Tuesday, December 27, 2011

[OOC] Sunset Bar and Grill

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Ohio police say they understand human-animal bond

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Ohio police say they understand human-animal bond ??



?????Sunday 25th December, 2011??Source: Associated Press ??
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Two Adults And Two Kids In A Deluxe Room Or Suite At Azul Fives Hotel In Mexico

The name ?Riviera Maya? is slightly deceptive: it derives from the modern connotation of the word ?riviera,? which can refer to almost any popular tourist coastline. The title has little to do with the Spanish translation of ?riviera,? as no freshwater rivers actually flow above ground through the area?s tropical jungles. Below sea level, however, lay thousands of cenotes?collapsed limestone caves that feature a network of freshwater rivers and underground lakes. The cenotes are a natural playground for scuba divers and snorkelers, as is the nearby Great Mayan Reef?one of the longest barrier reefs in the world. The luxurious Azul Fives Hotel resides between a natural cenote and the Caribbean Sea, as well as just 10 minutes from the bustling nightlife of Playa del Carmen.

Outdoor pools overlook the sea, and swim-up bars serve up tropical cocktails along the hotel?s palm-fringed grounds, a haven for relaxation. During a holistic couples massage at the 15,000-square-foot Vassa Spa, vacationers can soothe sore muscles after a day spent scuba diving or arm-wrestling octopi. Balmy breezes waft in from a private terrace or balcony within the posh guest rooms, where ivory-flecked d?cor nods to the picturesque seascape.

For a romantic dinner, guests can settle into gauzy beachside cabanas with a bottle of wine. The hotel also caters to families with its Azulitos Kid?s Club?a whimsical playroom and gym filled with Fisher-Price toys, a trampoline, and hands-on arts and crafts.

Playa del Carmen, Mexico: Popular White-Sand Beaches and Energetic Nightlife

Situated on Mexico?s southeastern tip just below Cancun are Playa del Carmen?s white-sand beaches, which stretch along the Caribbean Sea. Once part of a quiet fishing town, the beaches now welcome thousands of tourists year-round, with average temperatures hovering near 80 degrees. Crystal-clear waters make it easy for scuba divers and snorkelers of all levels to take the plunge into underground cenotes or the Great Mayan Reef, which is a hangout for turtles, lobsters, and whale sharks. Playa del Carmen?s downtown buzzes with restaurants that serve a variety of ethnic cuisines, and upscale retail stores stay open late along 5th Avenue. Street dancers move to the upbeat rhythm of live music and anyone nearby operating a jackhammer.

December 25, 2011, 12:47 pm

Source: http://www.bargainez.com/deal/two-adults-and-two-kids-in-a-deluxe-room-or-suite-at-azul-fives-hotel-in-mexico-103/

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Call for Tax Book Reviews: Oxford University Press

? ABA Standards Don't Cause Tuition Increases, Law Schools Do | Main | IRS to Implement New 2% 'Recapture Tax' in Two-Month Payroll Tax Cut Extension ?

December 23, 2011

Call for Tax Book Reviews: Oxford University Press

Daniel Solove (George Washington) has issued a call for book reviews (here and here) of new Oxford University Press books to be published on Concurring Opinions.? Two of the books are about tax:

In The Oxford Introductions to U.S. Law: Income Tax Law, Edward McCaffery presents an accessible introduction to the major topics in the field of federal income taxation, such as income, deductions, and recognition of gains and losses. After discussing central rules and doctrines individually, Edward McCaffery offers a very sophisticated yet clear explanation of the interplay among them, carefully describing how they work together to carry out the policy goals of the U.S. tax system.

Professor McCaffery describes, for example, how the current income tax in the United States has increasingly become a wage tax that favors those with capital rather than those whose money comes from labor. In explaining the consequences of tax policy on individuals, he also considers important possible alternatives for income taxation in the U.S.

The Oxford Introductions to U.S. Law: Income Tax Law sets forth the 'who,' 'what,' 'when,' and 'why' of income tax law and describes the essential concepts of the field in a clear and concise manner that helps students and non-experts increase their understanding of the policies behind modern tax law and the ways in which these policies affect different types of individuals.

  • A leading expert in tax law provides students with a clear and concise approach to the major topics in the field of federal income taxation
  • This book synthesizes the key doctrines, cases, evolution, and policies of tax law in a clear yet sophisticated manner
  • An indispensable supplement to casebook and tax code for students studying federal income taxation
  • Provides an overview of the major developments in tax reform and a framework in which these efforts can be better evaluated
  • Provides a framework to tax law that is accessible to beginners by continually offering a view of the "big picture" so that students do not feel overwhelmed by intricate tax detail
  • Covers the leading cases and concepts, and includes numerous real-world and hypothetical illustrations to ensure that students can grasp the otherwise complicated rules

Tax law is a daunting subject for many law students. It requires a firm grasp of the Internal Revenue Code provisions, the reasoning behind them, the way they interact, and the way courts have interpreted them. Students must also acquire a brand new vocabulary of tax terms.

For the first time, Oxford University Press equips students with an accessible guide to acing this most challenging of law school tests. In Federal Income Taxation: Model Problems and Outstanding Answers, Camilla E. Watson helps students demonstrate their knowledge of federal income tax law in the structured and sophisticated manner that professors expect on law school exams.

This book includes clear introductions to the major topics in tax law, provides hypothetical's similar to those that students can expect to see on an exam, and offers model answers to those hypothetical's. Professor Watson then gives students the opportunity to evaluate their own work with a comprehensive self-analysis section. This book prepares students by challenging them to use the law they learn in class while also explaining the best way to express an answer on law school exams.

  • Each problem/test question is separated into components so students can easily identify the key concepts in Federal Income Taxation and learn how to apply those concepts in a sophisticated manner on law exams
  • Helps students identify the deficiencies in their own answers, allowing them to refine their writing and provide the answers law professors expect on Federal Income Taxation exams
  • A self-evaluation section identifies which issues are most often missed on exams, allowing students to master the answers to challenging test questions

December 23, 2011 in Book Club, Scholarship, Tax | Permalink

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Oklahoma coach Bob Stoops thinks Landry Jones will stay for senior season

In the wake of USC QB Matt Barkley?s decision to stay in school for his senior season, eyes turn to another QB with draft prospects in Oklahoma?s Landry Jones, and what he?ll decide to do with his future.

To hear his coach say it, Sooners fans have reason to be optimistic.

"My gut feeling is that he'll stay," Sooners coach Bob Stoops told the Tulsa World.

Jones was on his way to a 30-plus touchdown season before star WR Ryan Broyles went down with an injury. In Oklahoma?s final three games where Broyles was unavailable, Jones did not have a touchdown pass and threw five picks.

That could have left a bad taste in Jones? mouth, and hurt his draft stock a bit.

As for when Jones will make a decision, he mentioned earlier this week that it will be done after the team?s Dec. 30 Insight Bowl game against Iowa.

"It's up to (Landry) and his family," Stoops told the World. "So we'll see."

Source: http://aol.sportingnews.com/ncaa-football/story/2011-12-24/landry-jones-draft-will-stay-oklahoma-matt-barkley

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Teamspeed: iPhone backup | does it contain my password?: Forum: All Things Apple Posted By: Royal Oak Post Time: 12-24-2011... http://t.co/vDcgWuNc

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iPhone backup | does it contain my password?: Forum: All Things Apple Posted By: Royal Oak Post Time: 12-24-2011... bit.ly/uYEhcP Teamspeed

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Source: http://twitter.com/Teamspeed/statuses/150627558008954881

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Erica Keppler: How ABC Can Salvage Work It

It is clear from reading public comments attached to various articles and blogs on ABC's upcoming new show Work It, which revolves around two masculine men forced by economic circumstances to seek work as women, that the general public does not comprehend why the transgender community is upset about it (also here, here, and here). (I expect similar comments to be attached to this post, so if you're writing to say, "It's just a joke," save it.) If transgender people were on a full and equal footing with the rest of society, if we were completely respected as a minority group, if we had full protections under the law like those based on race or religion, then I suppose we could view it as a little good-natured ribbing and take our lumps the same as anyone else.

The problem is that we are not. Here are just some of the findings in a survey conducted by the National Center for Transgender Equality. Transgender people surveyed:

  • Were four times more likely to have a household income of less than $10,000 a year
  • Had double the rate of unemployment
  • Had twice the rate of homelessness

Additionally, of the transgender people surveyed:

  • 90 percent had experienced harassment or mistreatment on the job
  • 47 percent had been fired, not hired, or denied promotion because of being transgender
  • 71 percent had attempted to avoid discrimination by hiding their transition
  • 16 percent had been forced to work in the underground economy
  • 53 percent reported being harassed or disrespected in places of public accommodation
  • 22 percent had been denied equal treatment by government agency or official

We are the most discriminated-against minority group in America. This isn't a little, innocent jab at your best bud. This is kicking down people already at the bottom.

It really doesn't matter if this show is about transgender people or only about masculine-identifying men masquerading as women. The general public will still conflate the two. The jokes at the expense of the main characters will turn into water-cooler jokes about trans people. The depictions of the lives and experiences of the main characters will become the cultural assumption about the lives and experiences of trans people. ABC's ability to craft and mold cultural attitudes, assumptions, and opinions blows away anything we in the transgender community can do for ourselves.

Take for example the very premise that two men struggling in a job market that favors women can simply dress up as women and have a better shot at finding employment. This is the polar opposite of the reality for actual transgender women. It is far, far harder to find work as a trans woman than it is as a man or a cisgender woman. Long-term unemployment is an extremely common consequence of transition, and underemployment is often the best that can be hoped for. If this show is successful in convincing audiences of its most basic plot element, they will also be successful in convincing the American public that life must be pretty easy for trans women. They will have people thinking that finding work is a snap and that giving us protections from discrimination in employment would be like giving tax cuts to the wealthy. It would undermine our attempts to gain relief from the greatest hurdle we face in our survival.

And while there are those who say that because these characters are not transgender women, the story has nothing to do with the transgender community, I have to point out that what these characters are trying to do is superficially the exact same thing trans women are forced to do: find employment and navigate in a world that is intolerant and discriminatory, sometimes violently, toward men who violate masculinity. This is an outrageously difficult challenge for anyone who has gone through it, and it is always approached with enormous fear. Few people can imagine the fear experienced by the transitioning transsexual. It is hard to imagine any kind of economic hardship that could drive a masculine-identifying man to go through that, and even harder still to imagine him being successful at it. These men would be exposed for what they are by lunch on their first day on the job, probably in the first hour or minutes -- I guarantee it. For such a plot line to be depicted even remotely plausibly, these two men would be the absolute only people in their workplace who would think they were pulling it off.

This is where it becomes impossible to avoid conflating these characters with transgender people. For the premise to have any credibility, every other character in the story would just assume that these are two trans women but would be too polite to say anything about it. Thus, the story and the humor would turn on two men trying to pass as women while the audience knows that everyone around them sees right through them. Yes, this must become a story about transgender issues.

If ABC wants to salvage this show in the eyes of the transgender community, and perhaps even the larger American audience, they must commit to making it a show about, and sympathetic to, transgender people. They could use it to depict the challenges transgender people face every day. They could draw these two main characters into the transgender community, show the transgender experience through their eyes, include transgender characters played by genuine transgender actors, and make the show the transgender equivalent of Will & Grace rather than a remake of Bosom Buddies. Make the humor about the genuine experience of trying to live as a transgender person; make the victims of that humor the bigoted and sometimes well-meaning but ignorant characters they encounter, while occasionally punctuating the humor with the harsh reality of confronting prejudice and discrimination. There are indeed humorous situations in the lives of trans people, but you cannot honestly portray our lives in a Seinfeldian stream of nonstop, nutty humor. The humor must at times be poignantly interrupted by bitter reality or you will not have been true to the lives of the people you portray. You can't get a laugh showing someone learning to walk in heals without also showing the pain of not being able to go home for Christmas because your family has rejected you. If they're going to do this, they have to be fair and show both sides.

?

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/erica-keppler/work-it-abc_b_1166102.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Apple's late boss Steve Jobs to receive Grammy

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Apple co-founder Steve Jobs is receiving a posthumous Grammy for his technological innovations in the arts.

Jobs is among a dozen people, music groups or companies receiving honorary awards Feb. 11, the day before the Grammys. He died of cancer in October.

The Grammys are honoring Jobs with one of the group's Trustees Awards, citing the late Apple boss' advancements that "transformed the way we consume music, TV, movies, and books."

Grammy organizers called him a "creative visionary" for Apple Inc. innovations that include the iPod, iPhone and iPad.

Others receiving honorary awards the day before the Grammys include Diana Ross, the Allman Brothers, Glen Campbell, Antonio Carlos Jobim, George Jones, the Memphis Horns and recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder.

---

Online:

http://www.grammy.com

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

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Academy's animation branch disqualifies "The Smurfs" (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Sorry, "Smurfs." No Oscar for you this year.

When the Academy announced on November 4 that 18 animated features had been submitted for consideration in the Best Animated Feature category, several of the films had not officially qualified for the award.

And while the Short Films and Feature Animation Branch eventually approved the three motion-capture movies under review ("The Adventures of Tintin," "Mars Needs Moms" and "Happy Feet Two"), and okayed the live action/animation hybrid "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked," it turned out that they did not approve "The Smurfs."

AMPAS rules governing hybrid films say that "a significant number of the major characters must be animated, and animation must figure in no less than 75 percent of the picture's running time."

The Academy has not made any announcement -- but according to an official in the branch, "The Smurfs" did not meet the requirements and is the one film on the original list of 18 to be disqualified. c Still, the 17 films that did make the cut are more than enough to guarantee that the category can have a full slate of five nominees, rather than the four it would have if the field fell below 16.

So while the Smurfs are going down, at least they didn't take anybody with them.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111217/film_nm/us_smurfs

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

School suspends players for Tebowing in halls

Sure, the issue of prayer in public school is a touchy subject. But what of Tebowing in public school? Four students at Long Island?s Riverhead High School ? including three varsity football players ? have been suspended for Tebowing in the halls (see photo), which they were apparently doing pretty much nonstop for three straight days.

Photo and video here.

Brothers Tyler and Connor Carroll, and their friends Jordan Fulcoly and Wayne Drexel were all given one day of in-school suspension Wednesday after three days of getting on one knee and bringing their fists to their forehead like Mr. Tebow?s signature move.

?We?ve been doing it all week,? said Tyler Carroll of Calverton. ?We started on Monday. We saw Tebow doing it and thought it would be funny. More people saw and started to join in. It was really catching fire.?

The school is saying they have no problem with the Tebowing, per se, except that it caused a ?dangerous situation? in the hallways, blocking students from getting to class. I suspect a much deeper, philosophical conspiracy, but then I always do. Please ignore my rantings.

Carroll says the suspension was a bit unfair, and despite the school?s claim to the contrary, he and his friends were never told to stop.

?The administration told us that our Tebowing was blocking the halls and could potentially cause a riot, because they were growing in number and if the wrong kid gets pushed a brawl could ensue,? Carroll told Prep Rally. ?We had no idea that we could get suspended for such a thing. It was a joke between a group of friends that took a life of its own. We figured at the most we would just be told to stop.?

***
Video: Riverhead students suspended for Tebow impersonation [Riverhead News Review]
New York Teens suspended for Tebowing in school hallway [Prep Rally]

Source: http://offthebench.nbcsports.com/2011/12/15/high-school-football-players-suspended-for-tebowing-in-the-halls-video/related

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With A Crisp $10M In His Pockets, ?Founder?s Den? Founder Launches Security App ?AirCover?

JJonFDcouch colorOn his second startup out of his incubator?Founder's Den, and perhaps proof that the Founder's Den model works, serial entrepreneur Jason Johnson is today launching the first app out of his new utility app startup BlueSprig. An app for app lovers -- and those suffering from app fatigue -- AirCover is a security service for both iOS and Android that basically aims to replace another eight apps on your phone.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/jJ-aj4GDT_Q/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

And Lunch Turned Into Dinner ?

I instantly bonded with Hitch in 1998 when I tagged along to an interview he did with a friend of mine over lunch. The friend left after an hour, but we stayed at the restaurant talking about politics, literature, and history. Lunch turned into dinner, and finally his wife, Carol, summoned him home on the grounds that 10 hours straight of talking to anyone was more than enough for one sitting. This set the stage for an abiding friendship based on such marathon conversations.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=6e8359b64b2ff8805dc0e543e4c7505d

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Nuclear agency chief again faces 'bully' claim (AP)

WASHINGTON ? A day after facing a stunning public rebuke from his closest colleagues, Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Gregory Jaczko faces another grilling as lawmakers continue to probe the nuclear agency's operations.

The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee was to discuss nuclear safety Thursday in the wake of Japan's nuclear crisis, but Jaczko's behavior was likely to be a key issue.

At a House hearing Wednesday, Jaczko's four fellow commissioners described him as an intimidating bully whose actions could compromise the nation's nuclear safety. The commissioners ? two Democrats and two Republicans ? said Jaczko, a Democrat, is responsible for an increasingly tense and unsettled work environment at the NRC.

Jaczko denied wrongdoing but said he has suggested the five commissioners talk to a "trusted third party" to improve communications.

The hearing before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee at times seemed more like a soap opera than an oversight session on nuclear power. Several lawmakers said they had trouble believing what they were hearing ? or even that the session was called at all.

"I feel like I'm sitting here trying to referee a fight," said Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., the committee's senior Democrat. "I haven't done that since my kids were tiny."

Noting that Congress has a low approval rating, Cummings said: "Congress isn't functioning very well at all. So I don't want to sit here and tell you how to conduct your business."

The four commissioners sent a letter to the White House in October expressing "grave concern" about Jaczko's actions. The letter stopped short of calling for Jaczko to resign but said he "intimidated and bullied" senior career staff, ordered staff to withhold information and ignored the will of the panel's majority. The letter was signed by Democrats William Magwood and George Apostolakis as well as Republicans Kristine Svinicki and William Ostendorff.

The commissioners told Congress that women at the NRC felt particularly intimidated by Jaczko. Magwood told the House oversight panel that Jaczko had bullied and belittled at least three female staff members, one of whom told Magwood she was "humiliated" by what Magwood called a "raging verbal assault."

Svinicki, the commission's only woman, told committee investigators she was so uncomfortable around Jaczko that she asked her chief of staff to "keep watch" over a private meeting with the chairman in Svinicki's office.

Asked about the incident Wednesday, Jaczko said, "I'm very passionate about safety, and all the things that I do at the agency are directed towards doing what I think is the right thing for safety."

Pressed, Jaczko said he went to Svinicki's office "to speak with her about a letter, I believe." At one point, he said, Svinicki "became concerned, and as I recall I simply motioned. I said, `Let's just sit down, let's just calm down and let's just work through it.' We continued to discuss it, and then at some point I left."

Asked if he had ever apologized for that incident or any of other incidents described at the hearing, Jaczko said he was hearing many of the allegations for the first time ? despite an inspector general's report on his behavior in June and a letter from fellow commissioners sent to him and the White House in October.

"Certainly if there's ever been a time when I have made someone feel uncomfortable, I always like to know so that I can take whatever action is necessary to remedy that," Jaczko said.

Magwood, a Democrat, disputed a claim by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., that the allegations against Jaczko were politically motivated. Jaczko worked for Reid before joining the NRC, and Reid's strong support for Jaczko is considered crucial in keeping his job.

Reid is the leading congressional opponent of a planned nuclear waste dump at Yucca Mountain in Nevada. Jaczko has made a series of decisions over the past two years that have aided the Obama administration's goal of shutting down Yucca Mountain.

Rep. Dennis Ross, D-Fla., said the situation reminded him of the movie "The Caine Mutiny," in which Humphrey Bogart's character was put on trial by his own crew members.

"So, I mean, it begs the question, Capt. ? I mean, Chairman ? Jaczko. How has the voyage been so far?" Ross asked.

Jaczko apologized for the distraction that had been created and said he looked forward to discussing ways "to improve communication and trust."

Even so, Jaczko denied that he has bullied and intimidated staff members and said he has no plans to step down.

Under fierce questioning from the House panel, Jaczko refused to name a single thing he had done wrong in his 2 1/2-year tenure as NRC chair.

"I have no plans to resign, because I continue to believe under my leadership the agency has performed very well," Jaczko said. "We have committed ourselves to safety, and I believe my record shows that."

While denying bullying anyone, Jaczko did acknowledge having a heated conversation with a senior NRC manager about the agency's response to Japan's nuclear crisis last spring. "I often engaged my colleagues in discussions about safety and that's been my style," Jaczko said.

Ostendorff said the issue was not Yucca Mountain or party politics, but Jaczko's "bullying and intimidation" of NRC staffers and even some commissioners, which Ostendorff said "should not and cannot be tolerated."

Ostendorff, a Republican, said he had "lost faith" in Jaczko's ability to lead the commission.

Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, said Jaczko should resign. "You're telling me they are all wrong and you are right," he told Jaczko. "That to me is a lack of leadership."

White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley said this week that problems at the NRC stem from the commission's "strong chairman" structure, in which the leader of the five-member panel has far greater powers than the remaining four commissioners.

___

Follow Matthew Daly's energy coverage at http://twitter.com/MatthewDalyWDC

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_go_co/us_nrc_dissension

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PFT: Ravens expect to have Lewis back

Pittsburgh Steelers v Kansas City ChiefsGetty Images

Romeo Crennel is making a change at quarterback.

Crennel, who took over as Chiefs interim head coach after Todd Haley was fired this week, plans to demote Tyler Palko and start Kyle Orton on Sunday against the Packers. The only question is whether the injured finger on Orton?s throwing hand will cause him any problems. But if Orton can?t throw because of the finger, Palko still won?t start ? Crennel told the Chiefs today that he has decided to move rookie Ricky Stanzi ahead of Palko on the depth chart as well.

?I told them we?re making a change at quarterback, that we?re changing the quarterback and that Tyler would not be the starter this week,? Crennel told the media today after talking to his players. ?Orton or Stanzi will be the starter. Which one? I?m not exactly sure yet because Orton has a finger that he has got to work through, and we?ll have to see during the week how his finger is and how he comes along and if he can handle it with that finger. Stanzi is a rookie and if Orton is able to go and can do it, then Orton is going to be the quarterback. If Orton cannot do it, then Stanzi will be the quarterback, and I told the team that today.?

Crennel hinted that the Chiefs might go all shotgun, all the time on offense if Orton is the starter.

?He?s been throwing a little bit with the trainers, and they said that for short passes, he?s been doing pretty good,? Crennel said. ?Now, we?ll have to see how he does in practice. We might have to protect him a little bit from taking a snap, and we?ve got a plan in place to do that so that we can still operate the offense without him having to take a snap.?

That plan may not sound like a winning formula on Sunday against the Packers, but considering how badly Palko has played, the Chiefs had to do something.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/12/14/ravens-expect-to-have-ray-lewis-back-on-sunday/related/

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Thursday, December 15, 2011

Father shares pain during military jet crash trial (AP)

SAN DIEGO ? Don Yoon wiped his eyes and struggled to speak on the witness stand as his lawyers showed him a handful of family photos ? the only items firefighters were able to salvage from his home after a U.S. military jet crashed into it, setting it ablaze. His 36-year-old wife, two baby daughters and mother-in-law all perished.

Yoon shared his pain during the second day of a trial to determine how much the U.S. government should award his extended family to compensate for the Dec. 8, 2008, accident that the Marine Corps has acknowledged was caused by multiple mistakes. Closing arguments were scheduled Wednesday.

Yoon burst into tears as soon as he took the witness stand and was asked to state Tuesday's date. It was exactly three years since he buried his wife in the same casket with his baby daughters.

"All we wanted was to grow old and raise babies," said Yoon, a Korean immigrant who came to California at the age of 18 to pursue a better life. "And now everything is gone. I know I'm going to be with them when my time comes. That's the only thing I'm looking forward to."

The case went to court after talks broke down over the undisclosed amount being sought by the family.

The situation is rare because the Marine Corps has said it was responsible. But the Department of Justice is disputing the amount of money that should be awarded. In most wrongful death cases, the government also disputes claims that it was responsible, legal experts say.

"There are very few if any cases like this," said attorney Kevin Boyle, who is representing the families.

Boyle said there was no doubt the military was at fault. Recordings of conversations between the Marine pilot and the military ground crews show the pilot was advised to make a potentially safer landing at a nearby Navy base over open water rather than head toward Miramar Air Station over the populated city.

Government attorneys declined to comment. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Miller will have the final say on compensation for the family.

California law does not allow victims in such cases to seek money for grief, suffering or punitive damages. Instead, both sides in the case face the difficult task of quantifying not only the future incomes of those who died ? based in part on their life expectancies ? but the worth of the love and compassion the deceased had for surviving family members.

Making it more challenging, lawyers say, is the fact that this case involves a Korean immigrant family stretching across two continents. Family members have had to testify mostly through an interpreter and explain the cultural nuances in describing their relationships.

Yoon described hugging his wife, Youngmi, and telling her he loved her that morning before heading to work at his sister's store. Yoon broke down sobbing, and his attorney Brian Panish withdrew his question asking him to recall how he heard the tragic news that day.

The government has put economic losses at less than $1 million and not given a figure for non-economic losses. The family's lawyers say Youngmi Lee's earnings would have topped $2 million had she lived.

In court filings, Panish pointed out cases in which he has won multi-million dollar awards for families who have lost loved ones in accidents caused by companies or government entities.

He also pointed out a case in which San Diego Gas & Electric Co. awarded $55.6 million to the heirs of four U.S. Marines who died in a 2004 accident when their helicopters crashed into power lines at Camp Pendleton.

During this week's trial, Panish has used testimony of the family and photographs to depict a close-knit family originating from a small Korean farming community, where Youngmi's mother, Seokim Kim Lee, was the pillar, taking care of those in her village and her four children, along with her husband, a cattle farmer.

In video clips taken in Korea, their baby daughter, Grace, is shown playing with Seokim Kim Lee and her husband in a living room filled with their large family.

One by one, the three remaining adult Lee children have testified how their mother's death shattered their lives, leaving them feeling lost.

Jun Hwa Lee, 34, said his mother was No. 1 on his phone's speed dial so he could talk to her quickly about anything. He recalled returning to his village almost every weekend after he moved away for a job and always found his home filled with flowers and food. His father now eats out and is so depressed he spends his days wandering the home in a daze, no longer tending to his cattle, he said.

"My mom was the most important person in my life," he said. "She was the person I loved most, and still is."

Department of Justice attorneys offered their condolences to the family but have raised doubts about how close they were and how much they depended on each other. On Monday, they questioned Yoon's father-in-law, Sanghyun Lee, about why he had not visited his eldest daughter in the four years she was in the United States and why he missed her wedding in Las Vegas.

He said the couple planned to hold a bigger wedding in Korea with the entire family.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/usmilitary/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111214/ap_on_re_us/us_military_jet_crash

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Geoengineering could save Earth _ or destroy it

(AP) ? Brighten clouds with sea water? Spray aerosols high in the stratosphere? Paint roofs white and plant light-colored crops? How about positioning "sun shades" over the Earth?

At a time of deep concern over global warming, a group of scientists, philosophers and legal scholars examined whether human intervention could artificially cool the Earth ? and what would happen if it did.

A report released late Thursday in London and discussed Friday at the U.N. climate conference in South Africa said that ? in theory ? reflecting a small amount of sunlight back into space before it strike's the Earth's surface would have an immediate and dramatic effect.

Within a few years, global temperatures would return to levels of 250 years ago, before the industrial revolution began dumping carbon dioxide into the air, trapping heat and causing temperatures to rise.

But no one knows what the side effects would be.

They could be physical ? unintentionally changing weather patterns and rainfall. Even more difficult, it could be political ? spurring conflict among nations unable to agree on how such intervention, or geoengineering, will be controlled.

The idea of solar radiation management "has the potential to be either very useful or very harmful," said the study led by Britain's Royal Society, the Washington-based Environmental Defense Fund and TWAS, the academy of sciences for the developing world based in Trieste, Italy.

Environmentalist Silvia Ribeiro, of the Canada-based ETC-Group, said geoengineering should be outlawed before it gets off the ground.

"Solar radiation management technologies are high-risk and extremely dangerous and they should be treated under international law like nuclear weapons ? except, unlike nuclear weapons, we have an opportunity to ban their testing and their proliferation before the technology is fully developed, rather than trying to prevent their proliferation after the fact," she said.

The final report grew out of three days of talks in a quiet country retreat last March, the climax of a yearlong dialogue spanning experts in 22 countries.

It was prompted in part by the failure of a 20-year U.N. negotiating process to take decisive action to curb greenhouse gas emissions, mainly from burning fossil fuels, responsible for climate change.

"The slow progress of international climate negotiations has led to increased concerns that sufficient cuts in greenhouse gas emissions may not be achieved in time to avoid unacceptable levels of climate change," the report said.

But geoengineering is not an alternative to climate action, said John Shepherd, a British oceanographer from the University of Southampton who was a lead author of the report.

"Nobody thought this provides a justification for not reducing carbon emissions," Shepherd said in a telephone interview from London.

"We have to stick with Plan A for the time being, and that could be a very long time indeed," he said. "This would buy time for people to make the transition to a low-carbon economy."

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change foresees temperatures rising as much as 6.4 degrees Celsius (11.5 degrees Fahrenheit) by 2100, swelling the seas with melted glacial water and disrupting climate conditions around the globe.

Releasing millions of tons of sulfur dioxide in the upper atmosphere would mimic the cooling effects of a volcanic eruption, lowering global temperature about 0.5 Centigrade (0.9 Fahrenheit), which can last for a year or two when it occurs naturally.

But deliberately tinkering with nature to counter global warming can only be a stopgap measure, and is fraught with danger, the report said.

Action such as spraying sulfur into the air or brightening clouds with sea water to reflect more sunlight would have to be sustained indefinitely because "there would be a large and rapid climate change if it were terminated suddenly," the report said.

Hazy skies could alter weather patterns and agriculture, replacing one source of climate change with another.

Years of study are required to calculate the environmental impacts, but the bigger questions are political.

Who would decide where and when to conduct experiments, and where to set the global thermostat? What would happen if a country acted on its own without an international agreement? Would it discourage efforts to reduce reliance on fossil fuels and reduce carbon emissions?

Notions of manipulating the climate to impede global warming have been on the fringe of scientific discussion for some time, but is moving increasingly toward the mainstream.

In the United States, a group of 18 U.S. experts from the sciences, social sciences and national security unveiled a report in October urging the federal government to begin research on the feasibility and potential effectiveness of geoengineering.

"The United States needs to be able to judge whether particular climate remediation techniques could offer a meaningful response to the risks of climate change," said that report sponsored by the Bipartisan Policy Center.

Shepherd said the 65-page Thursday's report was intended to start the conversation.

"No government asked us to do this. The U.N. didn't ask us," he said.

"I hope it can be continued in a more formal and mandated framework, because eventually somebody will have to take some decisions."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2011-12-02-AF-Climate-Cooling-the-Planet/id-8dfbad87a3db45a9a9c9b1c8409511e9

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Postal cuts to slow delivery of first-class mail

FILE - In this Sept. 6, 2011, file photo Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe appears before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee as the panel examines the economic troubles of the Postal Service, a self-funded federal agency, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Seeing no immediate help from Congress, the cash-strapped service is pushing ahead with unprecedented cuts to first-class mail next spring that will slow delivery and eliminate overnight service for the first time in 40 years. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 6, 2011, file photo Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe appears before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee as the panel examines the economic troubles of the Postal Service, a self-funded federal agency, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Seeing no immediate help from Congress, the cash-strapped service is pushing ahead with unprecedented cuts to first-class mail next spring that will slow delivery and eliminate overnight service for the first time in 40 years. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

Charts show U.S. Postal Service operating losses and mail volume since

FILE - In this Sept. 15, 2011, file photo Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe speaks at a news conference on changes to the Postal Service that could potentially save as much as $3 billion in Washington. The estimated $3 billion in reductions, to be announced in broader detail on Monday, Dec. 5, 2011, are part of a wide-ranging effort by the Postal Service to quickly trim costs and avert bankruptcy. While providing short-term relief, the changes could ultimately prove counterproductive, pushing more of America's business onto the Internet.( AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

FILE - In this Sept. 6, 2011, file photo Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe speaks before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee as the panel examines the economic troubles of the Postal Service, a self-funded federal agency, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Seeing no immediate help from Congress, the cash-strapped Postal Service is pushing ahead with unprecedented cuts to first-class mail next spring that will slow delivery and eliminate overnight service for the first time in 40 years. From left are Donahoe, John Berry, director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, Phillip Herr, director of physical infrastructure issues for the Government Accountability Office, and Thomas Levy, chief actuary of The Segal Company, serving as a consultant on postal employee benefits. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? Facing bankruptcy, the U.S. Postal Service is pushing ahead with unprecedented cuts to first-class mail next spring that will slow delivery and, for the first time in 40 years, eliminate the chance for stamped letters to arrive the next day.

The estimated $3 billion in reductions, to be announced in broader detail on Monday, are part of a wide-ranging effort by the cash-strapped Postal Service to quickly trim costs, seeing no immediate help from Congress.

The changes would provide short-term relief, but ultimately could prove counterproductive, pushing more of America's business onto the Internet. They could slow everything from check payments to Netflix's DVDs-by-mail, add costs to mail-order prescription drugs, and threaten the existence of newspapers and time-sensitive magazines delivered by postal carrier to far-flung suburban and rural communities.

That birthday card mailed first-class to Mom also could arrive a day or two late, if people don't plan ahead.

"It's a potentially major change, but I don't think consumers are focused on it and it won't register until the service goes away," said Jim Corridore, analyst with S&P Capital IQ, who tracks the shipping industry. "Over time, to the extent the customer service experience gets worse, it will only increase the shift away from mail to alternatives. There's almost nothing you can't do online that you can do by mail."

The cuts, now being finalized, would close roughly 250 of the nearly 500 mail processing centers across the country as early as next March. Because the consolidations typically would lengthen the distance mail travels from post office to processing center, the agency also would lower delivery standards for first-class mail that have been in place since 1971.

Currently, first-class mail is supposed to be delivered to homes and businesses within the continental U.S. in one day to three days. That will lengthen to two days to three days, meaning mailers no longer could expect next-day delivery in surrounding communities. Periodicals could take between two days and nine days.

About 42 percent of first-class mail is now delivered the following day. An additional 27 percent arrives in two days, about 31 percent in three days and less than 1 percent in four days to five days. Following the change next spring, about 51 percent of all first-class mail is expected to arrive in two days, with most of the remainder delivered in three days.

The consolidation of mail processing centers is in addition to the planned closing of about 3,700 local post offices. In all, roughly 100,000 postal employees could be cut as a result of the various closures, resulting in savings of up to $6.5 billion a year.

Expressing urgency to reduce costs, Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe said in an interview that the agency has to act while waiting for Congress to grant it authority to reduce delivery to five days a week, raise stamp prices and reduce health care and other labor costs.

The Postal Service, an independent agency of government, does not receive tax money, but is subject to congressional control on large aspects of its operations. The changes in first-class mail delivery can go into place without permission from Congress.

After five years in the red, the post office faces imminent default this month on a $5.5 billion annual payment to the Treasury for retiree health benefits. It is projected to have a record loss of $14.1 billion next year amid steady declines in first-class mail volume. Donahoe has said the agency must make cuts of $20 billion by 2015 to be profitable.

It already has announced a 1-cent increase in first-class mail to 45 cents beginning Jan. 22.

"We have a business model that is failing. You can't continue to run red ink and not make changes," Donahoe said. "We know our business, and we listen to our customers. Customers are looking for affordable and consistent mail service, and they do not want us to take tax money."

Separate bills that have passed House and Senate committees would give the Postal Service more authority and liquidity to stave off immediate bankruptcy. But prospects are somewhat dim for final congressional action on those bills anytime soon, especially if the measures are seen in an election year as promoting layoffs and cuts to neighborhood post offices.

Technically, the Postal Service must await an advisory opinion from the independent Postal Regulatory Commission before it can begin closing local post offices and processing centers. But such opinions are nonbinding, and Donahoe is making clear the agency will proceed with reductions once the opinion is released next March.

"The things I have control over here at the Postal Service, we have to do," he said, describing the cuts as a necessary business decision. "If we do nothing, we will have a death spiral."

The Postal Service initially announced in September it was studying the possibility of closing the processing centers and published a notice in the Federal Register seeking comments. Within 30 days, the plan elicited nearly 4,400 public comments, mostly in opposition.

Among them:

?Small-town mayors and legislators in states including Illinois, Missouri, Ohio and Pennsylvania cited the economic harm if postal offices were to close, eliminating jobs and reducing service. Small-business owners in many other states also were worried.

"It's kind of a lifeline," said William C. Snodgrass, who owns a USave Pharmacy in North Platte, Neb., referring to next-day first-class delivery. His store mails hundreds of prescriptions a week to residents in mostly rural areas of the state that lack local pharmacies. If first-class delivery were lengthened to three days and Saturday mail service also were suspended, a resident might not get a shipment mailed on Wednesday until the following week.

"A lot of people in these communities are 65 or 70 years old, and transportation is an issue for them," said Snodgrass, who hasn't decided whether he will have to switch to a private carrier such as UPS for one-day delivery. That would mean passing along higher shipping costs to customers. "It's impossible for many of my customers to drive 100 miles, especially in the winter, to get the medications they need."

?ESPN The Magazine and Crain Communications, which prints some 27 trade and consumer publications, said delays to first-class delivery could ruin the value of their news. Their magazines are typically printed at week's end with mail arrival timed for weekend sports events or the Monday start of the work week. Newspapers, already struggling in the Internet age, also could suffer.

"No one wants to receive Tuesday's issue, containing news of Monday's events, on Wednesday," said Paul Boyle, a senior vice president of the Newspaper Association of America, which represents nearly 2,000 newspapers in the U.S. and Canada. "Especially in rural areas where there might not be broadband access for Internet news, it will hurt the ability of newspapers to reach customers who pretty much rely on the printed newspaper to stay connected to their communities."

?AT&T, which mails approximately 55 million customer billing statements each month, wants assurances that the Postal Service will widely publicize and educate the public about changes to avoid confusion over delivery that might lead to delinquent payments. The company is also concerned that after extensive cuts the Postal Service might realize it cannot meet a relaxed standard of two-to-three day delivery.

Other companies standing to lose include Netflix, which offers monthly pricing plans for unlimited DVDs by mail, sent one disc or two at a time. Longer delivery times would mean fewer opportunities to receive discs each month, effectively a price increase. Netflix in recent months has been vigorously promoting its video streaming service as an alternative.

"DVD by mail may not last forever, but we want it to last as long as possible," Netflix CEO Reed Hastings said this year.

Maine Sen. Susan Collins, the top Republican on the Senate committee that oversees the post office, believes the agency is taking the wrong approach. She says service cuts will only push more consumers to online bill payment or private carriers such as UPS or FedEx, leading to lower revenue in the future.

"Time and time again in the face of more red ink, the Postal Service puts forward ideas that could well accelerate its death spiral," she said, urging passage of a bill that would refund nearly $7 billion the Postal Service overpaid into a federal retirement fund, encourage a restructuring of health benefits and reduce the agency's annual payments into a retiree health account.

That measure would postpone a move to five-day-a-week mail delivery for at least two years and require additional layers of review before the agency closed postal branches and mail processing centers.

"The solution to the Postal Service's financial crisis is not easy but must involve tackling more significant expenses that do not drive customers," Collins said.

In the event of a shutdown due to bankruptcy, private companies such as FedEx and UPS could handle a small portion of the material the post office moves, but they do not go everywhere. No business has shown interest in delivering letters everywhere in the country for a set rate of 44 cents or 45 cents for a first-class letter.

Ruth Goldway, chair of the Postal Regulatory Commission, said the planned cuts could test the limits of the Postal Service's legal obligation to serve all Americans, regardless of geography, at uniform price and quality. "It will have substantial cost savings, but it really does have the potential to change what the postal service is and its role in providing fast and efficient delivery of mail," she said.

___

Online:

Postal Service: https://www.usps.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-04-US-Postal-Problems/id-d9fd090c05dc42da9d7ba8dade05f0b4

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Monday, December 5, 2011

93% Hugo

All Critics (153) | Top Critics (38) | Fresh (143) | Rotten (10)

Scorsese transforms this innocent tale into an ardent love letter to the cinema and a moving plea for film preservation.

'Hugo': Scorsese's humbling hommage to his favorite art

Thematic potency and cinematic virtuosity -- the production was designed by Dante Ferretti and photographed by Robert Richardson -- can't conceal a deadly inertness at the film's core.

For all the wizardry on display, Hugo often feels like a film about magic instead of a magical film...

I have seen the future of 3-D moviemaking, and it belongs to Martin Scorsese, unlikely as that may sound.

It's a fairy tale for mature viewers, but the airy exterior hides emotional depth.

Director Martin Scorsese brings us an enchanting Christmas gift ... a marvelously inventive and inspiring 3-D film that has a heartfelt holiday message.

'Hugo' was an amazing cinematic experience for me, even though I'm not a 3-D fan.

Hugo is a master filmmaker's gift to children. It teaches, in an age-appropriate way, why movies are important and why it's essential that we take care of them. One of Scorsese's best!

Opulent, dazzling, enchanting screen adaptation of a beloved children's book. It's family-friendly fun.

( ... ) goose down floating around the set takes Scorsese's hard-hitting career into soft new dimensions

Leave it to Martin Scorsese to use 3-D not as a gimmick, but as a means of drawing us into a unique and magical environment...

The lesson to be learned is that [Scorsese] should stick to what he knows best, for Hugo won't appeal to anyone, least of all kids.

The on-screen craftsmanship is impeccable, from Robert Richardson's stunning cinematography to Dante Ferretti's production design and Sandy Powell's costumes.

Hugo is cinema shining a light reverently up its own fundament.

A dreamy triumph for Scorsese

The film demands patience from children and adults alike -- in fact, it's simply too slow for young viewers -- but like great literature, if you immerse yourself in it, the rewards are plentiful.

As a crazy mix of Cinema Paradiso, Cronos and David Copperfield it's unusually stimulating family fare.

The man responsible for Raging Bull, Taxi Driver and GoodFellas has tackled his first family film. Not only that: it's in 3-D, and a must-see for anyone who loves cinema.

The heart-shaped story may be the key that sets Hugo in motion, but this rediscovery of the cin?ma de papa is most memorable for its technical wizardry and astonishing visual trickery.

Hugo's best moments are those that aren't actually Hugo.

It is glorious to be thrown and blown about in this make-believe metropolis. The digitally enhanced shapes and colours suggest Jeunet and Caro reworked by a polychromatic Piranesi.

As soon as the lights went up in the theater, I told my viewing companions that I honestly felt that seeing the film was a privilege.

[T]here's certainly much to admire here... [but] Hugo feels like two very different films inelegantly spliced together...

It's possible to see the attraction, but when people break into applause over the credits, some are going to be left cold.

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/hugo/

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Transform Your Team Communications in Just 15 Minutes per Week ...

MIAMI, Dec. 5, 2011 ? Fortune 500 companies are using a brand new service from a UK-based software company to dramatically improve team communications.

Weekly Debrief is an online service that completely automates the creation of weekly status reports, which have been proven to increase productivity, reduce stress, and maximize employee satisfaction.

For decades top executives have insisted on receiving weekly status updates from their team members, but until now this has been a time-consuming manual process. The Weekly Debrief service has completely automated the process. The end result is a beautifully formatted document that could take pride of place on the desk of the CEO in any multi-billion-dollar international corporation.

?Our aim was to create a weekly status reporting tool team members would want to use. It had to make producing weekly status reports pretty much instantaneous,? says Paul Smithson, the brains behind Weekly Debrief.

One of the most revolutionary aspects of the Weekly Debrief system is that team members don?t have to install any software on their computer or remember usernames and passwords to log into an online system. In addition, they can file their weekly status reports whilst on the move, which makes it ideal for busy executives who travel regularly.

?Our research showed that the easier it was to file status reports, the more likely team members were to complete them each week, so it was essential that we built a system that required no additional software, no plug-ins, and even no log-in username and password to remember,? says Paul Smithson.

Weekly Debrief is currently available free of charge during its test phase, but the system has already become a hit with everyone from Fortune 500 companies through to some of the most prestigious educational institutions, and even international sports teams.

To find out more, visit http://www.weeklydebrief.com

About Weekly Debrief and Founder Paul Smithson

Weekly Debrief is founded by Paul Smithson, CEO and founder of Intellimon Ltd. Since graduating in business strategy and direct marketing from two of Europe?s leading business schools, Smithson has established five multimillion-dollar companies, one of which is now owned by the BBC. His areas of expertise include business strategy, ecommerce, online and traditional marketing, software development and maximizing the potential of online businesses.

Contact:

Paul Smithson
Weekly Debrief Press
Phone: +1 305-848-7336

Screenshot:
http://www.ereleases.com/pic/Weekly-Debrief-screenshot.jpg

More Press Resources (photos, screenshots, logos, etc):
http://www.weeklydebrief.com/press-resources.html

# # #

Source: http://www.ereleases.com/pr/transform-team-communications-15-minutes-week-70424

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Pastor seeks to?end church?ban on interracial couples

By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news service reports

A tiny, all-white Appalachian church in rural Kentucky that voted to bar interracial couples from its congregation will be asked to overturn its decision, its pastor said Friday.

Stacy Stepp, pastor of Gulnare Free Will Baptist Church, told the Lexington Herald-Leader that he will ask members to reconsider?the decision, perhaps as early as Sunday.

"We're going to get it resolved," Stepp told the Kentucky newspaper.

The church was drawn harsh criticism this week after its members voted 9-6 on the resolution, which says the church "does not condone interracial marriage" or allow such couples to join or take part in certain worship activities.

The church member who crafted the resolution, Melvin Thompson, said he called the matter an "internal affair."

"I am not racist. I will tell you that. I am not prejudiced against any race of people, have never in my lifetime spoke evil about a race," said Thompson, the church's former pastor who stepped down earlier this year. "That's what this is being portrayed as, but it is not."

Church secretary Dean Harville disagreed: He said the resolution came after his 24-year-old daughter, Stella Harville, visited the church this summer with her 29-year-old fianc?, Ticha Chikuni of South Africa.

Harville, a longtime member who serves also as the church clerk, said the couple attended worship service; she played the piano as he sang a song called "I Surrender," NBC New York reported.

Harville said Thompson, who had been pastor for many years, told him in August that the pair couldn't sing at the church again.

In November, Thompson proposed the church go on record saying that while all people were welcome to attend services, the church did not condone interracial marriage. A vote at the church affirmed his stance. Most in the congregation did not vote.

NBC New York?s Greg Wilson, msnbc.com's Sevil Omer and The Associated Press?contributed to this report.

Earlier: Kentucky church bars interracial couples

More news and feature stories from msnbc.com:

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/02/9172641-pastor-to-ask-church-to-overturn-ban-on-interracial-couples

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Barney Frank: Majority Of Democrats Will Support Amending Defense Cut Trigger

WASHINGTON -- Retiring Congressman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) spilled a few beans on Sunday morning when he said a majority of Democrats would sign off on a deal to lessen the military cuts that will result from the super committee's failure.

Appearing on ABC's "This Week," the Massachusetts Democrat was discussing the irony that, for the first time in recent memory, legislative inaction now favors his party. If Congress does nothing, by the end of 2012 the Bush tax cuts will expire and the defense budget will be slashed by $600 billion (the latter being part of the cuts that were triggered because of the super committee's inability to reach a deal). This would, Frank predicted, compel Republicans lawmakers to compromise. And on the defense cuts, they would find willing partners across the aisle.

"I'd be ready to live with the military cuts in the sequester," Frank said. "But I think there would be a majority of Democrats saying, 'You know what, we want some military reductions. We don't need to continue to protect Germany against Stalin. But we will compromise.' So I think what we are going to see this year, because of the consequences of inaction, is an unusual situation where there will be action on both an amendment to the sequester and to the taxes."

With Frank declining to run for reelection, his usual candid style has become even more forthright. But while amending the defense budget portion of the sequester may seem like the logical end game as Congress weighs its impact in the months ahead, President Obama and his aides have been absolutely adamant that he will veto any such move.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/04/barney-frank-majority-of-_n_1127988.html

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