Saturday, December 31, 2011

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Source: http://twitter.com/alexbkane/statuses/152135758675849217

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Endorsement game intensifies, but does it matter? (AP)

MANCHESTER, N.H. ? It may be overrated, but the political endorsement race won't stop. In fact, it will only accelerate as voting in the GOP presidential contest nears.

Hoping to bolster credibility and build political muscle, Republican presidential contenders have jockeyed for months to woo governors and congressional lawmakers, state senators and county sheriffs, newspaper editorial boards and tea party activists. The game has been dominated so far by former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who appears to have captured more endorsements than the rest of the field combined.

But Jeff Frost, like many Republicans in early voting states, isn't impressed. Frost, who is chairman of the Manchester Republican Committee, said New Hampshire voters don't much like being told which candidate to support.

"We're a stubborn bunch of horse traders," he said.

Indeed, candidates and voters alike suggest the impact of political endorsements is unclear at best. Any potential blowback, however, isn't enough to stop campaigns from trotting out new supporters as quickly as they can sign them up.

It didn't matter that the New Hampshire Union Leader has a spotty record of picking winners. Newt Gingrich claimed instant credibility after capturing its endorsement. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum proudly won over Iowa social conservative leader Bob Vander Plaats. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, while touring Iowa, recently dispatched his latest high-profile supporter, conservative businessman Steve Forbes, to New Hampshire.

In most cases, the campaigns shop their big-name backers to local reporters, arrange meetings with voters and use their names and voices in fundraising appeals. Some also offer an instant infrastructure to handle nuts-and-bolts political chores that have tripped up less-organized candidates. That was the case recently in Virginia, where leading Romney supporter Lt. Gov. Bill Boiling shared his political network to help collect thousands of signatures so Romney could qualify for the primary ballot. Gingrich and Perry failed to qualify.

There's also the buzz that comes with any endorsement, producing days or a few hours of positive media coverage that may inspire confidence among wavering supporters.

Republican candidate Jon Huntsman has struggled to attract big names but recently won the backing of three New Hampshire newspapers, including the capital city's Concord Monitor. His campaign blasted news of the endorsements to reporters.

But even Huntsman acknowledged their impact may be minimal come Election Day.

"It's recognition that you are a legitimate candidate and people think well of you," Huntsman said. "What it does in terms of bringing support around in real numbers that would be quantifiable, I don't have any way of measuring that. I just don't know if it matters at all at the end of the day. But anything that provides additional credibility is a good thing."

The people who endorse candidates are also freer to go negative. Romney supporter and former New Hampshire Gov. John H. Sununu has repeatedly jabbed at Gingrich for "whining." Forbes did much the same thing in New Hampshire for Perry, suggesting that the Texas governor has more "soul" than Romney.

Forbes, once a presidential contender himself, is considered popular in New Hampshire. But a handful of public appearances and media interviews are unlikely to sway any voters, according to Phyllis Woods, one of New Hampshire's two members of the Republican National Committee.

"I think in New Hampshire, there are precious few people who will make their decision based on an endorsement," she said.

There are always exceptions.

Romney helped create an air of inevitability in the fall after earning the endorsement of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, an outspoken conservative favorite. That was strengthened when Romney subsequently won over a tea party favorite, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

Dave Roederer, an unaligned Republican who was John McCain's Iowa campaign chairman in 2008, said such high-profile endorsements are helpful.

"Iowa's not a big endorsement-type state, but the fact of the matter is that people will obviously stop and listen to somebody who's a big name like that," Roederer said of Christie and Haley. "It helps."

Santorum hopes people will notice rounds of lesser-known Iowa Republicans, from pastors and politicians alike, whom he's courted with some success in recent weeks. His top prize so far has been Vander Plaats, whose Family Leader organization worked to oust judges who helped usher in gay marriage in Iowa. The organization itself, however, declined to endorse.

In the endorsement race, which candidate gets the most is also a contest.

Romney's campaign says he's collected more than 1,900 endorsements, including conservative activists and current and former elected officials in all 50 states. The list includes four governors, 48 House members and 11 senators.

No one else comes close.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_el_pr/us_endorsement_game

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Tour offers visitors a special screening of New Orleans (Reuters)

NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) ? It's been more than 50 years since Blanche DuBois of the New Orleans-set play "A Streetcar Named Desire" wistfully declared that she had "always depended on the kindness of strangers."

Now, a local tour service brings strangers close to settings where the lives of DuBois and later fictional characters, such as Benjamin Button (portrayed by Brad Pitt) and "GI Joe" Colton (Bruce Willis), played out in dramatic style.

New Orleans Movie Tours owner Jonathan Ray personally escorts visitors to film locations and other movie-related spots. Sites related to 30 movies are now on the tour, he said.

"I want to be able to answer every question about every movie ever filmed here," Ray told Reuters.

He and his wife Michelle began the tours seven months ago with the idea of giving visitors a cameraman's view of New Orleans by highlighting its history as a filming location.

Twice a day, Jonathan Ray drives as many as 10 passengers around the city in a van equipped with individual video monitors.

At each location along the two-hour route, Ray shows clips from a movie or TV episode filmed at the site and offers anecdotes related to the location.

They visit a spot near the foot of Canal Street as they watch video of Vivien Leigh, starring in the 1951 film version of "Streetcar," stepping off a train and asking directions to a street called Elysian Fields.

When a scene from the 1991 movie "JFK" pops onto the screen, showing Kevin Costner's character in the French Quarter bar called Napoleon House, tour guests get to see the bar up close.

"We'll show you that clip while parked right outside the Napoleon House, and then we'll tell you about the history of the building, too," Ray said.

Guests, who pay $39 for the tour, also get popcorn and bottled water.

Ray, who worked behind the scenes on several locally-shot feature films, spent much of the last two years researching local movie history and amassing details about more than 100 classic and contemporary New Orleans-related productions, from the 1958 Elvis Presley movie "King Creole" to "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" (2008).

PRODUCTION HOTBED

Keeping up with local movie trivia is a growing challenge in a city that's become a hotbed of movie production.

Since 2002, when Louisiana implemented a tax credit program that gives producers financial breaks in exchange for making movies in the state, New Orleans has become one of the largest film centers in the country outside of Los Angeles.

Some 90 feature films and television productions came to Louisiana during 2011, according to the state's Department of Economic Development. New Orleans hosted more than half of those projects.

The industry's growth here has increased the chances a visitor wandering along local streets might bump into a screen idol such as Brad Pitt or Sandra Bullock, who own homes in the city, or Nicolas Cage, Samuel L. Jackson, Nicole Kidman, Sylvester Stallone and a host of other stars who have worked here.

Guests on Ray's tour last week caught sight of Will Ferrell and Dylan McDermott as the van visited a location for "Dog Fight," a comedy slated for release in 2012.

Cris Roman, a recent visitor from Sauk Centre, Minnesota, said New Orleans Movie Tours gave him an insider's view of one of his favorite TV shows, the HBO series "Treme."

Now in production on its third season, the series uses sets throughout the city, including the series' namesake neighborhood just north of the historic French Quarter.

"I loved seeing the Treme neighborhood," Roman said. "And the fact that Jonathan would screen clips in the bus while driving by the locations -- I haven't taken a tour like that before."

Local tourism officials welcome the movie tours as an extension of the local film business, which they count among the city's growing visitor assets.

"When a tourist comes to the city and sees Matthew McConaughey or Jessica Alba, it supports the idea that New Orleans is an exciting place to be," said Jennifer Day-Sully, a spokeswoman for the New Orleans Convention & Visitors Bureau.

(Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111228/film_nm/us_movies_new_orleans

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Essay: American Horror Story: From cliches, genius (AP)

NEW YORK ? Producing and sustaining a horror show for the American television audience is not a mission for the squeamish.

Over television's 60-some years, very few continuing horror series have truly taken hold in this country. "Dark Shadows" survived five years in the 1960s by blending camp and soap opera. Joss Whedon succeeded by making "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" into a "Beverly Hills, 90210" of the undead. "Supernatural" works because it is, in effect, about two brothers on a really long road trip, and "True Blood" pins its allure on sex and deep bayou weirdness.

Then there's "American Horror Story," the brainchild of "Glee" creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk, which finished its addictively off-kilter first season last week on FX. Against every single odd, this haunted-Hollywood saga managed to take all the horror cliches in the book and, using those ingredients, spin a thought-provoking stew of compelling originality. (Warning to DVR jockeys: Read on and you WILL encounter spoilers.)

The show's first season documented the travails of the Harmon family in a 1908 mansion known as the "Murder House" for all the bad things that happened there. Now here's why the Golden Globe-nominated series shouldn't work:

Watching an episode of it is like leafing through a "Bartlett's Familiar Quotations" of old dark-house movies through the ages. Aside from the obvious prerequisite ? a menacing mansion with a murderous history and an abundance of creepy nooks and crannies ? pretty much everything you've seen in every horror show rears its head here.

There's the disembodied child's ball that rolls into the scene, the creepy and blank-eyed twins from beyond the grave, and the magnificently undulating Steadicam work ("The Shining"). There's the white rocking chair, the smarmy real-estate agent, and the menacing cellar with wooden steps that contains more than its share of dark corners and terrifying secrets ("The Amityville Horror").

There's the lens-blur of intense scenes and the muffled hallway sounds that might or might not be a supernatural force ("The Haunting"). There's the absurd abundance of doors ("The House on Haunted Hill") and the fact that they open and close on their own (fill in your own horror-movie title here). And, of course, there's the misshapen creature in the attic, the wide and looming staircase and the elaborate chandeliers (pretty much every other episode of "Scooby-Doo"). Occasional fragments from Vincent Price's oozy oeuvre and the famous horror films from the British studio Hammer in the 1950s and 1960s also pop up in cameos throughout the show.

Now. Here's a passel of fragments that explain why "American Horror Story" DOES work, and brilliantly:

The murderer in the full-body black rubber suit that might be living, might be dead. The decor-obsessed dead gay couple. The misunderstood teenage boy, dead 17 years, who turns out to be a Columbine-style killer but just wants to be understood. The maid who was murdered in 1983 while young and sexy and now is seen by some as a middle-aged woman and by others as the sexy young siren she was. The fact that dead people can be seen by the living, and interact with them physically, if they wish it. The dead wife of the 1920s abortion doctor who simply wants a child, no matter the cost. The gratuitous explanations of some of American history's more pernicious mysteries, including the Black Dahlia case and ? wait for it ? the disappearance of the Roanoke colony in 1590.

And then there is Jessica Lange, in a piercing performance that somehow manages to be simultaneously over the top and restrained and, as Salon TV critic Matt Zoller Seitz points out, channels the Southern Gothic sensibility of Bette Davis' terrifying turn in 1965's "Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte."

"If it were possible to take a classic early '60s camp horror movie, feed it massive amounts of cocaine, then turn it into a basic cable drama, the result might look like this," Seitz wrote last month.

Why does horror have such a difficult path in continuing to succeed over time, particularly in series form? Mostly it's because the conventions of fear, particularly the supernatural kind, rely upon the unknown itself being terrifying. But when the unknown keeps doing the same creaky, thumpy, door-slamming thing and remains unknown, it makes for a less scary story. (Perhaps that accounts for the popularity of torture horror such as the "Saw" franchise; the fear is in the gore, not the possibility of it.)

"American Horror Story," though, takes the opposite path.

Here, the living seem kind of dull but there's major character development among the dead. The house that belonged to Ben and Vivien Harmon and their daughter Violet (Dylan McDermott, Connie Britton and Taissa Farmiga) is not a single-family dwelling. It is occupied by the people who have lived there ? and, what is more important, died there ? over the decades, and they somehow coexist in the same space. Some are kinder and more benign; others aren't done making misery for the living or for each other. "This," says a psychic assessing matters, "is a very crowded house."

As the season progressed, the emphasis shifted to the house's dead occupants. Or, put another way, as more people were offed, the majority of the cast became ghosts, and the center of gravity moved to the afterworld. In one of the season's more extraordinary scenes, we saw the teenage Violet gazing upon her own decomposing body in the house's bowels and realizing, wrenchingly, that she had been dead for weeks.

We were offered ghosts who decorate nurseries, ghosts who sweep up their messes, ghosts who complain that there's no Ramones album available, ghosts who trim Christmas trees, ghosts who have varying degrees of knowledge that they are, in fact, dead. And like the dead who occasionally appeared during episodes of the late HBO funeral-home drama "Six Feet Under" ? albeit as hallucinations of the show's living characters ? the dearly departed of "American Horror Story" offer us insights into our own lives and how transitory our problems are when compared to death itself.

"The word ancient loses all its meaning when your entire existence is one long today," the middle-aged incarnation of Moira the housekeeper (Frances Conroy) says in the season finale.

Ultimately, "American Horror Story" is a fresh take on the tale of the immigrant experience. Death is the undiscovered country of destination, the place where people must build their world anew. It took the entire first season, but this much about the show has become clear: Dying is a starting point for exploration of the human condition. And what better way to look upon the living than through the eyes of the formerly living, which share traits with us but are also permanently, irrevocably different?

Thornton Wilder dealt with this notion in the final scene of "Our Town," which unfolds in a rural graveyard. A main character, Emily Webb, has died young during childbirth ? just like Vivien Harmon ? and is just arriving among the dead of her community. "Live people don't understand, do they?" she says to her late mother-in-law. "They're sort of shut up in little boxes, aren't they?" That's "American Horror Story" in a nutshell.

Now, in the past few days, we find that Murphy and Falchuk planned all along to end the saga of the Harmons and their LA house with the season finale. Next season, they say, they'll move on to an entirely different tale somewhere else in the vast and haunted American republic ? a place with different homeowners, different themes and different ghosts with different stories to tell.

"Houses don't have memories," George Lutz said as he moved into his house in "The Amityville Horror." He was, he quickly realized, as wrong as wrong can be. Or, as the Murder House's real-estate agent lobbies a family of prospective buyers, teeing up the second season of "American Horror Story" perfectly: "No matter where you go, you'll be moving into somebody's history."

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? Ted Anthony writes about American culture for The Associated Press. Follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/anthonyted

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_en_ot/us_tv_american_horror_story

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Five men break into Texas home dressed as Police officers

Tuesday, December 27, 2011 - 2:58pm

Five men dressed as police officers broke into a townhome near downtown Houston and violently robbed the homeowner.

Officials said the crooks wore Houston Police Department raid jackets, carried guns and tasers, and had fake badges when they kicked down the door of the home in the 1800 block of Wheeler at Chartres shortly after noon Monday, Dec. 26.

The suspects beat up the homeowner before tying him up and ransacking the house, police said.

A responding officer at first thought the men were real officers, but then became suspicious when he saw their suburban, officials said.

The men took off when the officer began questioning them.

Two of the suspects were apprehended with the help of police dogs.

Lee Brown Jr., 30, and Kevin Williams, 26, have been charged with Aggravated Robbery with a Deadly Weapon.
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Source: http://www.nbc33tv.com/news/national-news/five-men-break-into-texas-home-dressed-as-police-officers

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Aegis Secure Key


When you need to transport highly sensitive data, sending it in email or over the Internet may not be such a great idea. Transporting a physical drive holding the encrypted data significantly reduces points of possible exposure. Even so, a determined hacker could attack the decryption software, possibly compromising the data. The fully self-contained Aegis Secure Key ($65 direct) uses an onboard PIN pad rather than relying on software. That $65 price gets you a 4GB unit; 8GB and 16GB devices can be had for $95 and $125 respectively.

Since no software is needed, you can use the drive with any USB-capable device, regardless of the operating system. Windows, Mac OS, Linux?even a proprietary device with a proprietary operating system would be fine as long as it supports USB.

Button-based Configuration
In many ways Aegis Secure Key resembles LOK-IT Secure Flash Drive ($76.25 direct, 4 stars). That's only natural, as both license some basic technology from the same source. Both work with any USB-capable operating system, both use an onboard PIN pad for access, both destroy the stored data after ten bad guesses, and so on. However, there are some significant differences.

The Aegis Secure Key comes with a quick start card that explains how to unlock the key and set your own PIN code; you'll find the full manual stored on the key itself. Red, green, and blue LED lights (powered by a rechargeable battery) turn steadily on or blink in various combinations that reflect the key's status. For example, after you enter the unlock code the green light blinks until you plug the key into a USB port, which you must do within 30 seconds of entering the code.

Where LOK-IT comes without a PIN, Aegis has a default PIN installed at the factory. Before doing anything else with the device, use the quick start card's instructions to unlock the device with that default PIN. Copy the manual PDF from the secure key to local storage on your computer and give it a quick read.

Both devices require a PIN from 7 to 15 digits long without continuous runs of numbers or strings of repeated digits. The buttons on Aegis include letters, like buttons on a phone, allowing users to create alphabetic mnemonics for the PIN.

The unlock process is the same for Aegis and LOK-IT; press the Key button, enter the PIN, press the Key button again. The button sequence for setting a new PIN is also the same.

A rather complex series of button combinations completely resets the drive, wiping out all data and generating a new encryption key. After a reset, you'll have to create a new PIN and format the drive. LOK-IT has no similar feature, though you can force a wipe by entering the wrong PIN ten times. Note that LOK-IT has only six encryption keys; once they've been used up the device is kaput. Aegis can generate any number of encryption keys.

Another advanced Aegis feature is the option to create an Admin PIN. In a business setting the Admin PIN lets management reset a user's lost PIN without losing the data, or recover data after an employee leaves.

There are physical differences too. Aegis comes with a protective sleeve; LOK-IT does not. Aegis is smaller, so it doesn't block a USB port above or below the way LOK-IT can. The membrane keys of the LOK-IT can get marked up by fingernails, leaving clues as to which numbers get pressed during PIN entry; the Aegis's keys are hard and offer click feedback. Aegis is just a bit better all around, yet it costs less.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/nuPZs5G0DLY/0,2817,2397935,00.asp

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Paul Kleyman: Media Fail to Tell Full "Tax Holiday" Story

Democratic leaders and the White House are congratulating themselves as they depart for the holiday weekend about their tax-holiday victory -- but only until the Feb. 29 leap-of-faith day -- over GOP hardliners. But the payroll tax holiday, like most vacations, will have its bill to pay.

The national media have been playing the bipartisan shuffle in terms of Democratic stimulus versus GOP stinginess. But such major media as the New York Times, Wall Street Journal have largely abrogated their responsibility to report another viewpoint that multiple progressive experts and commentators have argued for since the essentially Republic tax-cut idea was put forward and accepted last year by the Obama White House.

A long list of prominent policy experts and advocates have contended for over a year that although the economy likely needs the tax cut's modest economic transfusion, President Obama could have accomplished the same thing even more effectively -- and without breaching the firewall between the Social Security Trust Fund and general U.S. tax dollars -- by fighting for his own Making Work Pay program.

Although Making Work Pay wasn't as politically catchy as Payroll Tax Holiday -- it was an effective tax credit of up to $400 passed as part of Obama's 2008 stimulus measure. It lasted two years and lapsed with Obama's judgment on this issue.

Not Much of a "Middle-Class" Tax Break

With Making Work Pay, the government could have set the tax credit at, say $800 for the year, about the "average" amount saved under the payroll tax. With the payroll tax cut, the ?ber Percent pay the FICA payroll tax on their earnings up to about $110,000. But if everyone had been limited to $800 or so, then much more of the $112 billion payroll tax cut from 2011 would have gone to people who could really use it and would get into the economy.

In other words, by giving everyone a 2 percent cut, Washington has gifted more money to wealthier people, those apt to salt the savings away in their banks, and less to middle and working class people, who would be more likely to spend it on rent, groceries and maybe a few holiday gifts.

In fact, the number crunchers at Sentier Research released their analysis this week casting doubt on whether the tax holiday is really a "middle-class tax cut" at all.

Sentier showed that compared to how much people at different income levels would have received under the Making Work Pay tax credit, under the payroll tax reduction, "The largest tax savings went to households in the highest income" brackets. The bottom 30 percent of Americans actually lost money.

What's more, "Households in the middle-income deciles gained very little, casting doubt on the often-heard assertion that this was a 'middle-class tax cut,'" says Sentier Research.
Even without the tax-credit comparison, says Sentier, the tax savings that went to the nation's richest 10 percent in 2011 was $2,990, quadruple the savings for workers in the middle -- and 25 times higher than the mere $122 amount -- about $10 a month -- saved by the bottom 10 percent.

That total bill the federal government needs to pay the Social Security Trust Fund back ($112 billion in 2011) won't much affect the long-term solvency of Social Security -- unless the holiday becomes permanent. And therein lies the national rub, which mainstream media seems to have shrugged off as hardly worth a mention in most news reports.

The Nation's Retirement Nest Egg

Now, don't get me wrong: The billions from the payroll tax holiday, now that we're stuck with this vehicle, should be renewed for now. But it was a dangerous way to go. Republicans originally proposed this approach years ago knowing it would break the barrier between the nation's retirement nest egg and general U.S. tax revenue. That barrier guards against short-term pressures, just as private pensions are separate from family cash flow, or from corporate budgets with penalties for withdrawal except in certain cases.

Here's why that division between the nation's pension plan and annual political wrangling over our tax dollars is so important. President Franklin D. Roosevelt had Social Security designed to stand independently from any other part of the federal budget. Liberal factions of the 1930s actually opposed his approach because they thought Congress should cover the program's costs annually through general taxes, as other countries did at the time. Liberals thought doing so would remind Congress of its duty to the public welfare annually. Yeah, that was going to work really well.

FDR tied Social Security to workers' wages, with an equal contribution from their employers, so everyone would feel it was his or her money. Conservatives contend that the payroll tax contributions are not really yours, but the refrain heard in today's town hall meetings and echoed in national polls has been, "It's our money. Keep your hands off of it." And truth be told, the program has been paying retirees (and later family survivors and those who become disabled) steadily for most of its 76 years of operation).

Now, though, the government needs to pay back the payroll tax cut -- through general taxes. A temporary boost to the working stiff in tough times? As predicted by media-ignored national experts and economists on the left, GOP leaders have been saying since its passage last year that they plan to attack any future Democratic effort to restore the 2 percentage point reduction by screaming bloody murder that Democrats want to raise your taxes. As seen this week, of course, the donkeys are grinning over extending it themselves.

The unreported concern is that once the prophylactic wall between Social Security and overall taxpayer dollars is punched, although just a little, it will be like a puncturing a vacuum-packed can. Longstanding conservative arguments that Social Security really isn't in a family and retirement lockbox, but is only sealed from other federal spending by worthless promises, could become a self-fulfilling prophesy.

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Follow Paul Kleyman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@genbeatonline

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-kleyman/media-fail-to-tell-full-t_b_1168358.html

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Indiana Pacers NBA Basketball at Bankers Life Fieldhouse


Monday, December 26, 2011, 7:00 PM.
Indiana Pacers NBA Basketball at Bankers Life Fieldhouse.

Detroit Pistons vs. Indiana Pacers in the Home Opener of the shortened 2011-2012 NBA season at Bankers Life Fieldhouse (formerly Conseco Fieldhouse). Tickets: Venue Box Office or Ticketmaster. Info: See Web site below or call 317-917-2727.
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Location: Bankers Life Fieldhouse, 125 South Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Marion County.

www.bankerslifefieldhouse.com

[Ref #490429]

Indiana Pacers on AroundIndy.com:
http://aroundindy.com/pacers.php
Bankers Life Fieldhouse on AroundIndy.com:
http://aroundindy.com/conseco.php

Source: http://aroundindy.blogspot.com/2011/12/indiana-pacers-nba-basketball-at.html

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Energy saves multi-band concert at Sherman Theater, and that's a shame

December 24, 2011

Posted by John J. Moser at 11:31:53 AM on December 24, 2011


Patent PendingEnergy usually is a very important element to a rock show: Without it, a great-sounding show can be bogged down.

Or a mediocre concert can be elevated, as was the case of Patent Pending headlining an eight-band show Friday at Stroudsburg?s Sherman Theater.

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But in the case of the Sherman, that?s a shame, because the show had all the ingredients for a great concert ? not one that needed to be defined by a high energy level.

Whether it was the impending holidays or the waiting ? and sometimes wading ? through what turned out to be a 5 1/2-hour show, many of the bands, including Patent Pending were decidedly off their games. With one exception; we?ll get to that later.

The Long Island, N.Y.-based Patent Pending was all about the energy, putting on a 20-song, 90-minute show that had singer/front man Joe Ragosta frequently crowd-surfing and bounding all over stage. He also incited the crowd not only to jump and form circle pits, but even to do reverse circle pits and a ?crawl of death? in which they split and, rather than ramming into each other in a wall of death, crawled. They also had bubble ?snowstorms? on the Christmas-themed stage and shot confetti streamers into the crowd.

They opened with ?Walk-in Closet? and stormed through ?I Already Know (She Don?t Give a S--- About Me),? which two weeks ago was used on MTV?s ?The Real World.? During ?Shake Weights and Moving Crates,? Ragosta actually brought out a Shake Weight and wiggled it suggestively.

They played ?The June Spirit,? a song they said they hadn?t done in two years, and on which Ragosta inserted lines from Vanilla Ice?s ?Ice Ice Baby? and DJ Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince?s ?Parents Just Don?t Understand.?

They even played ?Decemberween,? which they said was the first song they ever played at The Sherman six or seven years ago. And they covered Smash Mouth?s ?Hey Now, You?re a Rock Star,? from what Ragosta said was an upcoming album of cover songs.

It was all great fun, but the band?s songs were decidedly ragged. Ragosta sang off key on virtually every song, even when he wasn?t running around stage, and the band?s music was far tighter at Allentown?s Crocodile Rock Caf? in July.

They did better on ?Spin Me Around,? which Ragosta dedicated to his fianc?e and played alone on acoustic guitar, and the slower ?One Less Heart to Break? before closing the main set with their new single, ?Douchebag,? which is a great song, but also was ragged.

A three-song encore that started with ?Second Family? and included an appropriate ?She?s a Ho Ho Ho, Merry Christmas? was more of the same. But at least encores are expected to be ragged, and the band closed, again, with a lot of energy.

Of the supporting acts, Blairstown, N.J.?s Survay Says, which won two Sherman?s Clash for Cash battles of the bands that I judged, was disappointingly ragged on its eight-song, 30-minute set.

They also showed a lot of energy, but were startlingly loose for a band whose ska sound depends on being tight. The band?s three-man horn section was better accompanying Patent Pending on ?Set the Sun on Fire? than on any of their own songs.

Also disappointing was Refuse the Conformity, a young punk outfit from Nazareth and Easton that was so impressive at the Clash for Cash in July and again opening for Patent Pending at Croc Rock in July.?

They muddled through original songs, but seemed far more confident and proficient on a cover of Green Day?s ?American Idiot? (Patent Pending?s Ragosta joined them to sing) and saved their set with a loopy cover of ?All I Want for Christmas Is You,? with some nice lead guitar.

Goodbye Friday of Lopatcong, N.J., played a nice, chirpy pop-punk set with a good, tight sound. They?ve certainly got the teen-pop attraction part down, and were fun on a cover of Jay Sean?s ?Down.?

But the surprise of the night was Kim?s Comeback of Bethlehem, which showed stunning growth since also opening for Patent Pending at that Croc Rock show in July.

They were tighter, punkier and far more confident on a six-song, 22-minute set, playing originals and covers, including a speedy, fun cover of Taylor Swift?s ?Love Story? (Taking a page from The Summer ?Set) and blink 182?s ?I Won?t Be Home for Christmas.?

They closed with Lit?s ?My Own Worst Enemy,? which also had Patent Pending?s Ragosta on guitar. It had the crowd singing along and moshing. That was a good use of energy.

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Source: http://blogs.mcall.com/lehighvalleymusic/2011/12/energy-saves-multi-band-concert-at-sherman-theater-and-thats-a-shame-.html

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Police: Gunman in murder-suicide dressed as Santa

Grapevine police investigate the scene where they found seven people dead outside Dallas in Grapevine, Texas, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Grapevine police investigate the scene where they found seven people dead outside Dallas in Grapevine, Texas, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Police tape hangs in front of an apartment complex where 7 people were found dead, Sunday Dec. 25, 2010, in Grapevine, Texas. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Police tape stretches through a Grapevine, Texas, apartment complex where police found seven people dead in an apartment on Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 in Grapevine, Texas. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)

Police line tape lines the scene where police found seven people dead in an apartment on Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011 in Grapevine, Texas. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead. (AP Photo/The Dallas Morning News, Scott Goldstein) MANDATORY CREDIT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT; INTERNET OUT; AP MEMBERS ONLY

Grapevine police investigate the scene where they found seven people dead outside Dallas in Grapevine, Texas, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2011. Four women and three men who police believe to be related were found apparently shot to death, and authorities said they believe the shooter is among the dead (AP Photo/The Dallas Morning News, Michael Ainsworth) MANDATORY CREDIT; MAGS OUT; TV OUT;

(AP) ? Six members of a Texas family apparently opened Christmas presents just before a relative dressed as Santa Claus showed up, opened fire and killed them before killing himself, police said Monday.

Grapevine police spokesman Sgt. Robert Eberling said the shooter showed up in the Santa outfit shortly before gunfire erupted and was a member of the family. The identity of the shooter and the victims will be released after autopsies are conducted Monday, he said.

Police went to the apartment midday Sunday after dispatchers received a phone call in which no one was on the line. They found four women and three men, aged 18 to 60, dead. A motive for the shootings remains unclear.

Investigators worked overnight, meticulously searching the apartment, along with three vehicles parked outside.

"It appears they had just celebrated Christmas. They had opened their gifts," Grapevine Police Sgt. Robert Eberling said Sunday, adding that the apartment was decorated for the holiday, including a tree.

Two handguns were found near the bodies, and it appears all died of gunshot wounds, he said.

Grapevine Police Lt. Todd Dearing said investigators believe that the victims were related, though some were visiting and didn't live in the apartment. He said police are looking for other relatives to inform of the deaths.

"Seven people in one setting in Grapevine, that's never happened before. Ever," Dearing said.

Many of the nearby apartments are vacant, and police said no neighbors reported hearing anything on a quiet Christmas morning when many people were not around.

Jose Fernandez, a 35-year-old heavy equipment mechanic who moved to the complex with his family about six months ago, said he always felt safe in the area, but is now afraid to let his 10-year-old son play freely outside.

"This is really outrageous especially on Christmas," said Fernandez, who was visiting family for the holiday and returned to find several police cars parked outside his home.

"This has shocked everybody. It has scared everybody. I guess something like this can happen anywhere, but seven people dead. It's just very scary," he added.

___

Associated Press writer Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-26-Texas-Seven%20Dead/id-8c3221194f2746c99e5456d4f0d0283a

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Japanese designer of arty kichenware Yanagi dies (AP)

TOKYO ? Sori Yanagi, whose designs for stools and kitchen pots brought the simplicity and purity of Japanese decor into the everyday, has died. He was 96.

The pioneer of Japan's industrial design died of pneumonia in a Tokyo hospital Sunday, Koichi Fujita of Yanagi Design Office said Monday.

Yanagi's curvaceous "butterfly stool," evocative of a Japanese shrine gate, won an award at La Triennale di Milano in 1957 and helped elevate him to international stature.

The work later joined the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Louvre museum in Paris.

Another typical Yanagi design was the stackable plastic stool, humorously called the "elephant stool," because of its resemblance to the animal's chunky feet.

The lines and curves of Yanagi designs were as distinctly Japanese as they were universal, winning him fans ? and a place in homes not only in Japan but around the world ? for his tea pots, ceramic cups and even the lowly whisk, which became artwork with his touch.

Yanagi chose design for his career after falling in love with the work of architect Le Corbusier while studying at a Tokyo fine art university.

Credited with paving the way on the international stage for younger Japanese designers, Yanagi also took up more monumental pieces, such as bridges and the Olympic torch, as well as a motorcycle and toys.

He supported Japanese traditional art throughout his life, and he served as head of the Japan Folk Crafts Museum in Tokyo, which his philosopher father founded.

Funeral arrangements were not being disclosed as the ceremony is for family and close friends. He is survived by his wife Fumiko and four children, Fujita said.

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_as/as_japan_obit_yanagi

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

The Man Who Told A Christmas Story

I was introduced to Shep, as his fans called him, by my weird uncle Dave. Dave, who was a bit of a hipster, used to crash on our sofa when he was between jobs. Being a bookish and somewhat imperious 12-year-old, already desperately weary of life in suburban New Jersey and appalled by Hoss and Little Joe and Mitch Miller and the heinous Bachelor Father, I figured Dave was my man. One night, after ruthlessly beating me at rummy, he put down the cards and said, "Now we're gonna listen to Shepherd?this guy's great." The Zenith table model in the kitchen came to life midway through Shepherd's theme music, a kitschy, galloping Eduard Strauss piece called the "Bahn Frei" polka. And then there was that voice, cozy, yet abounding with jest.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=9d95d7b806c3c8410352f4637d36c93e

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amcgowanca: Time to go get the last gift I need to buy for this Christmas, then back home to work on a list of to-dos :) #lovingit

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Time to go get the last gift I need to buy for this Christmas, then back home to work on a list of to-dos :) #lovingit amcgowanca

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Source: http://twitter.com/amcgowanca/statuses/149952844613697536

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Beebe seeks partnership for health insurance exchange | Arkansas ...

By John Lyon
Arkansas News Bureau

LITTLE ROCK ? Gov. Mike Beebe said today he has endorsed Arkansas? involvement in a partnership with the federal government to implement a federally mandated health insurance exchange in the state.

The announcement was hailed by a coalition that had supported a state-run health care exchange and criticized by the state Republican Party, which said the state should not spend tax dollars on an insurance exchange while the federal health care overhaul is being challenged in court.

In his weekly column and radio address, Beebe said that this week he advised the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that he supports implementing the exchange through a state-federal partnership.

?This partnership will allow us to apply for federal money that will permit us to meet our legal requirements using as little state funding as possible,? Beebe said. ?It will also help to ensure that, as more Arkansans sign up for health insurance programs, the premium taxes collected on those policies remain in Arkansas and don?t go to Washington.?

The exchange is mandated under the federal health care overhaul that Congress passed and President Obama signed into law in 2009. Beebe has chosen not to set up a state-run exchange because of opposition from Republican legislators, so the exchange will be run by the federal government.

Because a large number of states have similarly opted not to embrace state-run exchanges, the Obama administration recently announced the creation of a new option in which states can partner with the federal government and retain some decision-making authority.

?Insurance options are best modeled with local needs and perspectives in mind, and this partnership program will give Arkansas a voice in that process, even with the federal government in control of this exchange,? Beebe said.

State Insurance Commissioner Jay Bradford said the state is seeking a grant expected to be roughly $7.5 million. The money would be used to gather and analyze data, educate the public about how the exchange works and train ?navigators? who would help clients navigate the new system and obtain coverage through the exchange, if they choose to do so.

The grant would save about $2.5 million that otherwise would have to come from state coffers, Bradford said. He said that if Arkansas is approved for the grant and for the partnership, it will ?be able to tailor these coverages to Arkansas needs, which is a lot better than losing all of this to the federal government.?

A coalition of Arkansas organizations that had supported a state-run health care exchange issued a statement today praising the governor?s action.

?Going forward, the federal partnership model is the best way to maintain some state regulatory oversight, protect consumers and save the state money,? said Lynn Zeno, executive vice president of the Independent Insurance Agents of Arkansas.

The insurance agents? group is part of a coalition that also includes the Arkansas Hospital Association, Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield, the Arkansas State Chamber of Commerce/Associated Industries of Arkansas and Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families, among others.

Katherine Vasilos, spokeswoman for the state Republican Party, said in a statement today, ?Until the Supreme Court rules this summer on the constitutionality of the law, we should not spend tax dollars to fund planning for an Obamacare exchange in Arkansas.?

Vasilos accused Beebe of giving himself ?political cover? when he cited Republican opposition as the reason for not pursuing a state-run exchange, even though legislative approval was not required.

State Democratic Party spokeswoman Candace Martin responded, ?Republicans in Arkansas are still advocating for the federal government to implement the health care exchange in our state, and that?s just wrong. This solution will at least allow for some state oversight.?

State Rep. John Burris, R-Harrison, the House majority leader, said in an interview he believes the Beebe administration has not kept legislators adequately informed about its actions.

?I haven?t had any information on the partnership exchange,? Burris said. ?I think the real problem is a lack of leadership from the administration in communicating what they want with the Arkansas Legislature. I?d rather see them communicating with Arkansas legislators than (Health and Human Services Secretary) Kathleen Sebelius.?

Bradford said that if the state receives the grant, legislators will have the final say because it will be up to them to appropriate the money.

As for the decision to pursue the grant and the partnership, Bradford said the governor ?thought it was in the best interests of the citizens, and I certainly agree with that decision.?

Source: http://arkansasnews.com/2011/12/22/beebe-seeks-partnership-for-health-insurance-exchange/

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Cancer Survivors Should Take Steps to Keep Healthy During Holidays (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Dec. 23 (HealthDay News) -- The holiday season can be especially meaningful for cancer survivors, but they need to take steps to ensure they stay healthy through this often hectic and stressful time.

One in 20 U.S. adults is a cancer survivor and their ranks are growing. Many of these folks have long-term health needs due to the disease and its treatment, experts at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center pointed out in a center news release.

Karen Syrjala, co-director of the center's Survivorship Program, offers holiday health tips for cancer survivors, including the following:

  • Be prepared for your holiday stress points. Take steps to deal with family conflicts or trying to do too much. For example, if you have to see a difficult relative, plan something fun afterward so you can look forward to doing something enjoyable.
  • Take control of your time and eliminate holiday events or traditions you feel you can do without. Also, try to postpone non-holiday events until the new year.
  • Make sure to schedule time with people who mean the most to you. Spending time with those closest to you has a beneficial effect on both the body and brain.
  • Keep physically active during the holidays and all through the year. It's good for your overall health and may even reduce your cancer-related risks.
  • Eat a healthy diet. Focus more on giving your body what it needs (such as fruits and vegetables) and less on trying not to eat certain foods. Eating healthy foods before going to a party will make it easier to resist sweets and other unhealthy foods. Consult a nutritionist if you're not sure what is healthy for you or if you have digestion problems.
  • Avoid alcohol or drink in moderation. Alcohol has been linked with an increased risk of cancer.
  • Find time to relax your body and mind, and tend to your body's needs. If you're having physical problems, make a list and schedule an appointment with your doctor in the new year. Knowing you have a plan for dealing with these problems can ease your mind during the holidays.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about cancer survivors.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/cancer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111224/hl_hsn/cancersurvivorsshouldtakestepstokeephealthyduringholidays

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Friday, December 23, 2011

World?s Largest Pro-Life Youth Rally Coming to Washington DC

by Kristan Hawkins | Washington, DC | LifeNews.com | 12/22/11 8:38 PM

Each year, hundreds of thousands of young pro-lifers march for preborn rights in Washington, D.C. on the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton Supreme Court decisions which legalized abortion in all 9 months of pregnancy.

Over the past few years, I have had the opportunity to speak to many of you about this generation?s involvement at the annual March for Life. Like last year, Students for Life of America is co-sponsoring a massive pro-life youth rally immediately following the annual pro-life March for Life.

The time has now come to show America and our nation?s leaders that this generation is pro-life by marching in the streets of our nation?s capital and gathering together to declare the end to the greatest injustice of our lifetimes.

On January 23rd, join Students for Life on the U.S. Capitol Lawn to make history at our annual National Pro-Life Youth Rally in Washington, D.C. It will be the largest pro-life youth rally in the world!

Pro-lifers of all ages are invited to join us for this FREE rally/concert. National leaders like David Bereit of 40 Days for Life and Erik Whittington of Rock for Life will join me on stage with Collin Raye, five time nominee as country music?s Male Vocalist of the Year, actress Jennifer Cadena, Jason Jones, co-executive Producer of Bella and more!

Pre-register now for the the Rally and SFLA will send you a FREE ?I Vote Pro-Life First? button which guarantee your admission to the event. Space is limited, so pre-register today! (Hurry, only the first 5,000 pre-registrants will receive a button!) In addition, all pre-registrants will receive Free Virtual Action Kits on 1/23 stuffed full with pro-life resources by national pro-life organizations!

For more information on the National Pro-Life Youth Rally or to register you or your group, visit us at: http://nationalprolifeyouthrally.com. We hope you can join us on this historic day!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/LifeNewsHeadlines/~3/ASgqpCYX_7g/

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Conan takes on the Amazon Kindle Fire

Catch the Conan show last night? Team Coco took on the Amazon Kindle Fire, which appears to be popular enough to merrit lambasting on the late-night show. It's quick, it's pointed, and, yeah, it's got a bit of truth to it. Check it out.

Source: Team Coco; thanks, Susannah!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/8lq5QTM7vZM/story01.htm

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

SurDoc Raises $4 Million For Sharing Formatted Documents Across All Platforms

iconSurDoc is doing what Adobe has sort of done with its PDF file format, which is make it as easy as possible to share formatted documents across computers and mobile devices without losing the formatting. The difference it offers is that you don't need to mess with any file formating or PDF reader to access the documents -- or with all of the vulnerabilities of PDFs. You can just upload text, spreadsheet and presentation files (Word, Excel, Powerpoint, etc.) to its online service, and share them from there.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/uqAJJlj4Ex0/

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Peru judge grants Berenson NY holiday (AP)

LIMA, Peru ? A Peruvian court is allowing paroled U.S. activist Lori Berenson and her toddler son to travel to New York for the holidays, she and her father said on Friday.

Mark Berenson told The Associated Press by phone from his Manhattan home that Berenson had obtained permission to leave Peru from Dec. 16 to Jan. 11.

"I'm very glad that Peru is respecting its laws and human rights," he said. "As Lori says, if she doesn't come home, let Interpol arrest her."

Lori Berenson was paroled last year after serving 15 years for aiding leftist rebels, but she cannot leave Peru permanently until her sentence ends in 2015.

Her father told the AP on Friday he is "petrified" a negative local reaction to the New York visit could prevent the trip.

"My worry is that there's going to be screaming to stop this," he said. Some Peruvians consider her a terrorist, opposed her parole and have publicly insulted her on the street.

He said that as far as he knew, his 42-year-old daughter was still trying to buy a ticket for herself and son Salvador, who is 2 1/2.

"It's not going to be easy," he said. Flights are heavily booked and prices high at this time of year.

Reached by the AP, Lori Berenson confirmed her court permission by a text message but added: "I am not speaking to the press."

She has been repeatedly hounded and mobbed by Peruvian news news media, which has occasionally frightened young Salvador. Last month, one TV channel obtained her new address and showed video of her home on television, her father said.

"It was very dangerous," he added. "The (U.S.) Embassy complained."

His daughter is separated from Salvador's father, Anibal Apari, whom she met in prison and who serves as her lawyer.

He also confirmed the court's approval of the New York trip to Peruvian TV reporters on Friday.

Mark Berenson, 69, said his daughter is looking forward to seeing relatives she hasn't met since her 20s, including his 96-year-old aunt.

Since her initial parole in May 2010, Lori Berenson repeatedly expressed regret for aiding the rebel Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement.

Arrested in 1995, the former MIT student was accused of helping the rebels plan an armed takeover of Congress, an attack that never happened.

A military court convicted her the following year and sentenced her to life in prison for sedition. But after intense U.S. government pressure, she was retried in civil courts in 2001 and sentenced to 20 years for terrorist collaboration.

Berenson was unrepentant at the time of her arrest, but softened during years of sometimes harsh prison conditions, eventually being praised as a model prisoner.

Yet she is viewed by many as a symbol of the 1980-2000 rebel conflict that claimed some 70,000 lives. The fanatical Maoist Shining Path movement did most of the killing, while Tupac Amaru was a lesser player.

Berenson has acknowledged helping the rebels rent a safe house, where authorities seized a cache of weapons. But she insists she didn't know guns were being stored there. She denies ever belonging to Tupac Amaru or engaging in violent acts.

In an interview with the AP last year, Berenson said she was deeply troubled at having become Peru's "face of terrorism."

Its most famous prisoner, she also became a politically convenient scapegoat, she said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_peru_lori_berenson

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Tool detects patterns hidden in vast data sets

Friday, December 16, 2011

Researchers from Harvard University and the Broad Institute have developed a tool that can tackle large data sets in a way that no other software program can. Part of a suite of statistical tools called MINE, it can tease out multiple patterns hidden in health information from around the globe, statistics amassed from a season of major league baseball, data on the changing bacterial landscape of the gut, and much more. The researchers report their findings in a paper appearing in the December 16 issue of the journal Science.

From Facebook to physics to the global economy, the world is filled with data sets that could take a person hundreds of years to analyze by eye. Sophisticated computer programs can search these data sets with great speed, but fall short when researchers attempt to even-handedly detect different kinds of patterns in large data collections.

"There are massive data sets that we want to explore, and within them, there may be many relationships that we want to understand," said Broad Institute associate member Pardis Sabeti, senior author of the paper and an assistant professor at the Center for Systems Biology at Harvard University. "The human eye is the best way to find these relationships, but these data sets are so vast that we can't do that. This toolkit gives us a way of mining the data to look for relationships."

The researchers tested their analytical toolkit on several large data sets, including one provided by Harvard colleague Peter Turnbaugh who is interested in the trillions of microorganisms that live in the gut. Working with Turnbaugh, the research team harnessed MINE to make more than 22 million comparisons and narrowed in on a few hundred patterns of interest that had not been observed before.

"The goal of this statistic is to take data with a lot of different dimensions and many possible correlations and pick out the top ones," said Michael Mitzenmacher, a senior author of the paper and professor of computer science at Harvard University. "We view this as an exploration tool ? it can find patterns and rank them in an equitable way."

One of the tool's greatest strengths is that it can detect a wide range of patterns and characterize them according to a number of different parameters a researcher might be interested in. Other statistical tools work well for searching for a specific pattern in a large data set, but cannot score and compare different kinds of possible relationships. MINE, which stands for Maximal Information-based Nonparametric Exploration, is able to analyze a broad spectrum of patterns.

"Standard methods will see one pattern as signal and others as noise," said David Reshef, a co-first author of the paper who is currently a graduate student in the Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology program and also worked on this project as a graduate student in the department of statistics at the University of Oxford. "There can potentially be a variety of different types of relationships in a given data set. What's exciting about our method is that it looks for any type of clear structure within the data, attempting to find all of them."

Not only does MINE attempt to identify any pattern within the data, but it also attempts to do so with an eye toward capturing different types of patterns equally well. "This ability to search for patterns in an equitable way offers tremendous exploratory potential in terms of searching for patterns without having to know ahead of time what to search for," said David Reshef.

MINE is especially powerful in exploring data sets with relationships that may harbor more than one important pattern. As a proof of concept, the researchers applied MINE to social, economic, health, and political data from the World Health Organization (WHO) and its partners. When they compared the relationship between household income and female obesity, they found two contrasting trends in the data. Many countries follow a parabolic rate, with obesity rates rising with income but peaking and tapering off after income reaches a certain level. But in the Pacific Islands, where female obesity is a sign of status, countries follow a steep trend, with the rate of obesity climbing as income increases.

"Many data sets will contain these types of complicated relationships that are guided by multiple drivers," said Sabeti. MINE is able to identify these. "This greatly extends our capability to find interesting relationships in data."

Researchers can use MINE to generate new ideas and connections that no one has thought to look for before.

"Our tool is a hypothesis generator," said Yakir Reshef, a co-first author of the paper and a graduate student in the Weizmann Institute of Science. "The standard paradigm is hypothesis-driven science, where you come up with a hypothesis based on your personal observations. But by exploring the data, you get ideas for hypotheses that would never have occurred to you otherwise."

In addition to testing the ability of the suite of tools to detect patterns in biological and health data, the researchers examined data collected from the 2008 baseball season.

"One question that we thought would be particularly interesting would be to see what things were most strongly associated with salary," said David Reshef. The researchers generated a list of relationships, finding that the strongest associations with salary were hits, total bases, and an aggregate statistic that reflects how many runs a player generated for a team. "Given the stakes, baseball is so well documented. We're curious to see what can be done in this realm with tools like MINE."

Researchers from many different fields, including systems biology, computer science, statistics, and mathematics, all contributed to this project. "People are getting better at combining data from different sources, and in some ways, this project is in the spirit of that," said Yakir Reshef. "The project brought together authors from many disciplines. It symbolizes the kind of collaborations that we hope people will use this for in the future."

###

Harvard University: http://www.harvard.edu

Thanks to Harvard University for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116108/Tool_detects_patterns_hidden_in_vast_data_sets

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Matchups if NFL playoffs started today

No. 1 Syracuse beats NC State 88-72

??At times, top-ranked Syracuse looked dominant and more than worthy of its No. 1 ranking. At others, the Orange looked flustered and vulnerable against a hot-shooting opponent playing in front of a rowdy home crowd.

Paterno: I didn't press for details on Sandusky

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Former Penn State football coach Joe Paterno told a grand jury earlier this year that he was told his ex-assistant Jerry Sandusky had done something of "a sexual nature'' with a boy in 2002.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45690407/ns/sports-nfl/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Ryan, Abraham lead Falcons to 41-14 rout of Jags

Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Roddy White (84) celebrates his touchdown with Atlanta Falcons running back Jason Snelling (44) during the second half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Roddy White (84) celebrates his touchdown with Atlanta Falcons running back Jason Snelling (44) during the second half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Jacksonville Jaguars tight end Zach Potter celebrates his touchdown with Jacksonville Jaguars linebacker Stephen Franklin (58) during the second half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Julio Jones (11) tries to break away from Jacksonville Jaguars defensive back Kevin Rutland (22) during the second half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)

Atlanta Falcons defensive tackle Corey Peters (91) runs a fumbled ball into the end zone during the second half of an NFL football game against the Jacksonville Jaguars, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

Atlanta Falcons wide receiver Roddy White (84) hits the turf after making a touchdown catch as Jacksonville Jaguars defensive back Kevin Rutland (22) looks on during the first half of an NFL football game Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

(AP) ? As the Atlanta Falcons learned so painfully in last season's playoffs, the key is peaking at the right time.

Maybe they'll get it right this season.

With their best effort of an up-and-down season, the Falcons clinched a fourth straight winning record with a 41-14 rout of the Jacksonville Jaguars on Thursday night. Matt Ryan had another big game, throwing three touchdown passes in less than three quarters of work, and John Abraham terrorized rookie quarterback Blaine Gabbert with 3? sacks.

"I feel like we've hit our stride," said Roddy White, who had 10 catches for 135 yards and a pair of touchdowns.

A year ago, the Falcons won the NFC South with a conference-leading 13 wins. But they were one-and-done in the playoffs, blown out at home by the Green Bay Packers in the division round.

The Packers went on to claim the Super Bowl title and haven't lost since.

Atlanta would like to follow their lead.

"You know, Green Bay did a heck of a job last year peaking at the right time," White said. "I feel like we haven't hit our stride. The last two games, we've been hitting it."

Atlanta led 27-0 at halftime and stretched it out to 41-0 before Jacksonville scored on a blocked punt. Going back to the previous week, when the Falcons overcame a 16-point halftime deficit at Carolina, they ripped off 65 points in a row over five quarters.

Now that's more like it from a team that was projected as a Super Bowl contender but had not quite lived up to expectations.

Atlanta (9-5) strengthened its hold on an NFC wild card and clinched its fourth straight winning season.

Ho hum. This team has much higher goals than finishing above .500.

"I'm glad we've been able to accomplish that as an organization and a football team," coach Mike Smith said. "But believe me, it's not one of those expectations we really want to talk about. If we're where we think we are as an organization and a football team, that's expected each and every year."

It wasn't so long ago that nine victories was a big deal. The Falcons went through the first 42 years of their existence without so much as back-to-back winning seasons.

All that changed when Smith and general manager Thomas Dimitroff took over in 2008.

"I can't speak to the people who came before, but I know since Thomas and I had the opportunity to be here, we've just kind of put our heads down and gone to work," the coach said. "When you do that, good things usually happen. We are not finished, believe me. Our expectations and internal goals are much higher than having a winning football season."

This one was over by halftime, Gabbert and the shell-shocked Jaguars (4-10) saddled with a net passing total of minus-1 yard. It got as bad as minus-29 before Jacksonville piled up some meaningless yards on its final two possessions.

Gabbert had one of his worst games in a miserable rookie season, coughing up the ball twice on hits by Abraham. Both fumbles led to Atlanta scores, with defensive tackle Corey Peters scooping up the second one and scooting 13 yards to the end zone early in the third quarter for a touchdown that ended any thought of the Jaguars getting back in the game.

"It wasn't just me," said Abraham, who came into the game with only five sacks on the season. "The whole team was able to get to the quarterback."

Ryan was 19 of 26 for 224 yards and three touchdowns, with a season-high rating of 137.3. Rookie Julio Jones had the other TD on a 29-yard reception, his third score in the past two weeks.

Gabbert was 12 of 22 for 141 yards, also throwing an interception during a truly awful night full of bad decisions when he wasn't running for his life. He was sacked five times and got most of his yards on an irrelevant final drive, which resulted in Jacksonville's only offensive touchdown: a 16-yard pass to Chastin West with 59 seconds remaining.

"It wasn't our best night," Gabbert said. "We've just got to learn from it, take the positives out of it and just get better."

The injury-riddled Jaguars, playing out the season with an interim coach and a new owner, were coming off their best performance, having scored 41 straight points in a 41-14 victory over Tampa Bay. But, playing for the third time in 11 days, they couldn't build any momentum for a strong finish.

Shahid Khan must have been wondering why he paid an estimated $760 million to buy the team from original Jaguars owner Wayne Weaver in a deal that was unanimously approved by NFL owners a day earlier.

Michael Turner had a 5-yard touchdown run and Matt Bryant kicked a pair of field goals to account for Atlanta's other scoring in the 41-point barrage.

"We didn't execute good against a good team and you saw what happened," Lewis said. "Nothing really more to it. Things got out of hand way too fast and we weren't able to recover.

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Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-16-Jaguars-Falcons%20Folo/id-963f7b7083504ab2ac0151a8846aaf0d

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