Saturday, December 31, 2011

Santorum who? Republican candidate gets timely poll surge (Reuters)

MASON CIY, Iowa (Reuters) ? Rick Santorum may be getting his shot at the spotlight -- in the nick of time.

Struggling for months to gain traction in the race for the Republican presidential nomination, the former Pennsylvania senator has moved into third place in Iowa, according to a new poll commissioned by CNN and Time magazine.

It couldn't come at a better moment for Santorum. The social conservative, who has languished in most opinion polls, could use the momentum from a surge to sustain his campaign after January 3, when Iowans choose their nominee.

That would be the latest twist in a nominating contest that has been punctuated by a rotation of "in" candidates seen as an alternative to Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, around whom social conservatives have failed to coalesce.

Pizza executive Herman Cain, Texas Governor Rick Perry, and Minnesota Representative Michele Bachmann have each had rises and falls, respectively.

But Santorum has stayed consistently low in the polls, until now.

"We've always felt we could trust the people of Iowa, that when they got down to the time they were going to look at all the candidates and measure up to people they've had the opportunity to see, that they would do well," Santorum said in an interview with CNN on Wednesday.

Romney came in first place in the poll, ahead of Texas Congressman Ron Paul, who came in second.

Santorum earned the support of 16 percent of Iowa voters surveyed by the news organizations, compared to 25 percent for Romney.

Santorum has virtually moved to Iowa, concentrating his hopes on the state's social conservatives who share his strict opposition to abortion and gay marriage.

He has visited all 99 of Iowa's counties and courted every leading religious group in the state, campaigning regularly in the diners, town halls and community centers that are so crucial to the type of personal contact that Iowa voters demand.

Success in Iowa may not mean he has a pathway to the Republican nomination, however, even if he becomes the latest Romney alternative.

"Santorum is benefiting from all of his quality time in the state," said Republican strategist Ron Bonjean. "However, any placement will be hard to sustain in other states where he lacks presence, organization and resources."

Santorum has polled consistently around 3 percent nationally and between 5 percent and 10 percent in Iowa. (additional reporting by Sam Youngman and Samuel P. Jacobs)

(Reporting By Jeff Mason; Editing by Xavier Briand)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111229/pl_nm/us_usa_campaign_santorum

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Friday, December 30, 2011

T.O. to the Indoor Football League, Colt McCoy Speaks to the Media

T.O. to the Indoor Football League

After striking out this season to play in the NFL, wide receiver Terrell Owens may have finally found his new team: the Allen Wranglers.

The who?

Yep, T.O. is close to signing a six-figure deal with the suburban Dallas? Indoor Football League team. Owens may also get an ownership stake of ?likely 50 percent,??according to ESPN.

Wranglers general manager and former Dallas Cowboy Drew Pearson was on ESPN Dallas 103.3?s ?Galloway and Company? on Thursday and said that a deal is ?very close? but it had not been finalized.

The team?s website said that an offer had been extended to Owens and it included a compensation package between $250,000 to $500,000.

Here?s a link to the front page story.

Owens? outspoken agent?Drew Rosenhaus has not commented.

Should Owens join the team, his first season in the Indoor Football League will begin on Feb. 25; training camp will open two weeks before then. Last season, the Wranglers won the 16-team league?s Lone Star Division.

Colt McCoy Speaks Out About Concussion

Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy is now in his third week for his concussion and he?s finally speaking to the media about it.

But he really didn?t say anything on Thursday.

McCoy, who has been out since the Dec. 8 injury, has not been medically cleared yet for practice. In his remarks, the quarterback didn?t talk about either the hit by Pittsburgh Steelers James Harrison or what happened afterwards that evening but he did have nice things to say about the Browns? medical staff and their efforts to deal with his concussion.

He said,??Our medical staff does an outstanding job and that should never be in question.?

McCoy did not give his opinion on whether he thought Harrison?s hit was a cheap shot or offer any explanations why he is still not medically cleared.

He did say in his 10-minute appearance,??I just don?t want to go there guys. I really don?t want to recreate anything. I don?t even want to think about it. I can tell you that I?m feeling a lot better, especially of late. I really feel like I?m coming out of this, and I hope to at least be able to be out there this weekend and help my team.?

Since McCoy has been unable to play, backup quarterback?Seneca Wallace has stepped in and will do so again on Sunday. He is 0-2 since taking over. On Sunday, the 4-11 Browns will host the Steelers.

After watching the last two games at home, McCoy said he was unsure if he?d be allowed on the sidelines for this week?s game.

?

?

Source: http://footballschedule.me/t-o-to-the-indoor-football-league-colt-mccoy-speaks-to-the-media.php

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Poll: What kind of case do you prefer for your iPhone?

What kind of case do you prefer for your iPhone?CES 2012 is coming up soon and before we get ready to amp up our accessory coverage, we thought we’d start by finding out what kinds of cases the TiPb Nation prefers to rock on the iPhone? There’s an...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/B9i3hHRi3Mo/story01.htm

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Attend both my children's College Graduation

ANOTHER GREAT LIFE LIST IDEA:


Have you always wanted to do this? Or have you done it?

Add it to your life list - a list of everything you want to do and have done. Keep your bucket list on SuperViva for ongoing inspiration, help from others, and flexibility planning over time. Learn more or start by adding this goal to your list!



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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Thatcher's "Iron Lady" image softened by new movie (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Making a film about an iconic politician like Britain's Margaret Thatcher is akin to walking into a movie minefield, and casting an American -- even one as revered as Meryl Streep -- is asking for more trouble.

Yet the makers of new movie "The Iron Lady," which opens in U.S. theaters on Friday, went one step further.

They chose to depict Thatcher, now 86, as a confused, lonely woman looking back on past glories, and doing so takes the kind of guts once exhibited by the former British prime minister herself.

British director Phyllida Lloyd and screenwriter Abi Morgan said they never set out to make an historical biopic or a film about politics. They wanted to tell the story of a woman of ordinary origins who rose to great power only to fall back again into a normal, elderly life that is much like anyone's.

"It is a Shakespearean story about power and loss, and the cost of a huge life, and letting go," Lloyd told Reuters.

"The Iron Lady" is the first feature film about Thatcher, Britain's only female prime minister who was elected in 1979 and forced, in tears, out of office in 1990 after losing the support of her cabinet.

Thatcher, a Conservative, was revered for uncompromising opposition to the Soviet Union and for putting the "Great" back in Great Britain. But she also was reviled by labor unions and blamed for creating deep divisions in British society.

Lloyd said there has been "astonishingly little backlash" in Britain about casting American Streep to play the British icon. Moreover, the role required portraying a woman in the prime of her life and in decline, and that sort of contrast meant a skilled actress who understood the nuances of both.

"You needed someone of the magnitude of Meryl Streep to take on Margaret Thatcher's size and personality. You needed a superstar to play a superstar," Lloyd said.

The casting appears to have worked. Streep, a master of theatrical manipulation, has received an armful of awards for her performance and is tipped to get her 17th Oscar nomination when Academy Award nominees are announced in January.

MORE THAN A BIOPIC

But Streep and the filmmakers wanted to do more than a movie biography of Thatcher and her politics .

"Meryl said that, for some time, she had been looking for a project that considered the end of things. She didn't see it as a biopic in any way," said Lloyd.

And fitting all the decisions in 11 years of leadership, along with Thatcher's rise from grocer's daughter to the highest echelons of power in a male-dominated world, was "like squeezing a large lady into a too-tight dress," Morgan said.

So Morgan chose to set the movie in the present day, when Thatcher has decided to let go of her dead husband Denis's clothes and is ambushed by selected memories of her past.

That decision meant introducing the fragile mental health of Thatcher, who suffered a series of small strokes after leaving office. In 2008, her daughter Carol revealed that the former titan of British politics suffers from dementia. Thatcher herself has been out of the public eye for 10 years.

"We considered very deeply the morality of discussing this issue about someone who was still alive. But we felt Carol (Thatcher) had given us this cue, that it was something that could be discussed. And we were all confident that Meryl would take care of Lady Thatcher's dignity," said Lloyd.

The filmmakers did not seek the cooperation of Thatcher's family but relied on her published memoirs, input from 1980s politicians, and hours of TV footage and speeches.

Lloyd and Morgan hope their approach will help the movie resonate with people who are less familiar with Thatcher.

"I think international audiences will see it as a very humane study of power and the isolation of power. I don't think they bring the same baggage to the film as British audiences," said Morgan.

With a female director, writer and star, "The Iron Lady" has strong feminist undertones and highlights nuances of the British class system in which Thatcher was viewed as an outsider.

Yet, despite dealing mainly with events 20 years ago, it also has resonance today. "We find ourselves back in a position where there are not many women (in high positions) in parliament," Lloyd said.

"Britain has a government quite dominated by men from very privileged backgrounds. We are in a recession, our government has taken austerity measures, we have riots on the streets and strikes. Does that make Margaret Thatcher just one pendulum swing in history, or the architect of where we are today?"

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/en_nm/us_ironlady

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?Digg? to join in on Facebook social readers

In addition to photos, locations and comments, Facebook users will now be able to share interesting things they ?Digg? up.

Digg, a content sharing website, will join a handful of other companies by launching a social reader on Facebook this December.

When logged into both Facebook and Digg, users who activate the reader will share the headlines they are reading back to their Timeline and their friends? News Ticker.

Publications including The Washington Post, Huffington Post, Yahoo News, The Independent and The Guardian already have similar applications on Facebook, some since September.

With the new Digg social reader, users will post articles they are reading, view a history of what they read on their timeline and get recommendations on what to read, according to the Digg website.

The new reader is one of several ?frictionless? open-graph apps that share activity automatically from an external site to a user?s facebook page.

Other frictionless apps, which post that a user is ?watching,? ?reading? or ?listening to? include Spotify, Rhapsody, Netflix and Hulu, according to Facebook developers.

Jonathan Polson, a freshman at the University of Vermont says he does not use social apps on Facebook.

?People don?t need to know every little thing that I do on the internet,? Polson says.

Because the updates are posted automatically, users have raised questions about security.

?You will have control over what you share on Facebook by choosing whether to turn social sharing on or off, selecting what audience you share to and the ability to always edit your activity,? the Digg website states. ?You can also control your settings from your Activity Log on Facebook, where you can remove specific stories from your Timeline or hide them.?

Other companies report success with their Facebook readers.

Yahoo News stated, ?Since adding deep integration with Facebook?s Open Graph, more than 10 million users of the social network have activated the social news features, and Yahoo! News has seen a 600 percent increase in traffic from Facebook,? according to allfacebook.com

You might also be interested in:

  1. Concerned, confused collegiate Facebook users contemplate changes
  2. Students fed up with countless Facebook changes
  3. I HATE Facebook?s new chat sidebar (or, why I?m rooting for Google Plus)
  4. Alabama student?s ?social media blackout?: Goodbye Facebook, Twitter, Skype
  5. Universities finally embrace social networking ? adoption rate near 100%

The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views of USA TODAY.

Source: http://www.usatodayeducate.com/staging/index.php/ccp/digg-to-join-in-on-facebook-social-readers

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'Mission Impossible' Wins Holiday Box Office, 'Dragon Tattoo' Disappoints

Say what you will about the guy, but it looks like nothing is "impossible" for Tom Cruise.

The actor's latest entry to the "Mission" franchise ? the Brad Bird directed "Ghost Protocol" ??made the impossible happen by topping the holiday weekend box office with a healthy $46.2 million haul, bringing the film's total to $78.6 [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2011/12/27/mission-impossible-dragon-tattoo-box-office/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Abstract painter Helen Frankenthaler dies at 83 (AP)

NEW YORK ? Helen Frankenthaler, an abstract painter known for her bold, lyrical use of color who led a postwar art movement that would later be termed Color Field painting, died Tuesday at her home in Connecticut, her nephew said. She was 83.

One of Frankenthaler's most famous works is "Mountains and Sea," a 1952 painting at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., which she created by pouring thinned paint directly onto raw, unprimed canvas laid on the studio floor.

Frankenthaler's death at her home in Darien, Conn., followed a long illness, said her nephew, Clifford Ross, a multimedia artist and photographer known for his large landscapes.

Her abstract style helped American art make the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Color Field painting and influenced such artists as Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland.

"Very few artists are able to develop a vocabulary and create an aesthetic that affects other artists deeply," said Ross. "She was the one who transmitted a certain kind of freedom and boldness use of the subconscious and impulse from the Abstract Expressionists on through the Color Field painters."

She was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2002. From 1985 to 1992, she served on the National Council on the Arts of the National Endowment for the Arts.

Frankenthaler was born on Dec. 12, 1928, on New York's Upper East Side and got her bachelor's degree from Bennington College in Vermont, where she studied with Paul Feely. She studied at Columbia University in New York and took painting classes with Vaclav Vytlacil at the Art Students League and also with Hans Hofmann.

She was only 23 when she created "Mountains and Sea," building on Jackson Pollock's abstract technique by pouring highly thinned oil paint from coffee cans directly onto the raw canvas to create floating fields of translucent color. Louis later said "Mountains and Sea" was "the bridge between Pollock and what was possible."

Her first solo exhibition was presented in 1951 at New York's Tibor de Nagy Gallery, and she was also included that year in the landmark exhibition "9th Street: Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture." Frankenthaler also showed internationally, exhibiting at the International Biennial of Art in Venice in 1966 and in the United States Pavilion at Expo in Montreal in 1967.

Frankenthaler went on to develop a highly personal painterly manner within the abstract expressionist movement. She worked in a wide range of media in addition to paintings on canvas and paper, including ceramics, sculpture, woodcuts, tapestry and printmaking.

Frankenthaler explored a variety of linear components in her oil paintings of the 1950s, but in the 1960s she shifted her focus, embracing acrylic paints to explore open, flat fields of color, evident in the large and glowing 1973 painting "Nature Abhors a Vacuum." Ross said she was never doctrinaire and cheered art from Henri Matisse to David Smith to Willem de Kooning.

In later years, Ross said, she seemed to have fallen out of favor "because of her embrace of beauty." He predicted that in the years to come, Frankenthaler's contribution will be "as a beacon about lyricism and openness and, frankly, beauty."

"Helen's role, critically, was to provide beauty and a certain sustenance at a very bleak time," Ross said. "One of the things I'm very curious about is to see how quickly that will be absorbed and celebrated."

Frankenthaler, whose 13-year marriage to the painter Robert Motherwell ended in 1971, also is survived by her second husband, Stephen M. DuBrul Jr.

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

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Russia taps new military spymaster

Russia appointed Major General Igor Sergun as the new chief of the GRU military intelligence service, the country's biggest espionage agency, Russian news agencies quoted a Defence Ministry spokesperson as saying on Monday. No other details were given about the new head of the GRU, an organisation so secretive it has neither a spokesperson nor a website.

The state-run newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta described Sergun as a career spy and cited sources as saying he had served as deputy to the outgoing GRU chief Alexander Shlyakhturov.

Defence Ministryspokesperson Igor Konashenkov told Interfax that Shlyakhturov, 64, was removed after reaching retirement age for military servicemen. The Kommersant newspaper, citing unidentified sources on Saturday, said Shlyakhturov, who was appointed by President Dmitry Medvedev in April 2009, had left his post to head the board of OAO Korporatsiya MIT, which develops nuclear missiles. Russian military intelligence service, known by its Russian acronym GRU, has agents spread across the globe.

Created in 1918 under revolutionary leader Leon Trotsky, it answers to the chief of the general staff, one of the three people who control Russia's portable nuclear briefcase. Shlyakhturov's predecessor, General Valentin Korabelnikov, was seen to have been dismissed for opposing Kremlin-backed military reforms.

But Shlyakhturov is viewed as an ally of Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov, who has cut the number of
servicemen and reorganised the armed forces command. Unlike the Soviet-era KGB secret police, GRU was not split up when the Soviet Union collapsed although the organisation has lost turf wars with the KGB's main successor, the FSB, over recent years, according to local media. Russia's most powerful man, Vladimir Putin, served as a KGB spy in East Germany in the 1980s and later became director of
the FSB. In 2006 he visited the new Moscow headquarters of GRU, where he was shown shooting a pistol on a firing range.

Source: http://www.dnaindia.com/world/report_russia-taps-new-military-spymaster_1630374

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Nationals bolster rotation with Gonzalez (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? The Washington Nationals have acquired All-Star left-handed pitcher Gio Gonzalez in a six-player trade with the Oakland A's, the teams said on Friday.

Gonzalez, 26, earned his first All-Star selection this year after finishing among the American League leaders in wins, strikeouts (197), and ERA (3.12) with a 16-12 record in 32 starts.

"We could not be more pleased to add lefthander Gio Gonzalez to our club," Nationals executive vice president of baseball operations and general manager Mike Rizzo said in a statement.

"Gio is a front-line starter with glowing credentials, the vast majority of which were achieved before his 26th birthday.

"Gio's presence bolsters the top portion of our rotation with yet another power arm to compete in the rugged National League East."

Gonzalez has a career record 38-32 in 95 games and a 3.93 ERA.

The Nationals also acquired minor league right handed pitcher Robert Gilliam, while the A's received right-handed pitchers A.J. Cole and Brad Peacock, left-handed pitcher Tom Milone and catcher Derek Norris.

(Reporting by Mike Mouat in Windsor, Ontario. Editing by Patrick Johnston)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111224/sp_nm/us_baseball_nationals_gonzalez

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Internet Changes How We Remember

Head Lines | Mind & Brain Cover Image: January 2012 Scientific American MagazineSee Inside

Knowing we can retrieve facts online later alters memory

Image: Mike Kemp/Corbis

Four years ago Columbia University psychologist Betsy Sparrow turned to her husband after looking up some movie trivia online and asked, ?What did we do before the Internet?? Thus, Sparrow set out to investigate how Google, and all the information it proffers, has changed how people think. Four psychology experiments later Sparrow has her answer, which was published in Science this past August. ?[The Web] is an external memory storage space, and we make it responsible for remembering things,? she says.

In one of Sparrow?s experiments she presented two groups of undergraduates with trivia statements. Individuals in one group, who were told they could retrieve the information later on their computer, had worse recall than subjects in the other group, who knew in advance they could not do so. Together with the rest of her results, this finding suggests that Internet users have learned to remember how to find a fact rather than the fact itself.

Does this mean the Web is dumbing us down? Certainly not, she says: ?Memory is much greater than memorizing.? Our brain may simply be adapting to present circum?stances, Sparrow points out. ?We?re in an Internet world.?


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=bf33f20af2554caa96dcf49fff5deca3

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

In China, a daring few challenge one-child limit (AP)

ZHUJI, China ? Seven months pregnant, Wu Weiping sneaked out early in the morning carrying a shoulder bag with some clothes, her laptop and a knife.

"It's good for me I wasn't caught, but it's lucky for them too," said Wu, 35, who feared that family planning officials were going to drag her to the hospital for a forced abortion. "I was going to fight to the death if they found me."

With her escape, Wu joined an increasingly defiant community of parents in China who have risked their jobs, savings and physical safety to have a forbidden second child.

Though their numbers are small, they represent changing ideas about individual rights. While violators in the past tended to be rural families who skirted the birth limits in relative obscurity, many today are urbanites like Wu who frame their defiance in overtly political terms, arguing that the government has no right to dictate how many children they have.

Using Internet chat rooms and blogs, a few have begun airing their demands for a more liberal family planning policy and are hoping others will follow their lead. Several have gotten their stories into the tightly controlled media, an indication that their perspectives have resonance with the public.

After finding out his wife was expecting a second child, Liu Lianwen set up an online discussion group called "Free Birth" to swap information about the one-child policy and how to get around it. In less than six months, it has attracted nearly 200 members.

"We are idealists," said the 37-year-old engineer from central China, whose daughter was born Oct. 18. "We want to change the attitudes of people around us by changing ourselves."

Freed of the social controls imposed during the doctrinaire era of communist rule, Chinese today are free to choose where they live and work and whom they marry. But when it comes to having kids, the state says the majority must stop at one. Hefty fines for violators and rising economic pressures have helped compel most to abide by the limit. Many provinces claim near perfect compliance.

It's impossible to know how many children have been born in violation of the one-child policy, but Zhai Zhenwu, director of Renmin University's School of Sociology and Population in Beijing, estimates that less than one percent of the 16 million babies born each year are "out of plan."

Liu thinks his fellow citizens have been brainwashed. "They all feel it's glorious to have a small family," he said. "Thirty years of family planning propaganda have changed the way the majority of Chinese think about having children."

The reluctance to procreate is also an issue of growing concern for demographers, who worry that the policy combined with a rising cost of living has brought the fertility rate down too sharply and too fast. Though still the world's largest nation with 1.3 billion people, China's population growth has slowed considerably.

"The worry for China is not population growth ? it's rapid population aging and young people not wanting to have children," said Wang Feng, director of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, a joint U.S.-China academic research center in Beijing.

Wang sees a looming disaster as the baby boom generation of the 1960s heads into retirement and old age. China's labor force, sharply reduced by the one-child policy, will struggle to support them.

He argues that the government should allow everyone at least two children. He thinks many Chinese would still stop at one because of concerns about being able to afford to raise more than that.

Penalties for violators are harsh. Those caught must pay a "social compensation fee," which can be four to nine times a family's annual income, depending on the province and the whim of the local family planning bureau. Parents with government jobs can also lose their posts or get demoted, and their "out of plan" children are denied education and health benefits.

Those without government posts have less to worry about. If they can afford the steep fee and don't mind losing benefits, there's little to stop them from having another child. There's popular anger over this favoring of the wealthy but not much that ordinary people can do about it, since the policy is set behind closed doors by the communist leadership in Beijing.

In 2007, officials in coastal Zhejiang province threatened to start naming and shaming well-off families who had extra kids, but the campaign never got off the ground, possibly because it threatened to tarnish the reputations of too many well-connected people.

Hardest hit by the rules are urban middle class parents with Communist Party posts, teaching positions or jobs at state-run industries.

Li Yongan was ordered to pay 240,000 yuan ($37,500) after his son was born in 2007 as he already had a 13-year-old daughter. After refusing to pay the fee, Li was denied a household registration permit for his son, forcing him to pay three times more for kindergarten.

He was also barred from his job teaching physics at a state-run university in Beijing. "I never regret my second child, but I have been living with depression and anger for years," said Li, who struggles to make ends meet as a freelance chess teacher.

Of course, there are surreptitious, though not foolproof, ways to evade punishment: paying a bribe or falsifying documents so that, for instance, a second child is registered as the twin of an older sibling. Or, sometimes second babies are registered to childless relatives or rural families that are allowed to have a second child but haven't done so.

Wu, the woman who made the early morning escape, said she never intended to flout the one-child rule. She had resorted to fertility treatments to conceive her first child ? a daughter nicknamed Le Le, or Happy ? so she was stunned when a doctor told her she was expecting again in August, 2008.

The news triggered a monthlong "cold war" with her husband, Wu said. Silent dinners, cold shoulders. She wanted to keep the baby. He didn't. After a few weeks, he came around, she explained with a satisfied smile.

But family planning officials insisted on an abortion. The principal at her school also pressured her to end the pregnancy.

Desperate, she went online for answers ? and was led astray.

At her home on the outskirts of Zhuji, a textile hub a few hours south of Shanghai, the energetic former high school teacher recounted how she divorced her husband, then married her cousin the next day, all in an attempt to evade the rules.

The soap-opera-like subterfuge was meant to take advantage of a loophole that allows divorced parents to have a second child if their new spouse is a first-time parent.

Wu had helped raise her cousin, who is 25 and 10 years younger than her, and when she asked if he would marry her to help save the baby, he agreed.

The divorce, on Sept. 27, 2008 involved signing a document and posing for a photo. It was over in just a few minutes. The next day's marriage was similarly swift.

"I remember I was very happy that day," Wu said holding the marriage certificate with a glued-on snapshot of the cousins. "Because I thought I'd figured out a way to save my baby."

But her problem wasn't over. When the newlyweds applied for a birth permit, officials informed them conception had to take place after marriage. They were told to abort the baby, then try again. Wu was back to square one.

A popular option that was out of reach for Wu economically is to have the baby elsewhere, where the limits don't apply. Some better-off Chinese go to Hong Kong, where private agencies charge mainland mothers hundreds of thousands of yuan (tens of thousands of dollars) for transport, lodging, and medical costs.

The number giving birth in Hong Kong reached 40,000 last year, prompting the territory to cap the number of beds in public hospitals they are allowed from 2012. However, parents of kids born abroad face the bureaucratic hurdles of foreigners, having to pay premiums for school and other services.

In the end, Wu also fled, but not as far as Hong Kong. Three months from her due date, she kissed her baby daughter goodbye, telling her she was going on vacation, and hopped an early morning train to nearby Hangzhou. There she switched to another train bound for Shanghai, hoping the roundabout route would throw off anyone trying to tail her.

In Shanghai, Wu used a friend's ID to rent a one-room apartment with shared bathroom and kitchen. It was tiny and not cheap for her, 700 yuan a month (US$107), but it was across from a hospital that allowed her to register without a government-issued birth permission slip and it had an Internet connection.

Wu had never used email, so her husband ? the real one ? set up a password-protected online journal that he titled "yixiaobb," or 'one tiny baby.' She posted to the journal up to nine times a day, describing where she was living without ever revealing her exact location. She prefaced every entry with a capital M for mother, and added a number to mark how many messages she wrote in a day. Using the same journal, her husband wrote to her, coding his messages with an F.

It felt like an invisible tether linking Wu to her husband. He didn't know where she was, but knew she was OK. Shortly before her due date, she asked him to come to Shanghai, and he was present for the birth of their son.

More than two years later, she and her former husband, the father to both her children, have yet to remarry ? hoping it will legally shield him from any future punishment.

The marriage with her cousin was easily dissolved after they discovered it was never valid, because marriages between first cousins is illegal in China.

Wu was fired from her job as a public school teacher because of the baby and her ex-husband, who is also a teacher, was demoted to a freelance position at his school. Though told she has been assessed a 120,740 yuan ($18,575) social compensation fee, Wu has refused to pay.

Enforcers of the family planning limits showed up at their house in July, and again in November, threatening legal action. Wu is afraid their property might be confiscated or that she or husband might end up in detention, but she doesn't want to pay the fine because she doesn't believe she's done anything wrong.

"I don't think I've committed any crime," she said. "A crime is something that hurts other people or society or that infringes on other people's rights. I don't think having a baby is any kind of crime."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_as/as_china_two_kids

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Why ABC's new sitcom "Work It" hurts the transgender community

On January 3, ABC is set to premiere the new comedy Work It, a sitcom about two men who dress as women to secure employment. During a period in which the transgender community now routinely finds itself in the cultural crosshairs, the timing couldn?t be worse for a show based on the notion that men dressed as women is inherently funny. In fact, shows like this have the power to put the transgender community in an even more dangerous position.

GLAAD has seen the pilot and while the show?s pilot does not explicitly address transgender people, many home viewers unfamiliar with the realities of being transgender will still make the connection. Work It invites the audience to laugh at images of men trying to adopt a feminine appearance, thereby also making it easier to mock people whose gender identity and expression are different than the one they were assigned at birth. Said GLAAD?s Acting President Mike Thompson, ?Transphobia is still all too prevalent in our society and this show will only contribute to it. It will reinforce the mistaken belief that transgender women are simply ?men pretending to be women,? and that their efforts to live their lives authentically as women are a form of lying or deception.?

These problems are even more pronounced in the show?s printed ad, which depicts the two main characters dressed as women while standing at men?s room urinals. Not only does it inadvertently further notions that transgender identities are humorous or artificial, but imagery like this is one of the first things anti-LGBT activists resort to when trying to deny transgender people protections against discrimination. As Mark Snyder from the Transgender Law Center said in a recent article, a printed image like this in magazines or the sides of city buses will ?make it more difficult for transgender people to gain full equality -- including the important right to access public accommodations appropriate to their gender identity.?

Work It comes from a network with a track record of inclusive LGBT content that has often included the transgender community. When ABC cast Candis Cayne on Dirty Sexy Money, it was the first time a transgender actress was featured in a recurring role on broadcast television. Around the same time, they featured Alexis Meade on Ugly Betty, who was television?s first regular transgender character. Most recently, ABC cast transgender advocate Chaz Bono on their hit series Dancing with the Stars. When it comes to representing the transgender community in a fair and accurate way, ABC has routinely led the network pack.

But the fact that this show is coming from what has been one of the LGBT community?s strongest media allies perhaps makes the sting worse. When speaking about the show to an audience of television critics at this summer?s TCA executive panel, ABC president Paul Lee said, ?I?m a Brit, it is in my contract that I have to do one cross-dressing show a year; I was brought up on Monty Python. What can I do?? For starters, Mr. Lee can recognize that there has been forty years of progressive social change since Monty Python?s television heyday. Not to mention the birth and continuing advancement of the modern LGBT movement.

We are at a crucial point in transgender representation in our culture. While public awareness continues to increase and there have been great milestones reached in the past few years, thanks in part to networks like ABC, all too often the community is still depicted in a problematic light. Creators often resort to the same tired stereotypes and insulting language to depict transgender people, and the slur ?tr*nny? is still used with alarming frequency. Off-screen, transgender people experience disproportionately higher rates of violence, harassment, discrimination, poverty, and homelessness. While the straight men on the show may have gotten jobs by dressing as women, transgender people also face double the rates of unemployment. At a time when we need greater understanding of the transgender community, a show like Work It will ultimately have the opposite effect.

We ask that ABC recognize this fact, keep the show?s bathroom advertisement out of circulation, and seriously consider whether airing this show is worth the damage it has the potential to do. The fact is ABC should not air this show at all, as it will contribute to a climate in which transgender people are something to be laughed at, rather than treated with the respect and dignity that everyone deserves.

To read the original story on the GLAAD blog, click HERE.

Source: http://sdgln.com/causes/2011/12/21/why-abc-sitcom-work-it-hurts-transgender-community

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Gingrich Blasts Romney: ?His People, Doing His Dirty Work? (ABC News)

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White House launches #40dollars Twitter campaign aimed at winning payroll tax debate (Washington Post)

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[OOC] Warriors of Cosmos

I will be relocating the character lists to OOC topic threads like this one, and the Intro page will now provide more detail about the story. This topic will list the Warriors of Cosmos, and any suggestions you might have for additional heroes. Now then, I shall start by giving a list of the characters already planned for the RP.




~Warrior of Light: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy I.}

~Garland: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy I.}

~Firion: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy II.}

~Maria: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy II.}

~Luneth (Onion Knight): Played by Me. {Final Fantasy III.}

~Refia (Freelancer): Available. {Final Fantasy III.}

~Cecil Harvey: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy IV.}

~Kain Highwind: Avaliable. {Final Fantasy IV.}

~Rosa Joanna Farrell: Available. {Final Fantasy IV.}

~Ceodore Harvey: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy IV: The After Years.}

~Bartz Klauser: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy V.}

~Faris Scherwiz: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy V.}

~Terra Branford: Played by Vampiric-Rage. {Final Fantasy VI.}

~Edgar Roni Figaro: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy VI.}

~Locke Cole: Available. {Final Fantasy VI.}

~Cloud Strife: Played by LightningxAlchemist. {Final Fantasy VII.}

~Arianna Strife: My FF7 OC.

~Christina Wyrd: LightningxAlchemist's FF7 OC.

~Tifa Lockhart: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy VII.}

~Vincent Valentine: Played by LightningxAlchemist. {Final Fantasy VII: Dirge of Cerberus.}

~Zack Fair: Played by Firewind. {Final Fantasy VII: Crisis Core.}

~Reno: Played by Me. {FF7, Before Crisis & Advent Children.)

~Rude: Reserved for Erayu. {FF7, Before Crisis & Advent Children.}

~Squall Leonhart: Played by Freemixer25{Final Fantasy VIII.}

~Laguna Loire: Available. {Final Fantasy VIII.}

~Rinoa Heartilly: Played by Hydrokinesis.{Final Fantasy VIII.}

~Zidane Tribal: Played by Vampiric-Rage.{Final Fantasy IX.}

~Garnet Til Alexandros XVI: Available.{Final Fantasy IX.}

~Tidus: Played by Me.{Final Fantasy X.}

~Yuna (Summoner): Available. {Final Fantasy X.}

~Rikku: Played by LightningxAlchemist. {Final Fantasy X.}

~Auron: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy X.}

~Jecht: Available. {Final Fantasy X.}

~Shantotto: Played by Katana_Wing. {Final Fantasy XI.}

~Prishe: Available. {Final Fantasy XI.}

~Vaan: Available. {Final Fantasy XII.}

~Balthier Mied Bunansa: Played by Erayu. {Final Fantasy XII.}

~Ashellia B'nargin Dalmasca: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy XII.}

~Claire "Lightning" Farron: Played by LightningxAlchemist. {Final Fantasy XIII.}

~Snow Villiers: Reserved for Erayu. {Final Fantasy XIII.}

~Ramza Beoulve: Played by Vampiric-Rage. {Final Fantasy Tactics.}

~Layle: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: The Crystal Bearers.}

~Crono: Played by Me. {Chrono Trigger.}

~Magus: Played by LightningxAlchemist. {Chrono Trigger.}

~Benjamin: Played by Me. {Final Fantasy: Mystic Quest.}

~Sora: Played by LightningxAlchemist. {Kingdom Hearts & Kingdom Hearts 2.}

~Aqua: Played by Firewind. {Kingdom Hearts: Birth by Sleep.}


If any characters are missing from this list please let me know, also if you would like to suggest characters to add to the list then feel free to give your opinions on who you think should be in this roleplay. As I said before, there will be different threads for each faction. So, this thread should only deal with the Warriors of Cosmos. The other character threads will come soon, so have patience.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/W-ApNcqTSgk/viewtopic.php

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Barracuda babies: Novel study sheds light on early life of prolific predator

Friday, December 16, 2011

For anglers and boaters who regularly travel the coasts of Florida the great barracuda (Sphyraena barracuda) is a common sight. Surprisingly, however, very little is known about the early life stage of this ecologically and socio-economically important coastal fish.

In the journal Marine Biology, lead author Dr. Evan D'Alessandro and University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science colleagues Drs. Su Sponaugle, Joel Llopiz and Robert Cowen shed light on the larval stage of this ocean predator, as well as several other closely related species.

"Due in large part to the expense and difficulty of collecting fish larvae from the open ocean, the larval ecology of barracuda were a mystery until now," said D'Alessandro. "A research study led by Dr. Robert Cowen, which sampled the Straits of Florida regularly for two years, provided a unique opportunity to catch a glimpse of the larval life of many fishes."

The study samples included great barracuda (92.8%) and their relatives Sphyraena borealis and Sphyraena picudilla (6.6%), commonly known as sennets.

In their larval stage, which generally lasts several weeks, barracuda and sennets remain in the upper 25 m of the ocean and live on a similar diet. They start out consuming copepods, or small crustaceans, but make an early switch to a diet of fish larvae, much like several larval billfishes and tunas.

"Barracuda are an important element in the marine food chain; they are voracious predators of other fishes as juveniles and adults on reefs and other nearshore habitats. Now we know this holds true for their larval stage before they reach an inch in length, as well," said D'Alessandro. "This novel study unlocks important aspects of the barracuda's life cycle. It also identifies an important size advantage within the larval stage (bigger larvae are more likely to survive) and provides insight that resource managers can use to better manage this species."

###

University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science: http://www.rsmas.miami.edu

Thanks to University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science 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/116109/Barracuda_babies__Novel_study_sheds_light_on_early_life_of_prolific_predator

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Remembering Christopher Hitchens (The Week)

New York ? The vaunted intellectual and contrarian charmer has died at the age of 62 after battling esophageal cancer

On Thursday, prolific polemicist Christopher Hitchens died from complications of esophageal cancer. He was 62. A Vanity Fair contributing editor, Slate columnist, and regular essayist for The Atlantic, Hitchens was the author of numerous books, including the 2007 bestseller God Is Not Great. He was known for his sharp wit, avowed atheism, love of the drink, and contrarian stance on subjects ranging from Mother Theresa (against) to the Iraq war (for). Today, colleagues, friends, fellow writers, and world leaders are remembering the late great. Here, a sampling:

His editors
"He was a man of insatiable appetites ? for cigarettes, for scotch, for company, for great writing, and, above all, for conversation," says Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter. "That he had an output to equal what he took in was the miracle in the man. You'd be hard-pressed to find a writer who could match the volume of exquisitely crafted columns, essays, articles, and books he produced over the past four decades."

SEE ALSO: The 'most expensive car crash in history': By the numbers

?

"Editing Christopher Hitchens... was the easiest job in journalism," says June Thomas at Slate. "He had a prodigious memory... Shortly after the news of Sen. Larry Craig's arrest in an airport men's room broke, Hitchens filed the piece that for me best exemplifies the breadth of his interests and the completeness of his recall ? it contained quotes from an obscure academic work, recollections of hilariously profane bathroom graffiti, remembered conversations with British politicians, and lines of satirical verse published decades earlier."

"Like his hero, Orwell, Christopher prized bravery above all other qualities ? and in particular the bravery required for unflinching honesty," says Benjamin Schwarz at The Atlantic. "This most intellectual of men valued intelligence, but valued courage far more ? or rather, he believed that true intellect was inseparable from courage."

SEE ALSO: The Korean apartments that look like exploding Twin Towers

?

His friends and contemporaries
"Lunch ? dinner, drinks, any occasion ? with Christopher always was [bracing]," says Christopher Buckley in The New Yorker. "One of our lunches, at Caf? Milano, the Rick's Caf? of Washington, began at 1 P.M., and ended at 11:30 P.M. At about nine o?clock (though my memory is somewhat hazy), he said, 'Should we order more food?' I somehow crawled home, where I remained under medical supervision for several weeks, packed in ice with a morphine drip. Christopher probably went home that night and wrote a biography of Orwell. His stamina was as epic as his erudition and wit."

"Goodbye, my beloved friend," says novelist Salman Rushdie via Twitter. "A great voice falls silent. A great heart stops."

SEE ALSO: Should the U.S. use foreign aid to promote gay rights?

?

He was the "finest orator of our time" and a "valiant fighter against all tyrants including God," says writer Richard Dawkins, a vocal atheist like Hitchens.

The press
"I knew Hitchens only by reading him. To read him was to be deeply impressed ? envious, if you were a writer yourself ? and at some point to have been deeply pissed off by him," says James Poniewozik at TIME. "Hitchens knew when to care greatly about the larger world, and when, therefore, not to give a rat's ass what the larger world thought of him. It's one thing for a writer to be principled, and it's one thing for a writer to be a jerk; it?s a rare thing to be a principled jerk, and that's what Hitchens was."

SEE ALSO: Queen Elizabeth's royal pay cut: By the numbers

?

"Religion, he wrote is 'violent, irrational, intolerant, allied to racism, tribalism, and bigotry, invested in ignorance and hostile to free inquiry, contemptuous of women and coercive towards children,'" says Roy Greenslade at The Guardian. "Thinking back to the 1970s, I can hear him saying that, with many adjectives and expletives thrown in for good measure. And that's how I wish to remember him."

"The world has lost one of its most outstanding and prolific journalists and a wonderful polemicist, orator and bon vivant," says George Eaton at New Statesman. "In his later years, Hitchens was fond of quoting his late mother's assertion that 'the one unforgivable sin is to be boring'. Today, as I realise I will never hear that resonant baritone again, that Hitchens' mighty pen is still, I feel certain in saying that the world has become a more boring place."

Politicians
"Christopher Hitchens was a complete one-off, an amazing mixture of writer, journalist, polemicist, and unique character," said former British Prime Minister Tony Blair. "He was fearless in the pursuit of truth and any cause in which he believed. And there was no belief he held that he did not advocate with passion, commitment and brilliance."

"Christopher Hitchens was everything a great essayist should be: infuriating, brilliant, highly provocative and yet intensely serious," says Britain's Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, who interned for Hitchens years ago and was charged with fact-checking his articles. "He had a photographic memory and an encyclopedic mind," he recalls. "It was the easiest job I've ever done."

View this article on TheWeek.com
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    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/oped/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/theweek/20111216/cm_theweek/222594

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    D.C. Appeals Court Upholds Police Assault Conviction, Despite ...

    Terrance Crossland was mowing the lawn and smoking a cigarette when he and his cousin were stopped by police in northeast Washington in April. Police later acknowledged that neither man was doing anything unlawful, but because they were investigating a string of recent crimes, police nevertheless asked them to put their hands on a fence for a weapons pat-down.

    Crossland protested and the encounter escalated quickly, and Crossland was later charged with assaulting a police officer. In a District of Columbia Court of Appeals opinion (PDF) published today, the court upheld Crossland's conviction, but had strong words for the police officers involved.

    Senior Judge Frank Schwelb wrote that he agreed with Crossland?s attorney that the police were being "rewarded" for what Schwelb characterized as the officers? ?patently unconstitutional conduct.? Schwelb wrote that he was bound to uphold the conviction because case law doesn?t permit individuals to use violence against police ? even in resisting unlawful conduct ? but he instructed the U.S. attorney?s office to tell the police that what they did was wrong.

    ?If anything good is to come from this unfortunate street encounter between the police and a citizen, it should be an end to the unconstitutional police conduct revealed beyond peradventure by this record,? Schwelb wrote. ?If this hope is naive and unrealistic, then to that extent we are less the land of the free than we would otherwise be.?

    Crossland?s attorney, Rockville, Md.-based solo practitioner Regina Michaels, did not immediately return a request for comment. The U.S. attorney?s office declined to comment and the Metropolitan Police Department was not immediately available.

    Crossland appealed his conviction on two grounds. First, he claimed that prosecutors failed to prove that he hit the officers first; according to the opinion, Crossland called witnesses at trial who described seeing one officer hit Crossland without provocation. Second, Crossland said the trial judge made a mistake in denying his motion for a judgment of acquittal. He had moved for acquittal as a sanction against the officers? violation of his Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and seizure.

    During the bench trial, Superior Court Judge Florence Pan credited the officer?s testimony that Crossland hit first. The appellate judges wrote that in the absence of any evidence that Pan made a mistake in crediting the officer?s testimony, they were bound to uphold the conviction.

    Responding to Crossland?s argument that Pan made a mistake in denying the motion for judgment of acquittal, the appellate judges wrote that unless the police then tried to use any evidence they seized from the unlawful search against him, he didn?t have grounds for acquittal.

    Furthermore, the judges wrote, the law didn?t give him leeway to use force in resisting the officers? behavior, even if it was unconstitutional.

    Associate Judge John Fisher and Phyllis Thompson also heard the case.

    Source: http://legaltimes.typepad.com/blt/2011/12/dc-appeals-court-upholds-police-assault-conviction-despite-unconstitutional-actions.html

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    Saturday, December 17, 2011

    Roku for iPhone now available

    Roku users rejoice! An app to control your Roku streaming player has been released. With it, you can launch or rate any channel, browse the Roku Channel Store, and control multiple Roku players.
    Turn your iOS device into a control center for your Roku streaming player. Launch channels,
    ...


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/qxn--rQJPMg/story01.htm

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    Friday, December 16, 2011

    Pocketbook Rules (Prospect)

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    Facebook, Greenpeace in truce over data centers (AP)

    NEW YORK ? Facebook and Greenpeace have called a truce over a clean energy feud that had the environmental group using the social network's own platform to campaign against it.

    Greenpeace and Facebook said Thursday that they will work together to encourage the use of renewable energy instead of coal. Last year, Facebook opened a data center in Prineville, Ore., using the area's cool nights and dry air to save energy while keeping its systems from overheating. It also received generous tax breaks for adding jobs to the economically struggling region.

    But Greenpeace wasn't happy that Facebook picked a power company that generates most of its electricity from coal to power the data center. It started a campaign to get the social network operator to use renewable energy. It attracted some 700,000 supporters on Facebook. Greenpeace said it was ending the campaign and declared victory on its "Unfriend Coal" Facebook page, which was still up Thursday morning.

    The page has more than 180,000 followers.

    Facebook says it will work with the group to promote clean, renewable energy and encourage other technology companies to do the same. The company said it will now state a "preference for access to clean and renewable energy" when choosing where to build its data centers. But it stopped short of saying it will only build on such sites.

    Clean energy has also been big issue for Facebook's Silicon Valley Google Inc. The online search leader has been trying to prove that its business model is environmentally friendly and recently revealed exactly how much electricity it uses (2.3 kilowatt-hours of electricity last year, about the same as what 207,000 U.S. homes would use in a year). It has also invested nearly $1 billion in renewable energy projects such as wind farms and solar projects.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_facebook_greenpeace

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    Video: What to wear to your holiday party

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29054368/vp/45655094#45655094

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