislator Rob Wilson.

"It left me wondering about the humanity of the filmmakers who are very subtly denigrating someone who was a great prime minister."

Thatcher rarely appears in public these days, and her inner circle releases little information about her health. But her daughter Carol ? sympathetically portrayed in the film by Olivia Colman ? wrote about her mother's dementia in a 2008 book.

Conservative grandee Norman Tebbit, a government minister under Thatcher, also criticized the film, saying the former prime minister was nothing like the "half-hysterical, overemotional, overacting woman portrayed by Meryl Streep" ? though he admitted he was basing that judgment on the movie's trailer.

The film's director rejects the criticisms, but says she's not surprised by them.

"Those two words ? Margaret Thatcher ? are provocative in this country," said Phyllida Lloyd, a Briton who also directed Streep in the frothy Abba musical "Mamma Mia!"

"She still has the ability to set people on one another. People think of her either as St. Margaret who saved the nation, or the she-devil who ruined the lives of millions and bred a culture of greed."

Both sides may find their conceptions challenged by the film, which opens in Australia and New Zealand on Monday, in the U.S. Dec. 30 and in Britain on Jan. 6.

"The left wing are nervous about being asked to feel compassion for someone they think they are supposed to hate," Lloyd said. "But all we are doing is making her human.

"And the right are questioning whether there is something shameful about putting her on the screen with this frailty. But that's if you feel frailty is shameful ? and we don't."

Lloyd said she initially hesitated to take on such a polarizing figure. Then she read the script by Abi Morgan ("Brick Lane," ''Shame"), and "realized it was not a political film at all."

She says it is something much more subversive ? a film about an elderly woman.

"If the film is political it's in wanting to put an old lady at the center of a film," she said.

That approach makes "The Iron Lady" more a character study than a political or historical drama. It touches on a handful of episodes from her 1979-1990 tenure ? the 1982 Falklands War, the 1984-85 miners' strike, the 1984 IRA bombing of the Conservative Party conference hotel in which five people died, and her eventual ousting after a rebellion by browbeaten Cabinet colleagues.

But this is not a film that makes viewers feel they are learning something new about recent and well-remembered events, in the way "The Queen" did with the aftermath of Princess Diana's death.

It is, instead, a portrait of aging and regret whose depiction of personal triumph and tragedy against a backdrop of state power has Shakespearean overtones.

Streep has called the film "Lear for girls" ? foundering ruler, faithful daughter, false friends ? and there's also a touch of "Julius Caesar" in the story of a leader brought down by conspiring colleagues.

"It's a film about power and the loss of power," Lloyd said. "The cost of a huge life to oneself, one's family, one's colleagues" ? and about how "our great strengths ? conviction, certainty ? can become our greatest flaws: hubris, inflexibility."

The filmmakers' approach may be a canny box office move, allowing viewers to embrace the movie whether or not they support Thatcher's politics.

Initial reactions have been good. Several critics with no love for the Iron Lady say they were moved to tears.

There have not even been the expected howls of outrage at the casting of an American in the role of a British icon.

"I think Meryl has special rights in the U.K.," Lloyd said. "And there is almost a subconscious acknowledgment that to play someone of the magnitude of Thatcher you need a megastar."

Journalist Charles Moore, who is writing Thatcher's authorized biography, predicted the movie would upset Thatcher's friends and family, but said they could take comfort in the fact that it shows her in a positive light.

"The effect of the film is to dramatize very successfully many of the things that made Lady Thatcher so remarkable," Moore said.

"It is an extraordinary story of somebody who comes from outside the establishment by sex and by class. It's a great tale of achievement, of sacrifices made and difficulties overcome."

He also thinks it marks a turning point, an end to the days when Britons had to choose sides on Thatcher ? love her or hate her.

"You have to be over 40 to hate Mrs. Thatcher," Moore said. "Young people just want to know about her."

Still, some of the Thatcherite faithful say they will be staying away from the film.

"There must be something wrong with it if it's converting all these lefty women to the view that she was something rather good," said Bernard Ingham, Thatcher's long-serving press secretary.

He says that if people "want to know what Margaret Thatcher was like they shouldn't go anywhere near it."

"Meryl Streep may be a good actress," he said, "but she ain't Thatcher."

_______

Jill Lawless can be reached at: http://twitter.com/JillLawless

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-21-EU-Britain-Iron-Lady/id-66a5cabfdd394827999e25e5e308ee11

manny pacquiao vs. juan manuel marquez manny pacquiao vs. juan manuel marquez cain velasquez vs dos santos cain velasquez vs dos santos oregon stanford oregon stanford jon huntsman

Does Mitt Romney Fare Better in Caucuses than Primaries? (ContributorNetwork)

One of the most memorable moments of the 2008 election was ex-Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney's failure in the Iowa caucus, losing to dark horse candidate Mike Huckabee (the former governor of Arkansas) after blanketing the Hawkeye State with his wealth and campaign cash to the tune of $10 million, according to the Associated Press.

Romney never seemed to recover, blowing the lead in his backyard (New Hampshire) to John McCain, finishing an embarrassing fourth in South Carolina, before dropping out of the nomination contest. This may explain his absence from South Carolina, as reported by Holly Bailey from Yahoo's The Ticket.

The press had a field day with Romney's failures. But amidst all of these shortcomings, Romney did perform well in several states, even winning a few. The question is whether he fared better in the primaries or the caucuses. The answer could speak volumes about Romney's strategy in 2012.

To determine this answer, I looked at all of Romney's performances in the 10 caucus states, as well as the 19 primaries he placed in before dropping out. The data can be found in CNN's Election Center for the 2008 contest.

Romney did surprisingly well in the caucuses. Though he was upset in Iowa, he won eight of the ten caucus states, averaging 46.1 percent of the vote. These victories include Wyoming, Nevada, Maine, Alaska, Colorado, Minnesota, Montana and North Dakota. Each region was represented: New England, the West, the Midwest; only in the South was Romney shut out. He also amassed 176 delegates in the process from these caucus states.

The primaries were a different story. Romney only won three of the 19 primaries, including third and fourth place finishes in a number of these. In these races, he took an average of 32.58 percent of the vote, and barely half as many delegates as he did from the caucuses (though he entered twice as many primaries).

For those who keep score, a difference of means test reveals that Romney's results in caucuses was significantly better than his primary performance. Take Utah out of the equation (where he got 90 percent of the vote), and the disparity would have been even bigger.

What's even more embarrassing for Romney is that he barely got more than 50 percent in the state where he was a governor: Massachusetts (51 percent), and where his dad was a governor: Michigan (39 percent). Those were two states where he won a primary. One third of his primary delegates came from that third state where he took a primary (Utah).

So the good news is that Mitt Romney does pretty well in caucuses, despite what happened in Iowa four years ago. But he had better watch out for primaries, where his real failures were in 2008. Maybe that's why he's focusing more on the New Hampshire Primary than the Iowa Caucus, according to National Public Radio. With fewer caucuses and fewer delegates at stake in those states, it's not a bad idea to focus on his glaring weakness from 2008.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111223/pl_ac/10737979_does_mitt_romney_fare_better_in_caucuses_than_primaries

jeff probst king jong il dead south korea baron davis duggar family dingo fidel castro

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Business events scheduled for Wednesday (AP)

Major business events and economic events scheduled for Wednesday:

WASHINGTON ? National Association of Realtors releases existing home sales for November, 10 a.m.

KB Home reports quarterly financial results.

Walgreen Co. reports quarterly financial results.

FRANKFURT, Germany ? The European Central Bank launches its new offer of three-year loans to banks, a measure meant to encourage lending as banks face pressure amid the continent's debt crisis.

TOKYO ? Bank of Japan wraps up a two-day policy board meeting.

TOKYO ? Japan releases November trade data.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_bi_ge/us_the_day_ahead

sandusky interview with bob costas live oak mark kelly mark kelly jeff goldblum uc berkeley ohio state basketball

Friday, December 16, 2011

The Most Expensive Computer Bugs of 2011 [Wtf]

Earlier this year a man lost a $57 million jackpot when a casino alleged a "software glitch" on the slot machine. Well, that's nothing compared to the backlog of $9 billion in unprocessed payments that happened in Japan in March. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/IEZOzxNq7Ps/the-worst-computer-bugs-of-2011

the call helen mirren surrogates surrogates james garner veteran aircraft carrier

Iraqis unable to defend their borders as US exits

In this Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011 photo, Iraqi security forces hold their US made M-16 assault rifle during a parade in Baghdad, Iraq. In ways big and small, the signs of American influence on the Iraqi military are unmistakeable after years of training to give them the skills to defend their country and the professionalism to do it differently than Saddam Hussein's forces did. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

In this Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011 photo, Iraqi security forces hold their US made M-16 assault rifle during a parade in Baghdad, Iraq. In ways big and small, the signs of American influence on the Iraqi military are unmistakeable after years of training to give them the skills to defend their country and the professionalism to do it differently than Saddam Hussein's forces did. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

In this Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011 photo, an Iraqi Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) team walks with their US-made explosives ordinance disposal robots during a parade in Baghdad, Iraq. In ways big and small, the signs of American influence on the Iraqi military are unmistakeable after years of training to give them the skills to defend their country and the professionalism to do it differently than Saddam Hussein's forces did. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

In this Friday, Feb. 25, 2011 photo, Iraqi riot police officers prevent anti-government protesters from entering the heavily guarded Green Zone during a demonstration in Baghdad, Iraq. In ways big and small, the signs of American influence on the Iraqi military are unmistakeable after years of training to give them the skills to defend their country and the professionalism to do it differently than Saddam Hussein's forces did. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

In this Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011 photo, Iraq riot police march in Baghdad, Iraq. In ways big and small, the signs of American influence on the Iraqi military are unmistakeable after years of training to give them the skills to defend their country and the professionalism to do it differently than Saddam Hussein's forces did. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

In this Friday, Feb. 25, 2011 photo, Iraqi security forces arrest a protestor during a demonstration in Baghdad, Iraq. In ways big and small, the signs of American influence on the Iraqi military are unmistakeable after years of training to give them the skills to defend their country and the professionalism to do it differently than Saddam Hussein's forces did. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

BAGHDAD (AP) ? After billions of dollars and nearly nine years of training, American troops are leaving behind an Iraqi security force arguably capable of providing internal security but unprepared to defend the nation against foreign threats at a time of rising tensions throughout the Middle East.

Building up an Iraqi military and police able to protect the country became a key goal of the United States and its allies after they defeated and then disbanded the Saddam Hussein-era force in 2003. As America's role in Iraq fades, the results appear at best incomplete.

Iraqi forces ? currently about 700,000 strong ? have been largely responsible for security in Baghdad and other cities since 2009, carrying out their own raids and other combat operations against insurgents.

More than 10,000 Iraqi soldiers and police have been killed since the new force was established ? more than double the number of American military deaths. Few if any military forces in the Arab world have as much combat experience within the ranks.

"They can kick a door in and knock out a network's leadership as good as anybody I've seen," said U.S. Lt. Gen. Robert Caslen, commander of the NATO training mission, which will soon be disbanded. "I would say that they have the discipline and the tenacity to fight as well as anybody I've ever seen."

Nevertheless, Iraqi forces have their work cut out for them. They will be operating in a country which, although quieter than a few years ago, saw more people killed, wounded and kidnapped last year than in Afghanistan, according to U.S. figures.

The departure of American forces this month also leaves Iraq vulnerable to threats from its neighbors ? Iran to the east, Turkey to the north and Syria to the west. A major Arab country of about 30 million people with some of the world's largest proven petroleum reserves is incapable of defending its borders in one of the most unstable parts of the world.

The Iraqi military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Babaker Zebari, has said it would take until at least 2020 for Iraq to defend its airspace. Without a well-trained and equipped air force, Iraqi ground forces would be hard-pressed to defend against incursions across borders with few natural barriers and little cover from vegetation.

"An army without an air force is exposed," Zebari was quoted as saying in a report last October by the U.S. agency responsible for overseeing Iraqi reconstruction.

Even though a full-scale ground invasion from its neighbors may seem remote, the possibility of incursions from Turkey against Kurdish rebels, or Iranians along disputed border stretches or even from a Syria facing an internal revolt cannot be ruled out, especially at a time when the Arab Spring and the looming showdown between the West and Iran are raising tensions throughout the region.

External defense seemed a low priority in the early years of the Iraq war, when tens of thousands of American troops, tanks, planes and artillery served as a deterrent.

During those years, the main threat was posed by Shiite and Sunni extremists, including al-Qaida in Iraq, who were battling the Americans and their allies in the streets of Baghdad and other major cities. Iraqi forces were organized and trained primarily to augment the U.S.-led force, using the American military as a rough model.

Soon, Iraqi commanders were giving power-point briefings, and their generals were handing out specially made coins emblazoned with their names and units as souvenirs. Iraqi soldiers at street checkpoints were wearing kneepads slouched down around their ankles, again just like their American counterparts.

But there wasn't enough time to develop the full package ? logistics, intelligence, medical services and a fully integrated command structure ? for the Iraqis to operate as effectively without U.S. support. A budget crisis in 2009 and a lengthy political stalemate the following year "crippled both the qualitative development of Iraq's forces and its ability to implement its own development plan," wrote analyst Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The head of Iraqi military intelligence, Hatem al-Magsousi, said it takes the Iraqis a week to plan and carry out a military operation that they could execute in a day with American help.

Such delays could be costly if al-Qaida ? as expected ? takes advantage of a security vacuum to reconstitute itself following major defeats on the battlefield in the final years of the war.

"Unless the Iraqi security forces continue to put pressure on al-Qaida, they could regenerate capability and come back in an even worse way than they have in the past," said a U.S. military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Buchanan.

Another key concern is keeping the security forces free of any political pressure or sectarian interference. For over a year now, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has effectively controlled the Ministries of Interior and Defense while conflicts between Sunni and Shiite political blocs have delayed the appointments of permanent ministers.

That leaves both key ministries leaderless and without direction at a crucial time.

It also has allowed al-Maliki to pack some units with members of his tribe and appoint political favorites to command positions with no effective checks and balances.

"That means Maliki is making all these senior officer decisions, and that's not a healthy modus operandi for a vibrant democracy," said retired Lt. Gen. James Dubik, who was in charge of training Iraqi forces in 2007 and 2008.

The role of al-Maliki, who spent years abroad as a leader of the Shiite underground resistance to Saddam's Sunni-dominated regime, also threatens to worsen sectarian tensions in the ranks. Those tensions nearly tore the country apart in the dark days of intense communal fighting in 2006 and 2007.

Both the Iraqi Army and police are dominated by Shiites, not surprising in a country where Shiites make up 60 to 65 percent of the population. But Shiite domination still alarms the Sunnis: They remember the years when Interior Ministry paramilitary police, whose ranks included veterans of Iran-based Shiite militias, were accused of some of the most vicious sectarian crimes.

Many people in Sunni-dominated provinces such as Salahuddin and Anbar already complain of Shiite-led forces coming in from outside the province to make arrests without informing local officials.

Public trust is further undermined by corruption, including selling fuel for military vehicles on the black market or pocketing the salaries of nonexistent soldiers.

"The widespread practice of buying command appointments is particularly destructive because it places corrupt officers at the head of divisions, brigades and battalions. Such commanders then commit theft and fraud to recoup their 'investment' in the job," wrote Iraq analyst Michael Knights in a report this summer for The Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Despite the U.S. military withdrawal, Iraq and the United States will still maintain a security relationship. Gen. Caslen is in charge of a $10 billion weapons sales program that will be run out of the U.S. Embassy next year with nearly 160 military personnel. Hundreds of civilian contractors will train Iraqi troops on equipment they've bought from American companies, including 18 F-16 fighter jets which Baghdad ordered this year.

That will give Washington some leverage with the Iraqis ? but hardly to the degree it enjoyed when there were nearly 170,000 U.S. troops on Iraqi soil.

What remains unclear is whether without the Americans, the Iraqi military will continue the transition to a well-oiled professional force, free of political influence and capable of integrating their various weapons systems and units into an effective machine capable of defending the nation.

"Left to their own devices, the transition does not occur," Dubik said.

Lt. Gen. Frank Helmick, deputy commander of U.S. Forces-Iraq, told reporters last week that there is a "question mark right now for external security, but for the internal security we've done all we can do."

"We really don't know what's going to happen," Helmick said.

___

Reid, who reported from Cairo, Egypt, covered the Iraq war from 2003 until 2009. Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Qassim Abdul-Zahra in Baghdad contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-14-ML-Iraq-War-Security-Forces/id-645e628143e64a68ba07cc4e633edfa1

gold rush alaska the addams family blue bloods temple grandin texas rangers marie osmond st louis cardinals