Saturday, December 31, 2011

Economic collapse is public's big worry

By Allison Linn

Natural disasters, terrorist attacks, global disease ? if you?re so inclined, there?s no shortage of major issues to fret about these days.

Still, a new poll finds that the catastrophic event Americans are most likely to be worried about is economic collapse.

The pollsters asked Americans to choose the top three catastrophic events that worry them the most. The top choice was ?economic collapse,? with 63 percent choosing that option.

Natural disaster was second, at 46 percent, and terrorist attack ranked third at 44 percent.

Market research firm Leiflin Inc. asked the question on behalf of the EcoHealth Alliance, a conservation group that also works on global disease issues. One-third of the people surveyed said a global disease outbreak was one of their top three worries.

The poll of about 1,000 Americans, conducted this fall, had a margin of error of 3 percent.

The pollsters did not specify whether they were referring to global or national economic collapse. Still, after four years of very difficult economic times, it?s no surprise economic worries are top of mind for many Americans.

Related:

Your grocery bill is getting higher, and higher

It?s the economy, not the debt, stupid

What are you most worried about?

Source: http://lifeinc.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9772280-what-worries-us-most-economic-collapse

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Notable deaths in 2011: bin Laden, Steve Jobs, Liz Taylor, Moammar Gadhafi

ATLANTA ? They lived by the sword, both inspiring fear and acts of bloodshed around the world. And in the end, they both suffered violent deaths befitting their fearsome reputations. Perhaps no two deaths in 2011 transfixed the world more than those of terrorist leader Osama bin Laden and Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi.

Bin Laden became the most wanted man in the world after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that killed almost 3,000 people. Nearly a decade later, he was shot dead by U.S. commandos in May after being tracked to his hideout in Pakistan. His body was buried at sea. For Gadhafi, the end came after he was captured by rebels, his final moments shown in gruesome, shaky handheld video that was seen across the globe.

If relief and even celebration greeted their demise, the deaths of other notables in 2011 brought reflection on lives of achievement.

The world of science and innovation lost Steve Jobs, the Apple founder who invented and marketed sleek gadgets that transformed everyday technology from the personal computer to the iPod, iPhone and iPad.

Science also said goodbye this year to Christian J. Lambertson, Norman Ramsey, William Nunn Lipscomb, Jr., Boris Chertok and Ralph Steinman.

Political figures who died in 2011 included R. Sargent Shriver, Warren M. Christopher, Jiri Dienstbier, Sultan bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, Geraldine Ferraro, Max van der Stoel, Necmattin Erbakan, Ratu Josefa Iloilo, Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, Leonidas Kyrkos, Hugh Carey, Garret FitzGerald and Betty Ford.

In entertainment, the world lost Elizabeth Taylor, a woman whose sultry screen persona, stormy personal life and enduring fame made her one of the last of the classic movie stars. The year also saw the passing of soul singer Amy Winehouse, whose death at age 27 left many wondering what works of musical brilliance the world might have seen from the troubled, young star.

Others in the arts and entertainment field who died include: Peter Falk, Jane Russell, Clarence Clemons, Pinetop Perkins, Annie Girardot, Harry Morgan, Ferlin Husky, Susannah York, Randy ?Macho Man? Savage, David Nelson, Sidney Lumet, Richard Hamilton, Bil Keane, Poly Styrene, M.F. Husain, Heavy D, Jackie Cooper, Robert Tear and Betty Garrett.

Here is a roll call of some of the people who died in 2010. (Cause of death cited for younger people if available.)

JANUARY

Maj. Richard ?Dick? Winters, 92. The man who fought in several major battles in World War II and whose quiet leadership was chronicled in the book and television miniseries ?Band of Brothers.? Jan. 2.

Malangatana Ngwenya, 74. A Mozambican painter, poet and politician who became one of Africa?s most famous artists for his work drawing on the country?s rocky history. Jan. 5.

Vang Pao, 81. A revered former general in the Royal Army of Laos, who led thousands of Hmong guerrillas in a CIA-backed secret army in the Vietnam war. Jan. 6.

Jiri Dienstbier, 73. A reporter turned dissident who joined Vaclav Havel to help topple one of Eastern Europe?s most repressive regimes, then served under Havel in Czechoslovakia?s first post-communist government. Jan. 8.

Peter Yates, 81. A British film maker who sent actor Steve McQueen screeching through the streets of San Francisco in a Ford Mustang in ?Bullitt.? Jan. 9.

Margaret Whiting, 86. A sweet-voiced performer known for sentimental ballads who sold millions of records in the 1940s and 1950s. Jan. 10.

David Nelson, 74. He starred on his parents? popular American television show ?The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet.? Jan. 11. Colon cancer.

Mississippi Winn, 113. A former domestic worker believed to be the oldest living African-American in the U.S. and the seventh oldest person in the world. Jan. 14.

Susannah York, 72. One of the leading stars of British and Hollywood films in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Jan. 15. Cancer.

Don Kirshner, 76. A rock promoter who helped launch performers such as Prince, the Eagles, Lionel Ritchie and Ozzy Osbourne. Jan. 17.

R. Sargent Shriver, 95. First Peace Corps director, ambassador and leader of the War on Poverty in the U.S. but best known as a Kennedy in-law. Jan. 18.

Ed Mauser, 94. The oldest living member of a 101st Airborne Division company that became known as the ?Band of Brothers? and fought some of the fiercest battles of World War II but kept his Army service secret even from his family. Jan. 21. Pancreatic cancer.

Jack LaLanne, 96. The fitness guru who inspired U.S. television viewers to trim down, eat well and pump iron for decades before diet and exercise became an American obsession. Jan. 23. Respiratory failure due to pneumonia.

Samuel Ruiz, 86. A retired Roman Catholic bishop and staunch defender of Indian rights who served as a mediator in talks between the Mexican government and leftist Zapatista rebels. Jan. 24.

Nora Sun, 72. A former U.S. trade counsel and granddaughter of the founder of Asia?s first republic in China, Sun Yat-sen. Jan. 26. Injuries suffered in a car accident.

FEBRUARY

Maria Schneider, 58. A French actress who was Marlon Brando?s young co-star in Bernardo Bertolucci?s steamy ?Last Tango in Paris.? Feb. 3.

J. Paul Getty, 54. The troubled grandson of one of the world?s richest men who lost an ear in a grisly kidnapping in Italy. Feb. 3.

Maria Altman, 94. A refugee from Nazi-occupied Austria whose successfully fought to recover Gustav Klimt paintings looted from her Jewish family. Feb. 7.

Ratu Josefa Iloilo, 91. A Fijian tribal chief who as president made crucial decisions backing the military takeover of the South Pacific country. Feb. 7.

Christian J. Lambertson, 93. A scientist and doctor who invented a self-contained underwater breathing apparatus used by the military in World War II and later coined the term ?scuba,? an acronym by which such systems are widely known. Feb. 11.

Betty Garrett, 91. The vivacious Broadway star who played singer Frank Sinatra?s sweetheart in two MGM musicals before her career was hampered by Hollywood?s blacklist in the 1950s. Feb. 12.

George Shearing, 91. A Britsh-born jazz pianist who wrote the standard ?Lullaby of Birdland? and headed a famed quintet. Feb. 14.

Suze Rotolo, 67. Artist and girlfriend of singer Bob Dylan, who was his lyrical muse when he came to prominence in the early 1960s. Feb. 25.

Judith Coplon, 81. Convicted of being a Soviet spy after she was caught with secret U.S. documents at a meeting with a Russian agent in 1949 but later acquitted. Feb. 26.

Necmattin Erbakan, 85. A longtime leader of Turkey?s Islamic political movement and briefly the country?s prime minister in the first Islamic-led coalition in the country?s modern history. Feb. 27.

Duke Snider, 84. Baseball Hall of Famer for the ?Boys of Summer? who helped the Dodgers bring their only World Series crown to Brooklyn. Feb. 27.

Frank Buckles, 110. The last surviving American veteran of World War I who also survived being a civilian prisoner of war in the Philippines in World War II. Feb. 27.

Jane Russell, 89. The voluptuous actress who starred in the controversial film ?The Outlaw? and who, as a pin-up girl, set GIs? hearts to pounding during World War II. Feb. 28.

Annie Girardot, 79. The perky, gravelly voiced actress who became one of France?s most enduring and modern stars. Feb. 28.

MARCH

Mikhail Simonov, 81. An aircraft designer whose heavily armed and far-flying Sukhoi fighter jet became the star of the Soviet defense industry and a cash cow for post-communist Russia. March 4.

Alberto Granado, 88. He accompanied Ernesto ?Che? Guevara on a journey of discovery across Latin America that was immortalized in Guevara?s memoir and on the screen in ?The Motorcycle Diaries.? March 5.

Owsley ?Bear? Stanley, 76. A 1960s counterculture figure who worked with the Grateful Dead and was a prolific LSD producer. March 12. Injuries suffered in a car crash.

Joe Morello, 82. A legendary American jazz drummer whose virtuosity and odd time signatures made him an integral part of the Dave Brubeck Quartet on such recordings as ?Take Five.? March 12.

Carel Boshoff, 83. Founder of an all-white separatist community who sought to preserve the culture of Afrikaners as South Africa moved from a white-ruled apartheid government to a democracy. March 16.

Michael Gough, 94. The British actor best known for playing Bruce Wayne?s butler in a series of Batman movies. March 17.

Ferlin Husky, 85. A pioneering American country music entertainer in the 1950s and early `60s known for hits like ?Wings of the Dove.? March 17.

Farley Granger, 85. The 1950s American teen screen idol who starred in Alfred Hitchcock classics such as ?Rope? and ?Strangers on a Train.? March 20.

Pinetop Perkins, 97. Grammy-winning bluesman, who for years played the rickety bars of the Mississippi Delta and performed with musicians such as Ike Turner, Sonny Boy Williamson and slide guitarist Robert Nighthawk. March 21.

Mayhew ?Bo? Foster, 99. A World War II U.S. Army pilot who transported Nazi official Hermann Goering for interrogation in an unarmed, unescorted plane. March 21.

Elizabeth Taylor, 79. The violet-eyed American film goddess whose sultry screen persona, stormy personal life and enduring fame and glamour made her one of the last of the classic movie stars and a template for the modern celebrity. March 23.

Warren M. Christopher, 85. The attorney-turned-envoy who tirelessly traveled to Bosnia and the Middle East on peace missions as U.S. secretary of state in the Clinton administration. March 25. Complications from bladder and kidney cancer.

Olga Ulyanova, 89. A chemist and niece of Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin who wrote books praising her uncle and family. March 25.

Geraldine Ferraro, 75. A relatively obscure Democratic congresswoman who became the first woman on a major U.S. party ticket when she ran for vice president in 1984 and emboldened American women to seek office. March 26. Complications from blood cancer.

Harry Wesley Coover Jr., 94. Known as the inventor of the popular adhesive Super Glue. March 26.

Jose Alencar, 75. A former vice president and millionaire textile magnate who shared eight years of government with Brazil?s first working-class President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. March 29.

Robert Tear, 72. A versatile Welsh tenor who appeared in opera houses around the world and made more than 250 recordings. March 29.

APRIL

Ange Felix Patasse, 74. He led the desperately poor Central African Republic for a decade before being ousted in a coup in 2003. April 5.

Dr. Baruch S. Blumberg, 85. He shared the Nobel Prize in medicine for his discovery of the hepatitis vaccine. April 5.

Sidney Lumet, 86. The award-winning director of such American film classics as ?Network,? ?Serpico,? ?Dog Day Afternoon? and ?12 Angry Men.? April 9.

William Nunn Lipscomb, Jr. 91. A Harvard professor who won the Nobel chemistry prize in 1976 for research on the structure of molecules and chemical bonding and mentored several future Nobel laureates. April 14. Pneumonia and complications from a fall.

Juan Pedro Domecq Solis, 69. One of Spain?s foremost breeders of fighting bulls and a descendant from a famous sherry producing family. April 18. Vehicle collision.

Pietro Ferrero, 47. Chief executive of the Ferrero Group holding company that produces Nutella, Tic-Tac mints and other confections and a scion of one of Italy?s richest families. April 18. Fall from a bicycle.

Grete Waitz, 57. The Norwegian runner who won nine New York marathons and the silver medal at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. April 19. Cancer.

Tim Hetherington, 49. A British-born, Oscar-nominated film director and photojournalist. April 20. Killed while covering fighting between rebels and government forces in Libya.

Hubert ?Hub? Schlafly, 91. A key member of a team that invented the teleprompter and rescued soap opera actors, newscasters and politicians from stumbling over their words on live television. April 20.

Jess Jackson, 81. The founder of the Kendall-Jackson winery and owner of two most widely recognized thoroughbreds in recent years. April 21.

Norio Ohga, 81. As chairman he transformed the Japanese electronics maker Sony into a global software and entertainment empire. April 23.

Max van der Stoel, 86. A former Dutch foreign minister and a U.N. human rights representative who became a thorn in the side of the late Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. April 23.

Sathya Sai Baba, 84. A Hindu guru revered by millions worldwide. April 24.

Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, 86. The outspoken beauty who served as South Vietnam?s unofficial first lady early in the Vietnam war and earned the nickname ?Dragon Lady? for her harsh criticism of protesting Buddhists and communist sympathizers. April 25.

Poly Styrene, 53. The braces-wearing British singer who belted out the punk anthem ?Oh Bondage, Up Yours? with the band X-Ray Spex. April 25.

Orlando Bosch, 84. A Cuban exile militant who was acquitted in Venezuela in the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner. April 27.

Ernesto Sabato, 99. An Argentine writer who led the government?s probe of crimes committed by the military dictatorship. April 30.

MAY

Henry Cooper, 76. One of Britain?s most popular sportsmen who was best known for knocking down Muhammad Ali when he was still known as Cassius Clay. May 1.

Osama bin Laden, 54. Terrorist leader whose money and preaching inspired the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, which killed nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania. May 2. Killed during a raid by U.S. Navy SEALs in Pakistan.

Rene Emilio Ponce, 64. A Salvadoran army general and former defense minister accused of ordering the 1989 killing of six Jesuit priests and two others during the country?s civil war. May 2.

Jackie Cooper, 88. One of the most popular child movie stars of the 1930s who later had a successful career as a television director and still appeared in films. May 3.

Arthur Laurents, 93. The director, playwright and screenwriter who wrote such enduring productions as ?West Side Story? and ?`Gypsy? as well as the film classics ?Rope? and ?The Way We Were.? May 5.

Claude Stanley Coules, 110. The last known combat veteran of World War I who had a 41-year-military career that extended into World War II. May 5.

Seve Ballesteros, 54. A five-time major champion whose incomparable imagination and fiery personality made him one of the most significant figures in modern golf. May 7. Complications of a cancerous brain tumor.

Robert Stempel, 77. A former General Motors chief executive and engineer who led the development of the catalytic converter but was ousted in a boardroom coup. May 7.

Lidia Gueiler, 89. The only woman ever to have been Bolivia?s president. May 9.

Burt Reinhardt, 91. One of CNN?s first presidents and an American television pioneer who is credited with helping to build the global news network in its formative years. May 10.

Wallace McCain, 81. A billionaire frozen food mogul and philanthropist who helped turn a small Canadian french fry plant into the global McCain Foods empire and later went on to control meat processor Maple Leaf Foods. May 13.

Michael William Coplestone Dillon Onslow, 73. The 7th earl of Onslow and a cheerful advocate of removing nobles such as himself from the House of Lords. May 14.

Harmon Killebrew, 74. The baseball slugger for the Minnesota Twins and for many years the face of the team. May 17. Esophageal cancer.

Garret FitzGerald, 85. A beloved figure who as Ireland?s prime minister in the 1980s was an early architect of peace in Northern Ireland. May 19.

Randy ?Macho Man? Savage, 58. A larger-than-life personality from professional wrestling?s 1980s heyday known for his raspy voice and brash style. May 20. Car crash.

Bill Hunter, 71. The archetype of a working class Australian with a distinctive accent, weather-worn face and a no-nonsense style who starred in films and on television. May 21. Cancer.

Leonora Carrington, 94. A British-born painter, writer and sculptor considered one of the last of the original surrealists. May 25.

Gil Scott-Heron, 62. Widely considered one of the godfathers of rap music with his piercing social and political prose laid against the backdrop of minimalist percussion, flute and other instrumentation. May 27.

Sergei Bagapsh, 62. Leader of Abkhazia, a separatist region of Georgia aligned with Russia. May 29. Lung cancer.

JUNE

Albertina Sisulu, 92. A veteran of the anti-apartheid movement who was married to Nelson Mandela?s mentor. June 2.

Sammy Ofer, 89. A billionaire Israeli shipping magnate and philanthropist at the center of a scandal involving trade with Iran. June 2.

Jack Kevorkian, 83. Defiant proponent of doctor-assisted suicide who said he oversaw the deaths of 130 gravely ill people. June 3.

James Arness, 88. An actor who towered over the American television landscape for two decades as righteous Dodge City lawman Matt Dillon in ?Gunsmoke.? June 3.

Harry Bernstein, 101. Wrote acclaimed memoir of an English childhood haunted by anti-Semitism ?The Invisible Wall,? published when he was 96. June 3.

Lawrence Eagleburger, 80. The only career U.S. foreign service officer to rise to secretary of state and whose exuberant style masked a hard-driving commitment to solving tangled foreign policy problems. June 4.

Jorge Semprun, 87. A writer and politician who chronicled his own experience in the Nazis? Buchenwald death camp, struggled against dictatorship in his native Spain and later became that country?s culture minister. June 7.

M.F. Husain, 95, a former movie billboard artist who rose to become India?s most sought after painter before going into self-imposed exile during an uproar over nude images of Hindu icons. June 9.

Brian Lenihan 52. A former finance minister who oversaw Ireland?s struggle to avoid national bankruptcy even as he battled cancer. June 10.

Sir Patrick Michael Leigh Fermor, 96. A British travel writer who tramped across Europe in his teens and captured a German general in Nazi-occupied Crete during World War II. June 10.

Clarence Clemons, 69. The saxophone player for the E Street Band who was one of the key influences in Bruce Springsteen?s life and music. June 18. Complications from a stroke.

Frederick Chiluba, 68. Zambia?s first democratically elected president who became increasingly autocratic during his decade in office. June 18.

Yelena Bonner, 88. A Russian rights activist and widow of Nobel Peace Prize winner Andrei Sakharov. June 18.

Peter Falk, 83. The American stage and screen actor who became identified as the rumpled detective title character on ?Colombo,? which spanned 30 years in primetime U.S. television. June 23.

Christiane Desroches Noblecourt, 97. A pioneering Egyptologist who prodded Gen. Gamal Abdel Nasser to help salvage Nubia?s vaunted antiquities. June 23.

JULY

Itamar Franco, 81. A former Brazilian president who in the 1980s tamed inflation in Latin America?s largest country. July 2.

Otto Von Habsburg, 98. The oldest son of Austria?s last emperor and head of one of Europe?s most influential families. July 4.

Manuel Galban, 80. An award-winning Cuban guitarist who rose to international fame as a member of the Buena Vista Social Club musical collective. July 7.

Betty Ford, 93. The former U.S. first lady whose triumph over drug and alcohol addiction became a beacon of hope for addicts and the inspiration for her Betty Ford Center in California. July 8.

Facundo Cabral, 74. One of Latin America?s most admired folk singers who was also a novelist. July 9. Killed in Guatemala City when gunmen ambushed his vehicle.

Leo Kirch, 84. A German media mogul whose television empire collapsed in a spectacular bankruptcy nearly a decade ago. July 14.

Juan Maria Bordaberry, 83. Former president-turned dictator whose coup launched more than a decade of military rule in Uruguay. July 17.

Lucien Freud, 88. A towering and uncompromising figure in the art world for more than 50 years known for his intense realist portraits, particularly of nudes. July 20.

Elliot Handler, 95. With his wife, he grew Mattel Inc. from a small home-based picture-frame business into the largest U.S. toy maker and created the Hot Wheels brand. July 21.

Charles T. Manatt, 75. A former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and former U.S. ambassador to the Dominican Republic during the Clinton administration. July 22.

Nguyen Cao Ky, 80. The flamboyant former air force general who ruled South Vietnam for two years with an iron fist during the Vietnam war. July 23.

Amy Winehouse, 27. A dazzling, versatile singer who produced bitterly honest lyrics but who made headlines because of drug and alcohol abuse, eating disorders and destructive relationships. July 23. Alcohol poisoning.

John Shalikashvili, 75. A retired U.S. Army general who was the first foreign-born chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and counseled President Bill Clinton on the use of troops in Bosnia and other trouble spots. July 24.

John Stott, 90. A minister who led a resurgence of evangelism in Britain and went on to become one of the most influential evangelical thinkers of the 20th century. July 27.

Pietro Sambi, 73. An archbishop and papal ambassador to the United States who helped bring about a meeting between Pope Benedict XVI and clerical sex abuse victims. July 27.

AUGUST

Delois Barrett Campbell, 85. A member of the award-winning Barrett Sisters who electrified audiences around the world with their powerful gospel harmonies. Aug. 2.

Baruj Benacerraf, 90. A Venezuelan-born immunologist who shared the 1980 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Aug. 2.

Bubba Smith, 66. Former NFL star and actor best known for playing Moses Hightower, the soft-spoken officer in the ?Police Academy? films. Aug. 3

Jean-Claude Bajeux, 79. A former culture minister, scholar and steadfast human rights activist who targeted both Haiti?s long-ruling family dictatorship and the governments that followed. Aug. 5.

Andrzej Lepper, 57. A pig farmer-turned-firebrand populist who was briefly deputy prime minister in a shaky Polish government and who was later disgraced in a bribery and sex scandal. Aug. 5. Suspected suicide.

Hugh Carey, 92. A former New York governor who saved New York City from bankruptcy in the 1970s, staring down President Gerald Ford in the process. Aug. 7.

Marshall Grant, 83. The last surviving member of Johnny Cash and the Tennessee Two who helped change the future of American music and popular culture with their boom-chicka-boom beat. Aug. 7.

Billy Grammer, 85. His 1958 hit ?Gotta Travel On? hit the top of American pop music charts and led to a long career at the Grand Ole Opry. Aug. 10.

Ctirad Masin, 81. A controversial anti-communist fighter in the former nation of Czechoslovakia who eluded a massive East Bloc manhunt during the Cold War. Aug. 13.

Raoul Ruiz, 70. A Chilean-born filmmaker who made more than 100 films and rebelled against the conventions of movie-making. Aug. 19.

Albert ?Doc? Brown, 105. A survivor of the Bataan Death March, a harrowing 65-mile (105 kilometer) trek in which 78,000 prisoners of war were forced to walk from Bataan, a province near Manila, to a Japanese prisoner camp. Aug. 21.

Jack Layton, 61. A folksy and charismatic political leader who guided his leftist New Democrat party to become the dominant opposition group in Canada?s Parliament while battling severe health problems. Aug. 22. Cancer.

Vicco von Buelow, 87. A humorist known as ?Loriot,? often cited by Germans as proof of their sense of humor. Aug. 22.

Frank Dileo, 63. An American music industry executive, who managed Michael Jackson?s career in the 1980s and returned as his manager in the superstar?s final days. Aug. 24.

Leonidas Kyrkos, 86. A veteran leftist politician who once nearly faced a firing squad and eventually became one of Greece?s most respected politicians. Aug. 28.

David ?Honey Boy? Edwards, 96. An award-winning American musician believed to be the oldest surviving Delta bluesman, in Chicago. Aug. 28.

Betty Skelton Erde, 85. An aviation and auto racing pioneer once called the fastest woman on Earth. Aug. 31.

SEPTEMBER

Sandor Kepiro, 97. A former officer in the Hungarian security force who was acquitted of Holocaust-era war crimes. Sept. 3.

Julio Casas Regueiro, 75. An accountant who fought in Cuba?s revolution and became a general, then used his training to run the military?s lucrative enterprises for two decades before becoming defense minister. Sept. 3.

Vann Nath, 66. An artist who was among only seven people to survive Cambodia?s most notorious prison of the 1970s Khmer Rouge regime and who later depicted the facility?s horrific torture. Sept. 5.

Salvatore Licitra, 43. A tenor known in his Italian homeland as the ?new Pavarotti.? Sept. 5. Motorcycle accident.

Cliff Robertson, 88. Actor who portrayed President John F. Kennedy in the film ?PT-109? and won an Oscar for playing a mentally disabled man in ?Charly.? Sept. 10.

John Calley, 81. He ran three Hollywood studios that made such hits as ?The Exorcist? and ?Spider-Man.? Sept. 13.

Richard Hamilton, 89. A British pop artist pioneer who depicted former Prime Minister Tony Blair as a cowboy and designed a Beatles? album cover. Sept. 13.

Charles H. Percy, 91. A Chicago businessman who became a U.S. senator and was once widely viewed as a top presidential contender. Sept. 17.

Robert Whitaker, 71. A photographer who shot some of the most famous ? and infamous ? images of The Beatles. Sept. 20. Cancer.

Aristides Pereira, 87. Fought Portugal?s colonial rule in the Cape Verde islands and became the West African nation?s first president. Sept. 23.

Wangari Maathi, 71. The first African woman recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, who combined environmentalism and social activism. Sept. 25. Cancer.

Phillip Matthew Hannan, 98. The popular former New Orleans Roman Catholic archbishop who sought to console a grieving U.S. with his eulogy for slain President John F. Kennedy. Sept. 29.

Anwar al-Awlaki, 40. An American-born Muslim preacher and savvy Internet operator, who became a powerful al-Qaida tool for recruiting in the West. Sept. 30. Killed in what was believed to be a U.S. airstrike in Yemen.

Ralph Steinman, 68. A pioneering cell biologist who was awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine for his discoveries about the immune system. Sept. 30. Pancreatic cancer.

OCTOBER

Arthur C. Nielsen Jr., 92. He led the company that grew into an international firm that produces the TV ratings known as ?The Nielsens.? Oct. 3.

Steve Jobs, 56. The Apple founder and former chief executive who invented and master-marketed ever sleeker gadgets that transformed everyday technology, from the personal computer to the iPod and iPhone. Oct. 5.

Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth, 89. Civil rights activist who endured arrests, beatings and injuries from fire hoses while fighting for racial equality in the segregated South of the 1960s. Oct. 5.

Bert Jansch, 67. A virtuoso acoustic guitarist who was at the center of the British folk revival of the 1960s and 1970s. Oct. 5.

Robert Galvin, 89. He was Motorola?s chief executive for 29 years and took it from maker of police radios and television sets to one of the world?s leading electronic companies. Oct. 11.

James Van Doren, 72. The co-founder of Vans canvas shoes that were embraced by the skateboard culture and became a sensation in the U.S. when Sean Penn wore a checkerboard pair in the 1982 film ?Fast Times at Ridgemont High.? Oct. 12. Cancer.

Dan Wheldon, 33. Race car driver who moved from his native England to the United States with hopes of winning the Indianapolis 500 race and went on to do so twice. Oct. 16. Wreck at the Las Vegas Indy 300.

Tadeusz Sawicz, 97. A Polish World War II airman believed to be the last surviving Polish pilot from the Battle of Britain. Oct. 19.

Moammar Gadhafi, 69. The last of the old-style Arab strongmen who ruled Libya for nearly 42 years with an eccentric brutality. Oct. 20. Died after being captured by rebels in Libya.

Sultan bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud, 80. Crown prince of Saudi Arabia who as defense minister closed multibillion-dollar deals to establish the modern Saudi armed forces. Oct. 22.

Jimmy Savile, 84. A veteran British broadcaster and famously eccentric culture figure. Oct. 29.

NOVEMBER

Dorothy Rodham, 92. Mother of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and former President Bill Clinton?s mother-in-law. Nov. 1.

Norman Ramsey, 96. Shared the 1989 Nobel Prize in physics for his research into atomic energy levels that led to the creation of the atomic clock and imaging machines. Nov. 4.

Andy Rooney, 92. The curmudgeonly commentator who spent 30 years talking about the oddities of life on American television. Nov. 4.

Alfonso Cano, 63. A bespectacled intellectual who rose from chief ideologist to maximum leader of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, also known as the FARC. Nov. 4. Killed in combat.

Joe Frazier, 67. One of the great heavyweight boxers of his era who was forever associated with three bouts he had with Mohammad Ali, including the ?Thrilla in Manila.? Nov. 7.

Bil Keane, 89. Creator of the comic strip ?Family Circus,? which entertained readers with a mix of humor and traditional family values for more than a half century. Nov. 8.

Heavy D, 44. He became one of rap?s top hit makers in the late 1980s and early 1990s with his charming combination of humor and positivity. Nov. 8. Died after collapsing outside his home.

Francisco Blake Mora, 45. Mexico?s interior minister and point man in the country?s deadly war against organized crime and drug cartels. Nov. 11. Helicopter crash.

Evelyn Lauder, 75. An executive at cosmetics giant Estee Lauder Cos. who helped create the pink ribbon campaign for breast cancer awareness. Nov. 12.

Karl Slover, 93. One of the last surviving actors who played one of the Munchkins in the 1939 classic film ?The Wizard of Oz.? Nov. 15.

Basil D?Oliveira, 80. A South African-born cricket player for England who became a pivotal figure in the sport?s battle against apartheid. Nov. 19.

Anne McCaffrey, 85. Her vision of an interstellar alliance between humans and dragons spawned the science fiction ?Dragonriders of Pern? novels. Nov. 21. Stroke.

Eli Hurvitz, 79. The one-time laboratory dishwasher who transformed Teva Pharmaceutical Industries from a small Israeli medical company into the world?s largest genetic drugmaker. Nov. 21.

Danielle Mitterrand, 87. The widow of France?s first Socialist president, Francois Mitterrand, and who joined the World War II French resistance and later advocated many left-leaning causes and vociferously opposed capitalist excess. Nov. 22.

Svetlana Alliluyeva, 85. Known later in life as Lana Peters, she was Soviet dictator Josef Stalin?s daughter whose defection to the West during the Cold War embarrassed the ruling communists and made her a best-stelling author. Nov. 22.

Tom Wicker, 85. The former New York Times political reporter and columnist whose career soared after his acclaimed coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Nov. 25.

Judy Lewis, 76. Conceived out of wedlock by movie stars Clark Gable and Loretta Young while they filmed ?Call of the Wild? in the 1930s, for years one of the best kept secrets in Hollywood. Nov. 25.

Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu, 78. A millionaire?s son who became leader of the breakaway Republic of Biafra in eastern Nigeria, plunging the country into civil war that killed a million people and brought television images of starving African children. Nov. 26.

Ken Russell, 84. An iconoclastic British director whose daring films blended music, sex and violence in a potent brew seemingly drawn from his subconscious. Nov. 27.

Ante Markovic, 87. The former Yugoslavia?s last prime minister who tried to prevent the country?s bloody breakup in the 1990s. Nov. 27.

DECEMBER

Francois Lesage, 82. The heir of the legendary Maison Lesage embroidery atelier which has been long embellishing Paris? couture houses? most fantastic creations. Dec. 1.

Dev Anand, 88. A charismatic and flamboyant Indian film star for more than half a century. Dec. 3.

Socrates, 57. A former Brazilian soccer star known for his elegant style and deep involvement in politics. Dec. 4. Septic shock from an intestinal infection.

Patricia Dunn, 58. The former Hewlett-Packard chairwoman who authorized a board room surveillance probe that ultimately sullied her remarkable rise from investment bank typist to the corporate upper class. Dec. 4. Ovarian cancer.

Violetta Villas 73. A Polish coloratura soprano who spurned opera for popular music and became a cabaret star in Las Vegas and then got trapped behind the Iron Curtain when she returned to care for her dying mother. Dec. 5.

Harry Morgan, 96. An actor best known for playing the fatherly Col. Sherman Potter on the TV show ?M-A-S-H.? Dec. 7.

Jerry Robinson, 89. A comic book industry pioneer who helped create Batman sidekick Robin the Boy Wonder and their arch-nemesis The Joker. Dec. 7.

Diana Joy Colbert, 41. The wife of author Charles Bock whose battle with leukemia inspired widespread sympathy and support among the New York literary community. Dec. 8.

Cardinal John Foley, 76. For 25 years, he was the voice for American viewers of the Vatican?s Christmas Midnight Mass and he led an ancient Catholic order in the Holy Land. Dec. 11.

Boris Chertok, 99. A Russian rocket designer who played a key role in engineering Soviet-era space programs. Dec. 14.

George Whitman, 98. A pillar of Paris? literary scene, whose eclectic bookshop Shakespeare and Company was a beacon for readers. Dec. 14.

Joe Simon, 98. He co-created Captain America along with Jack Kirby and was one of the comic book industry?s most revered writers, artists and editors. Dec. 14.

Christopher Hitchens, 62. An author, essayist and polemicist who waged verbal and occasional physical battle on behalf of causes left and right. Dec. 15. Complications from esophageal cancer.

Kim Jong Il, 69. North Korea?s mercurial and enigmatic leader whose iron rule and nuclear ambitions dominated world security fears for more than a decade. Dec. 17. Heart attack.

Cesaria Evora, 70. Grammy-winning Cape Verde singer known as the ?Barefoot Diva? because she always performed without shoes. Dec. 17.

Vaclav Havel, 75. Czech dissident playwright who led the 1989 anti-communist ?Velvet Revolution? and went from prisoner to president. Dec. 18.

Eva Ekvall, 28. Former Miss Venezuela whose struggle with breast cancer was closely followed by Venezuelans. Dec. 17. Cancer.

Yoshimitsu Morita, 61. A director whose films depicted the absurdity and vulnerability of everyday life in conformist Japan. Dec. 20. Acute liver failure.

Source: http://dailyherald.com/article/20111228/news/712289952/

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Kansas GOP presidential caucus to have full slate

Kansas Republican presidential caucus participants should see a full ballot March 10.

The deadline for candidates to qualify by paying the $10,000 filing fee is 5 p.m. Saturday.

Kansas Republican Party executive director Clayton Barker said filing documents for former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich arrived around the middle of December, and representatives for three other candidates have said their papers will be sent by special delivery and should arrive this Thursday or Friday in Kansas.

The trio expected to beat the deadline are Rep. Michele Bachmann, Minnesota; former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman; and former Sen. Rick Santorum, Pennsylvania.

Barker noted that although campaign staffs are preparing the paperwork, the documents require the candidates? signatures, and they?re busy on the campaign trail, so the logistics are taking time.

Besides Gingrich, other Republicans already guaranteed a spot on the Kansas caucus ballot are Rep. Ron Paul, Texas; Gov. Rick Perry of Texas; and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Georgia businessman Herman Cain has requested his name be removed from the Kansas ballot, Barker said. No decision has been made.

Recently, Gingrich and Perry were told they failed to secure the petition signatures needed to qualify for the Virginia Republican presidential primary. Barker said Kansas Republicans had considered a petition requirement, but decided, based on input, to establish a $10,000 fee.

That simplifies the process, Barker said, and the $10,000 fee is high enough that it discourages non-serious candidates.

Kansas voters must be registered as Republican on or before Feb. 17 in order to vote in the March 10 caucus.

The presidential primary season opens Tuesday with the Iowa caucus.

Source: http://www.kansas.com/2011/12/28/2154860/kansas-gop-presidential-caucus.html

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

OneRepublic - Good Life (Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade 2011) 720p HDTV TrollHD


OneRepublic - Good Life (Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade 2011) 720p HDTV TrollHD

Format : MPEG-TS at 13.6 Mbps
Length : 307 MiB for 3mn 9s 776ms

Video #0 : MPEG Video at 12.5 Mbps
Aspect : 1280 x 720 (1.778) at 59.940 fps

Audio #0 : AC-3 at 384 Kbps
Infos : 6 channels, 48.0 KHz

Download OneRepublic - Good Life (Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade 2011) 720p HDTV DD5.1 MPEG2-TrollHD:

Code:

http://www.fileserve.com/file/23YgxtC
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/apniCommunity/~3/7dlP3ZRKDIY/632868-onerepublic-good-life-disney-parks-christmas-day-parade-2011-720p-hdtv-trollhd.html

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White Supremacist Radio Host: Ron Paul Was Scheduled and Confirmed in 2006 (Little green footballs)

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Wacky rules complicate race for GOP delegates (The Arizona Republic)

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Berri threatens to question cabinet?s performance if oil bill stalled

Speaker Nabih Berri threatened to question the Lebanese cabinet?s performance if it does not issue relevant decrees to put in action the oil exploration bill, which was approved by parliament in 2010.

?I will call on the parliament to convene and carry out its role in questioning [the cabinet?s performance], even if the parties concerned are my allies and friends,? Berri said in an interview with As-Safir newspaper published on Tuesday.

He added that ?Prime Minister Najib Mikati and Energy Minister Gebran Bassil voiced commitment to issue the decrees [to implement the oil projects].?

?I will not allow this commitment to be broken,? the speaker said.

?Cyprus and Israel began the procedures to launch oil exploration while we keep wasting time? I will no longer bear this issue.?

Lebanese Parliament in August 2010 passed an oil exploration bill, which calls for the establishment of a treasury and a committee to oversee exploration and drilling off Lebanon?s coast.

-NOW Lebanon

Source: http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=346410

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[SB Nation: Baseball Nation] - Some Things You Might Not Know About Andy Sonnanstine

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

Source: http://sportspyder.com/teams/tampa-bay-rays/articles/5492021

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

JewishJournal: Israel?s Mr. Basketball is also Mr. Goodwill http://t.co/rkPpHM1W

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Israel?s Mr. Basketball is also Mr. Goodwill dlvr.it/12FyD9 JewishJournal

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China declara persona non grata a Christian Bale

Publicado: 26 dic. 2011 7:05 AM

MADRID, dic. 26 (UPI) -- El gobierno chino declar? como persona nos grata al actor estadounidense Christian Bale, seg?n inform? el diario espa?ol El Pa?s.

El int?rprete de Batman, intent? visitar en su ?ltima visita a China al candidato al premio Nobel de la Paz en varias ocasiones, Chen Guangcheng, quien combati? fuertemente la pol?tica del hijo ?nico que forzaba a campesinos a realizarse abortos y esterilizaciones.

"No es bienvenido para crear noticias", indic? durante una rueda de prensa el portavoz del Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores, Liu Weimin, quien a?adi? que "ese actor deber?a sentirse avergonzado por lo que hizo" el pasado 15 de diciembre.

De acuerdo con el medio, aquel d?a, acompa?ado de c?maras de CNN, Bale fue hasta la aldea de Donshigu con la intenci?n de "estrechar la mano de Chen y decirle que es una inspiraci?n". Sin embargo, esto le fue impedido por las fuerzas de seguridad que custodian el arresto domiciliario de Guangcheng.

LATAM: Reporte-tgp

Source: http://espanol.upi.com/Entretenimiento/2011/12/26/China-declara-persona-non-grata-a-Christian-Bale/UPI-42901324893900/

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Monday, December 26, 2011

County Executive and County Council President Statement on PSC $1 Million Fine

The following information was sent to us by Neil H. Greenberger:

?

Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett and County Council President Roger Berliner said today that the County supports the $1 million initial fine issued to Pepco by the Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC) and that Montgomery County will continue to advocate on behalf of ratepayers.

County Executive Leggett and Council President Berliner said in a joint statement that the PSC made critical findings that Pepco?s service has been unreliable, that larger fines or penalties would be justifiable and that customers should not bear the cost of the improvements that Pepco needs to make because of its imprudence.

They went on to say the following:

?Montgomery County was instrumental in prompting the Public Service Commission to initiate this investigation into Pepco?s reliability. The Commission appears to have clearly heard the outcry from Montgomery County?s elected officials and customers and ruled in our favor on virtually every key finding.

?This was the first time Montgomery County provided extensive intervention in a case before the Public Service Commission. The PSC?s ruling in this case was clearly influenced by Montgomery County retaining a Special Counsel, establishing a Work Group to prepare recommendations and having County staff testify at a hearing.

?In issuing a $1 million fine, the PSC rejected Pepco?s excuses and stated that a larger fine or other additional penalties may be justifiable. More importantly, the PSC stated that it will not allow Pepco to charge customers for Pepco?s ?imprudence? in future rate setting cases. The Commission also stated that additional penalties may be imposed if Pepco does not improve its reliability.?

Montgomery County?s Work Group submitted a comprehensive report and the PSC adopted most of the Work Group?s recommendations including:

?????????Require Pepco to execute a multi-year plan for inspecting its distribution system.

?????????Create an ombudsman within Pepco to create a more customer-oriented culture and improve its pure communication with customers.

?????????Impose penalties to send a message to Pepco.

?We are grateful for the work of the Maryland People?s Counsel,? County Executive Leggett and Council President Berliner went on to say, ?and we believe the direct input from Montgomery County in this case was critical given the gravity of the situation.

"Our County has been asking the Commission to hold Pepco accountable?financially and in terms of service quality. ?We believe that this order represents a major step in that direction and commend the Commission for doing so.?

?

?The Commission has stated that it would not put the burden of Pepco's reliability expenses solely on the shoulders of ratepayers. ?That was a key request of the County, and we will expect the Commission to honor that pledge in Pepco's recently filed rate case.

?

?On almost every key recommendation made by the County?on finding Pepco imprudent for allowing its system to deteriorate to this state; on holding that Pepco failed to perform vegetation management properly; and in ruling that Pepco's communications with customers was inadequate, the Commission ruled in favor of the County and against Pepco. ?

?While we expect Pepco will continue its efforts to improve service, we are gratified that the Commission has made it clear that further fines will be forthcoming if they fail to do so.??

Source: http://chevychase.wusa9.com/news/news/86541-county-executive-and-county-council-president-statement-psc-1-million-fine

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Analysis: Isolated on tax cut, House GOP blinks

WASHINGTON (AP) -- With tea party-backed first-termers calling the shots, House Republicans snatched political defeat from the jaws of victory in a year-end showdown over Social Security payroll tax cuts and jobless benefits.

This time, they pushed the country to the brink - and wound up blinking.

"In the end House Republicans felt like they were re-enacting the Alamo, with no reinforcements and our friends shooting at us," said veteran Republican Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas.

Precisely.

By spurning a deal that Senate Republicans had embraced, for a two-month extension of tax cuts for 160 million Americans and jobless benefits for millions more, the House wing of the party isolated itself politically and by some calculations improved President Barack Obama's re-election prospects.

Friday brought a humbling surrender, the only realistic alternative despite grumbling from scattered holdouts and Newt Gingrich, courting tea party support in the race for the presidential nomination.

By then, even allies said Republicans had become vulnerable to Obama's accusation that they, alone, were threatening a fragile economic recovery and the well-being of the employed and unemployed alike. "Right now, the bipartisan compromise that was reached on Saturday is the only viable way to prevent a tax hike on Jan. 1," Obama said Tuesday after the House rejected the two-month measure that had sailed through the Senate on a vote of 89-10.

The reliably conservative editorial page of The Wall Street Journal piled on, referring to a circular Republican firing squad. The GOP has "achieved the small miracle of letting Mr. Obama position himself as an election-year tax cutter. ... This should be impossible," it wrote on Wednesday.

One poll said Obama ran ahead of Republicans when it came to handling taxes, an issue that has generally favored the GOP since Ronald Reagan sat in the White House three decades ago.

No less critical were Senate Republicans, fearing the impact on their own political prospects, both individually and as a group eager to gain a majority in the 2012 elections. A gain of four seats would give them control, and several close races are likely. Losses suddenly seemed possible instead. There was in even talk that the hardline stance by House Republicans was putting the GOP's big majority in that chamber in danger.

Most importantly, for the first time all year, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell wasn't in a position to help as House Speaker John Boehner sought to carry out the wishes of his rank and file, the Kentucky senator having voted for the bill that House Republicans insisted was a loser.

At its core, the dispute was a simple one.

Talks between the two parties in the Senate on a full-year extension faltered when negotiators could not agree on the cuts needed to make sure the measure did not increase deficits. The two-month stopgap bill was designed to keep the tax cuts and jobless benefits going until the negotiations could resume again after the first of the year.

To the tea party types, that smacked of government as usual, precisely what they came to Washington to change.

"We're as unified as we've been all year," said Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, on the night before the House Republicans rejected the Senate bill, demanded negotiations on a compromise and drove themselves into a political dead end.

This time, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Democrats had no incentive to negotiate, unlike earlier when brinkmanship pushed the government to the edge of a partial shutdown or an unprecedented default.

They and the White House had already caved to Republican demands that any extension be paid for, and that Obama decide within 60 days whether to allow construction of an oil pipeline from Canada to Texas.

The president had threatened to veto any measure that linked tax cuts and the pipeline, hoping to postpone a decision on the project until after the election. Late last week, he did an about-face and demanded Congress send him a bill that did precisely that.

The reversal gave Republicans the political victory some had sought if they were going to approve an extension of the tax cuts and jobless benefits at the core of Obama's jobless program.

Boehner told House Republicans as much in a conference call on Saturday, according to several officials who listened. They added he recommended no specific course of action and sought the all views.

Some lawmakers suspected Boehner had acquiesced in the two-month extension that McConnell worked out, and he was challenged on it 48 hours later in a closed-door meeting. He bristled at the accusation, according to several participants, and denied it flatly.

There were hints of infighting. Behind closed doors, one Republican lawmaker raised a concern about a memo - inaccurate, he said - from an unidentified staff aide who wrote that Boehner favored a more conciliatory approach than Majority Leader Eric Cantor and other members of the leadership.

"We're here and ready to work," Boehner told reporters on Wednesday morning. He spoke at a made-for-television event with Cantor and the eight Republicans, including three first-termers, appointed to conduct non-existent negotiations with Democrats.

Little more than 24 hours later, the charade ended when Boehner informed his own rank and file, no consultations permitted.

By then, even two newcomers to the House had issued public statements calling for an end to the standoff.

"I don't think that my constituents should have a tax increase because of Washington's dysfunction," said freshman Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., now a voting member of the government he was criticizing.

The struggle over, Reid said he hoped the episode had been "a very good learning experience, especially to those who are newer" to Congress.

"Everything we do around here does not have to wind up in a fight."

---

EDITOR'S NOTE - David Espo covers Congress for The Associated Press.

Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_PAYROLL_TAX_ANALYSIS?SITE=OREUG&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

What to search for in a canada goose Jacket

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Purchasing stylish womens winter parkas calls for somewhat touch of look at but in circumstance you are into your style and design then this in all probability will not be an issue! You are in a placement to hold out your purchasing near to the net or inside the significant path style shops, every undoubtedly are a superb offer of fun. using the loads of types which could be offered, purchasing for womens Canada Goose Jacket outlet really should undoubtedly be pleasing expertise, and shouldn?t be considered a frustrating one. There are jacket which have heated liners and so are waterproofed. There are in actuality winter coat which could be two-piece convertible types that retain wetness out, and preserve warmness in with a thermacore insulation. These womens winter jacket often arrive using a hood, occasionally detachable, to retain that mind cozy too.The canada goose jackets are also well-known for winter jackets. They are observed within a light plaid, as well as arrive within a quilted design to retain out the wind and snow. The actually wanted ?down jacket? is nonetheless in design for womens winter jackets, but they arrive in lots of exclusive colours now. The along filling will undoubtedly preserve every one of the chilly out, as well as the parka are also waterproofed. however one more often well-known coat could possibly be the fleece jacket that is thermal. it is a rugged outfits that will withstand the coldest of temperatures, and nevertheless arrives in lots of stylish colors.The common pea parka is even now properly recognized in womens winter Canada Goose Banff Parka. These coats are even more sensible compared to prolonged winter coats once the female is producing and have unquestionably stood the evaluate of your time with regards to fashion.
Somewhere it is Winter. Regardless of no create a difference whether it is Winter in which you live, or Winter near to one other part belonging toward Earth, every one of us want canada goose jacket to preserve us cozy through the chilly Winter months. modern morning day fabrics and types is sometimes identified near to the internet at reputable clothiers. loads of producers have tens of many years come throughout creating and constructing toasty cozy coats that will make you appear like you just walked away the webpages of the style magazine.It is uncomplicated to develop to be cozy and stylish on the exact same exact time. We do not should bundle up in last year?s styles: just appear on collection for superb provides on warm outfits that will wrap you in design not getting breaking your budget.
Canada Goose Men's Banff Parka Brownouterwear represents the pinnacle of design and efficiency. every significant college and college child desires canada goose items within their closet and on their back. people find out the distinctive logo along using the trademark styling which has made Colombia a home name all by suggests belonging toward winter. This toasty cozy outfits is made with polyester fleece for prolonged existence and warm style. it is superb for layering: the material is not as well bulky to compare to below a hoody once the temperatures drops into one digits. A drawcord inside the hem lets you cinch up for skateboarding or trips toward the mall. relatively many colours are offered which consists of ?bark?, ?beet?, and ?intense red?. choose the colours that reflect your winter moods or even the moods of everyone in your shock list. you will require satisfaction in just about every one instant within this cozy and stylish New Canada Goose Jacket!

Source: http://community.momtv.com/_What-to-search-for-in-a-canada-goose-Jacket/blog/5666172/101589.html

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Dropbox v2.0 with Ice Cream Sandwich optimizations goes live in the Android Market

Android Central

Having previously slipped a preview of the Dropbox update with optimizations for Ice Cream Sandwich, we all knew it was coming but we didn't know when, exactly. As it turns out, the latest update for Dropbox is now available in the Android Market and ready to be downloaded. Aside from the new UI and Ice Cream Sandwich optimizations, Dropbox has a few other tricks built in:

  • Favorites: quick offline access to files
  • Bulk upload photos and videos
  • Rename files and folders
  • Single-tap access to all file and folder actions
  • Improved gallery view
  • Upload from and export to local storage
  • Numerous bug fixes and stability improvements

Whether you're a hardcore Dropbox user or just a casual user, this update is one not to skip over. You'll find some more screenshots and the download link past the break for you all.

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/DutiaB6vU5c/story01.htm

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Tottenham keen to sell Giovani dos Santos

By Sportsmail Reporter

Last updated at 12:31 AM on 24th December 2011

Spurs have held talks with Giovani dos Santos and his representatives as they try to sell the Mexican next month.

The 22-year-old midfielder was wanted by Sevilla and Udinese but his ?9million price tag was too high.

Out of favour: Giovani dos Santos

Out of favour: Giovani dos Santos

Tottenham want the cash to help strengthen the squad.

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Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2078178/Tottenham-keen-sell-Giovani-dos-Santos.html?ITO=1490

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11 Afghan miners die in accident at coal mine (AP)

KABUL, Afghanistan ? An Afghan official says 11 miners have died in an accident at a coal mine in central Afghanistan.

Mohammad Haqmal, spokesman for the governor's office in Baghlan province, says the accident occurred on Friday evening in Narin district, about 120 miles (200 kilometers) northwest of Kabul.

He says police and rescue teams are at the scene.

Authorities have not been able to determine the cause of the accident.

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

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California OKs third-party slot on presidential ballot

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Source: www.stateline.org --- Wednesday, December 21, 2011
TODAY'S TAKE : California elections officials have granted Americans Elect, a privately funded group hoping to upend the nation's two-party political system, a place on the state's presidential ballot next year. ...

Source: http://feeds.stateline.org/~r/StatelineorgRss-Stories/~3/YwmCE63vAPY/story

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Mark Cavendish wins 2011 Sports Personality of the Year

He was mindful, too, that his win signalled a watershed, ushering cycling into the mainstream of British sport. ?The more people who are riding bikes, the more they can appreciate what it means,? he said.

?It is not just the Tour de France ? one race a year. We are racing 100 days a year. They know what it is to race such distances for such a long time. They appreciate all it takes to do that.?

Cavendish, whose nickname is the ?Manx Missile?. has disclosed he still wears he rainbow jersey he earned from the unforgettable afternoon in Copenhagen when he won the road cycling world title. That Sunday in September, the eight-strong GB team ignored all breakaways to control the peloton over the 170-mile course before delivering Cavendish to the finishing line in grand style.

His exploits in the Tour de France were even more staggering: besides the green jersey he took as the leading sprinter, he claimed a third successive stage win in Paris that made him the first man to have won the final three stages in succession since the great Belgian Eddy Merckx in 1972.

Talking of Belgium, Cavendish told the story of how it had been the first country to acclaim him as the leading sports personality ? twice. ?To be honest it has been like this in other countries for a few years now,? he said with a smile as pregnant girlfriend Peta Todd looked on.

Knowing that he could seize Britain?s first gold in London next summer, Cavendish said: ?There couldn?t be a more perfect way to go into the Olympics than as Sports Personality of the country. We go in, it?s the first medal on offer at the Games and

everyone is looking at me and my team to achieve that first goal. It couldn?t be more fitting that I am doing that with this accolade under my belt.?

Clarke?s runner-up placing was his reward for a year of gloriously unexpected success. True to exuberant form, Clarke marked the honour by recalling an incident on the evening of his post-Open celebrations where, briefly, he thought he had lost the Claret Jug.

But it was prove a false alarm: the Northern Irishman had indeed won the prize he most coveted, having started the tournament as a 200-1 outsider.

Farah, who heads to Kenya today for four weeks of high-intensity training was a popular choice in third. Having moved to train to the United States with Alberto Salazar, he found 2011 was the year all his graft reaped handsome dividends. His win in the 5,000m was not just the most significant distance win by a Briton since that by Ireland?s Eamonn Coghlan at the Worlds in 1983, but also the first long distance gold won by a British male at a global championships.

Novak Djokovic, after his remarkable haul of three Grand Slam titles, emulated rivals Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal to become the Overseas Sports Personality of the Year.

Breaking the Federer-Nadal duopoly at the head of men?s tennis, the Serbian enjoyed an extraordinarily decorated season, amassing six titles in succession from the Australian Open to the Rome Masters.

It was the year when England?s cricketers combined the exquisite triumph of winning the Ashes in Australia for the first time in 25 years with the satisfaction of being officially recognised as the world?s best Test side.

Andrew Strauss?s players, who sealed their elevation to No?1 status with a 4-0 series whitewash against India in August, last night can now add Team of the Year to that portfolio, while England team director Andy Flower was named Coach of the Year.

Sir Steve Redgrave, who won the main prize in 2000 in the year of his fifth Olympic gold, savoured rich acclaim as winner of the Lifetime Achievement award.

The honour, presented by the Princess Royal, reflected not merely Redgrave?s prolonged and garlanded career at the pinnacle of rowing but also his continued charitable commitments.

Source: http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568303/s/1b321245/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Csport0Cothersports0Ccycling0C89737810CMark0ECavendish0Ewins0E20A110ESports0EPersonality0Eof0Ethe0EYear0Bhtml/story01.htm

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