Thursday, 29 November 2012

Fiscal cliff would have slashed Powerball winnings by $8M

(Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The winners of the $587 million Powerball jackpot should obviously consider themselves lucky. But they should be especially grateful that they won in 2012 and not next year, when a possible dive over the so-called fiscal cliff would certainly slash their winnings.

Two Powerball winners, one from Arizona and another from Missouri, were announced on Thursday and will split the jackpot. Assuming they take the lump sum of $384 million right now rather than the full $587 million over 29 years, each winner will receive about $125 million after state and federal taxes. Not bad.

But consider this hypothetical scenario.

Imagine it's Jan. 1, 2013, and President Barack Obama and Republican congressional leaders have failed to reach a budget deal. The breakdown has triggered the dreaded "fiscal cliff," meaning the income tax cuts set by former President George W. Bush have expired across the board and the tax burden on every income bracket has jumped.

Right about then, the Powerball winners are announced. How much more would Uncle Sam collect?assuming the jackpot is the same as it is today?from the fortunate souls who won after the country went over the cliff?

According to Tax Foundation analyst Nick Kasprak, the total tax burden on the winnings would jump by $17.7 million. Because there were two winners, that would amount to about $8.85 million more in taxes per person.

Congress and the White House are currently in last-minute negotiations to avoid some of the tax hikes set for next year. Despite the grandstanding on Capitol Hill this month, Congress should be able to reach a deal before the Jan. 1 deadline, but if it doesn't, taxpayers will be out of luck. There are some experts, like former director of the Congressional Budget Office Doug Holtz-Eakin, who say a failure to act could trigger another recession.

"I'd give us a 30 percent chance of doing something that stupid," Holtz-Eakin, now the president of the American Action Network, said.

If you're not already thoroughly depressed, consider this: Under the doomsday scenario, once the federal government collects its share of the Powerball winnings, it will spend every penny in less than five minutes.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/ticket/powerball-winners-paid-8-85-million-more-taxes-210539181--election.html

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A Guide To Purchasing Commercial Real Estate | Destination Raleigh

Posted on Wednesday, November 28th, 2012

Kinds of Properties Involved in Commercial Real Estate

Commercial property investing consists of putting a large amount of money directly into properties that have known commercial or company value including malls, buildings, resorts and so on. It is a rewarding way to earn money especially if the region where the developing is located is extremely populated.

The key types of components that you can typically put your money in are offices, industrial factories, retail marketplace centers and apartment unit buildings. Most of these real estate properties reveal a common denominator which is they all have tenants that will shell out good money with regard to commercial lease space. You can find of course a number of tenants in which fall into different categories for instance office tenants usually book long-term and tend to be a particular region as long as the organization is doing properly. Retail store tenants tend to be cheaper than office tenants et cetera Wood Ranch real estate .

Figuring out Factors inside Commercial Real Estate

Internet operating cash flow or NOI is a vital determining element when investing in commercial real estate. NOI is basically calculated by the sum of the property?s yearly hire and subtracting the prices incurred which are not part of cash or required to rental new regions. The value of commercial real estate properties usually are determined by splitting the net running income through the sale cost or cap. The rationale may be the greater the property?s income in spite of its cap rate, the higher its total value.

Whilst capital costs as well as rental costs are generally not included in the internet operating salary of the property, it is recommended that you take all of them seriously simply because they play an important role inside the overall dividends. For example, it wouldn?t be unconventional for a property owner to say reduce 20% of the lease in order to signal a actuel when the economic climate is weak.

When you are looking to get financing to get a commercial real estate house, the amount of money you?ll get will be based for the income your property creates. Banks and lending businesses will significantly scrutinize your financial troubles coverage percentage which is the quotient when dividing the yearly internet operating cash flow with an yearly mortgage payment. If your net running income tends to be lesser compared to the mortgage payments, financial institutions would reject you the financing Agoura Hills real estate .

Commercial Real Estate Investment Advice

Commercial real estate investment is evidently not for all of us because it consists of a lot of financing and involves a significant amount of danger. It requires a great deal of focus and a focus but the rewarding results are really worth the effort that certain puts into it. ?In order to generate profits, you need to spend money? ? this kind of saying is so true with regards to commercial real estate shelling out as you need easily accessible funds in order to conserve the upkeep demands of the house. You need to buy the building as a way to attract tenants as well as demand higher renting both of which may greatly impact your internet operating cash flow and ultimately the overall value of neglect the.

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Source: http://www.destinationraleigh.com/random-thoughts/a-guide-to-purchasing-commercial-real-estate/

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The fiscal cliff, the debt cliff, and the political cliff (Powerlineblog)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/267096010?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Wednesday, 28 November 2012

Syrian rebels, civilians brace for long civil war

In this Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012 photo, Syrian Mohammed Quweiri, 63, stands near the grave of his son and others killed in fighting between rebels and the Syrian army in Harem, Syria. A dark realization is spreading across north Syria that despite 20 months of violence and recent rebel gains, an end to the war to topple President Bashar Assad is nowhere in sight. (AP Photo/ Ben Hubbard)

In this Saturday, Nov. 17, 2012 photo, Syrian Mohammed Quweiri, 63, stands near the grave of his son and others killed in fighting between rebels and the Syrian army in Harem, Syria. A dark realization is spreading across north Syria that despite 20 months of violence and recent rebel gains, an end to the war to topple President Bashar Assad is nowhere in sight. (AP Photo/ Ben Hubbard)

FILE - In this Thursday, June 7, 2012 file photo, Free Syrian Army members raise their weapons during a training session on the outskirts of Idlib, Syria. A dark realization is spreading across north Syria that despite 20 months of violence and recent rebel gains, an end to the war to topple President Bashar Assad is nowhere in sight. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012 file photo, a group of Free Syrian Army fighters carry a wounded comrade to cover in the town of Harem, Syria. A dark realization is spreading across north Syria that despite 20 months of violence and recent rebel gains, an end to the war to topple President Bashar Assad is nowhere in sight. (AP Photo/Mustafa Karali, File)

FILE - In thisTuesday, Oct. 30, 2012 file photo, Mustafa, a rebel from the town of Bennish, watches for a sniper firing down a street in the town of Harem, Syria. A dark realization is spreading across north Syria that despite 20 months of violence and recent rebel gains, an end to the war to topple President Bashar Assad is nowhere in sight. (AP Photo/Mustafa Karali, File)

FILE - In this Thursday, Nov. 8, 2012 file photo, a Syrian man who fled from the violence in his village, sits for a haircut next to his tent at a camp, in the Syrian village of Atmeh, near the Turkish border with Syria. A dark realization is spreading across north Syria that despite 20 months of violence and recent rebel gains, an end to the war to topple President Bashar Assad is nowhere in sight. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)

(AP) ? Before the civil war, Ramiz Moussa was a middle class civil servant who processed fines for littering, illegal construction and disturbing the peace in Aleppo, Syria's largest city.

Now, the 40-year-old squats with other rebels in damaged, abandoned homes in this embattled town. He rarely sees his family and thinks of little beyond the next attack on government soldiers.

"We no longer count the days," he said, standing in a rubble-strewn alley, holding a rifle and two rocket-propelled grenades. "Today we're in a battle, but we can't remember when it started, much less the past battles. You could ask me what day it is, but I can't tell you."

A dark realization is spreading across northern Syria that despite 20 months of violence and recent rebel gains, an end to the war to topple President Bashar Assad is nowhere in sight.

As a result, civilians and rebel fighters are digging in, building an infrastructure to secure rebel towns, care for the wounded and escalate the fight against Assad's forces.

Although incomplete and often hobbled by competition between factions, these efforts have produced a rebel force capable of victories nearly unimaginable months ago. And recent interviews in the northern provinces of Idlib and Aleppo with more than a dozen rebels and civilian activists gave no sign that they would give up soon.

"At the start I never imagined it would last this long," said rebel field commander Abdulllah Qadi, 25. "We have been at it for 20 months and we could be at it for 20 more. All we can do is keep fighting."

Syria's uprising started with protests calling for political change in March 2011. Like many in the opposition, Qadi said the successful toppling of dictators in Egypt and Tunisia gave him hope that Assad, too, would soon fall.

Instead, his regime launched a relentless crackdown, causing many to take up arms. The conflict escalated this year into a civil war with scores of rebel groups fighting Assad's military. Activists say more than 40,000 people have been killed.

Syria's rebels have claimed a string of victories in recent weeks, storming military bases, boosting their armories with looted munitions and overrunning a hydroelectric dam that powers a large swath of the country.

Fueling these advances is greater organization among rebel brigades. At least three major umbrella groups have formed to solicit private aid from abroad and shuttle arms and ammunition to brigades inside Syria.

"At first, the regime's presence in many places prevented us from bringing our forces together, but after we liberated some areas, we saw that we needed to unify the forces on the ground," said Gen. Ahmed al-Faj of the so-called Joint Command. The other groups are the Syria Liberation Front and the Military Councils of the Free Syrian Army.

In one striking example of the opposition's new capabilities, hundreds of rebels recently stormed the base of the Syrian army's 46th Regiment near Aleppo after a coordinated two-month siege, taking away tanks, armored vehicles and truckloads of munitions they plan to use against Assad's forces.

But rebel advances remain limited. While they control a strip of territory along the Turkish border and have carved out pockets near Damascus and in the sparsely populated eastern provinces, much of the country remains beyond their reach. Even in Idlib, a center of rebel activity, the army still has four major towns and two bases, plus a half-dozen checkpoints to prevent rebel expansion to the west and south.

The rebels also remain largely helpless against the regime's air power, whose daily air raids often kill civilians. Many fighters are bitter that the U.S. and others have not intervened to stop Assad's air force as they did in Libya against Moammar Gadhafi last year.

"We saw in Libya the aid that the U.S. and NATO gave and how quickly the battle went," said fighter Abdullah Biram. "So why don't they come here? Don't they see all the people dying?"

One recent evening, a helicopter dropped a bomb on the village of Maaret al-Naasan in Idlib. Moments later, Bilal Haidar emerged from the stairwell he was hiding under to find that his parents, six of his siblings, his sister-in-law and three neighbors were killed when their houses collapsed.

"I have no one left," he said the next day, standing in the rubble of his former home. "My whole family is gone."

Civilian leaders have scrambled to fill the void left by the government's withdrawal, setting up hospitals with operating rooms and security brigades to prevent crime.

A half-dozen Idlib towns have also set up Islamic courts under the jurisdiction of a High Judicial Council, said Salah Hablas, a Muslim cleric involved in the effort.

When asked what the most common crimes were, he read off the names of a dozen people, all wanted on suspicion of spying for the regime.

Hablas, sporting a long gray beard, dark sunglasses and a black track suit, said the courts apply a mix of Syrian and Islamic law and have sentenced one person to death. While that sentence has yet to be carried out, others have.

"If there a punishment for anyone, whether whipping or anything else, it is carried out in the public square," he said.

The complete mobilization for war is clear in Harem, a scenic town rich with orange and persimmon groves, built around an imposing, hilltop castle near the Turkish border.

After months of clashes, rebels managed to besiege the remaining troops inside the castle. They try daily to force them out.

Sniper fire, artillery blasts and near-daily government airstrikes have sent most residents fleeing through rubble-strewn streets. Rebels squat in abandoned homes, smashing holes in walls to create passages to the front line. Between clashes, they make tea on wood fires or pick fruit, much of it about to rot because farmers can't harvest it.

Captured regime soldiers are held in a former police station and medics treat the wounded in a farmhouse before they return to battle or are driven to hospitals.

Rows of fresh graves line a grassy, tree-covered compound abutting the barbed wire of the Turkish border.

Mohammed Quweiri, 63, pointed to the grave of his son, killed by a sniper. Next to him lay a school principal and a mosque preacher, also slain by snipers, and a rebel commander who died in an airstrike that also killed 15 others, Quweiri said.

Four graves nearby held the remains of some of the 10 people killed in another airstrike near the town's mosque.

Sitting in the dirt nearby, Sobhia Qarboulad, 55, said her brother Mohammed was among the dead. When the first missile hit near their house, he rushed to help the wounded. A second missile hit soon after and he never came back.

Since then, the family has been living in the abandoned bakery where her brother once worked. When they hear a fighter jet, they collect the children and flee to the olive groves, she said, where no roof can collapse on their heads.

"We have no money to leave and no place to go," she said. "Only God can provide protection."

As she spoke, rebels crowded around the bodies of two fighters killed that day while an old man dug a new grave.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-27-Syria-The%20Long%20War/id-516c993359fb42388a3af3e043808a53

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US consumer confidence at highest in 4? years

FILE -In this Friday, Nov. 23, 2012, file photo, Tonya Thomas, of Russellville, Ky., makes her way through the aisles at Best Buy in Bowling Green, Ky. U.S. consumer confidence rose this month to its highest level in almost five years, helped by a better outlook for hiring over the next six months. The Conference Board said Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012, that its consumer confidence index rose to 73.7 in November from 73.1 in October. Both are the best readings since February 2008. (AP Photo/Daily News, Alex Slitz)

FILE -In this Friday, Nov. 23, 2012, file photo, Tonya Thomas, of Russellville, Ky., makes her way through the aisles at Best Buy in Bowling Green, Ky. U.S. consumer confidence rose this month to its highest level in almost five years, helped by a better outlook for hiring over the next six months. The Conference Board said Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012, that its consumer confidence index rose to 73.7 in November from 73.1 in October. Both are the best readings since February 2008. (AP Photo/Daily News, Alex Slitz)

FILE -In this Friday, Nov. 23, 2012, file photo, shoppers rummage through a pile of sweaters on sale at a J.C. Penney store, in Las Vegas. U.S. consumer confidence rose this month to its highest level in almost five years, helped by a better outlook for hiring over the next six months. The Conference Board said Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2012, that its consumer confidence index rose to 73.7 in November from 73.1 in October. Both are the best readings since February 2008. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

(AP) ? U.S. consumer confidence rose this month to its highest level in almost five years, helped by a better outlook for hiring over the next six months.

The Conference Board said Tuesday that its consumer confidence index rose to 73.7 in November from 73.1 in October. Both are the best readings since February 2008.

The index is still below the level of 90 that is consistent with a healthy economy. It last reached that point in December 2007, the first month of the Great Recession. But the index has increased from the all-time low of 25.3 touched in February 2009.

Higher consumer confidence could translate into a more robust holiday shopping season and stronger economic growth. Consumer spending drives nearly 70 percent of economic activity.

The report also supported the findings of a separate survey from the University of Michigan released last week, which showed consumer sentiment at a five-year high. Still, both surveys increased at slower rates than the previous month.

Americans are growing more optimistic because they see the job market improving, the Conference Board said. Employers added 171,000 jobs in October and more jobs were created in August and September than first thought.

The Conference Board surveyed approximately 2,500 households in the first two weeks of the month. Those surveyed were asked how they felt about the economy and job market now, as well as where they see both going in six months. They were also asked if they planned to make a major purchase or take a vacation in the next six months.

The survey found that most people viewed current conditions the same as in October. But the percentage of Americans who expect more jobs to be available in the next six months rose to 20.3 percent, from 19.7 percent in October.

And the percentage of Americans who say jobs are "plentiful" rose to 11.2 percent from 10.4 percent in the previous month. That's the highest level in four years and a good sign for hiring this month.

More Americans said they plan to buy a home, an appliance or take a vacation, the survey found. About 6.9 percent said they planned to buy a home, the highest on record. But the percentage expecting to buy a car fell.

Confidence among households earning $50,000 and higher slipped to 88 from 91.7 in October. But among the poorest households, those earning less than $15,000, confidence jumped to 56.2 from 50.2.

Many of the participants in the Michigan survey said they expect the unemployment rate to drop over the next six months. Still, some expressed concerns about the "fiscal cliff," a package of sharp tax increases and spending cuts that will take effect next year unless Congress and the White House can replace them. The tax increases would leave consumers with much less money to spend.

A better housing market may also be contributing to consumers' better mood.

Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller reported Tuesday that its 20-city index of home prices rose 3 percent in September compared with the same month last year. Prices also gained 3.6 percent in the July-September quarter compared with the same quarter in 2011.

Across the nation, prices increased in 18 of 20 cities over the 12-month period.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-27-Consumer%20Confidence/id-5e68398ad79e401fb0bb276eef37a2b7

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Hold an Estate Sale to Downsize and Make Money from Your Old Crap

Hold an Estate Sale to Downsize and Make Money from Your Old Crap Contrary to popular belief, estate sales can take place when the person selling is alive and well. When done right, you can get a tidy sum for the stuff you've been meaning to get rid of but haven't gotten around to listing on Craigslist, or easily prep to downsize to a smaller apartment or home with little hassle.

Make no mistake, estate sales are for people who have more money than time to sell their stuff. Estate sale companies will take a cut of all of the sales, which can definitely add up. They will, however, come to your home, help you draft up a complete catalog of what you're selling and what's staying, and handle the arrangements of getting people to come to the auction, actually auctioning off the items for sale, collecting money, and handling the paperwork resulting from the sales. When they're all finished, your old crap is all gone and you have money in your pocket.

It's a drastic measure to be sure, but if you've been meaning to list your crap on Craigslist for years or a more sensible approach to decluttering just hasn't worked for you, it may be a good option. Hit the link below for some helpful tips from the commenters at Apartment Therapy on finding the right people to help with a sale.

How Do I Sell the Contents of My House? | Apartment Therapy

Photo by Elliott Brown.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/9aE5pthWbqY/hold-an-estate-sale-to-downsize-and-make-money-from-your-old-crap

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Hoffmann on softball, no politics involved | Hawaii 24/7

Pete Hoffmann | Special to Hawaii 24/7

Normally I write about some politically related issue that is capturing the local headlines. Permit me to change gears a little and relate a sports story.

On Nov. 15, the Hawaiian Pride Senior Softball Team won the 2012 Winter World Championships in the 70+ age group, Major League Division in Phoenix, Ariz.

Of the 18 members of the team that competed in Arizona, 14 are Big lsland residents, to include coach/player Danny Ayala, Mel Hirayama, Frank Amaral, Dave Belaski, Jack McMenimen, Mike Fontes, Herb Leite, Billy Lyman, Clyde Nishioka, Jerry Tulang, George Kodani, Travis Warner, Richard Rodero and Pete Hoffmann.

The tournament victory emphasizes several notable achievements. First, I think it attests to the success of the county?s efforts in promoting senior softball.

When I arrived on the Big Island in 1997, there were eight senior softball teams. There are currently 23 or 24 depending upon the eventual 2013 Kupuna League set up. Senior softball remains one of the county?s biggest success stories for the Department of Parks and Recreation.

Second, when the Hawaiian Pride team travels to the mainland, it regularly faces teams that represent much larger constituencies: New Mexico, Oregon, Central California, for example. We do not enjoy the relatively large pool of potential players from which others draw players.

Nevertheless, we remain very competitive in all aspects of the game, and not just in the 70+ age group.

Which leads to the third conclusion, the quality of play on the Big Island is quite good and the spirit intense. In the Phoenix tournament, four of the six games were decided in the final inning.

Exciting games are the ingredients that bring players back season after season. Big Island Senior Softball certainly confirms the validity of that observation.

Just thought you?d like to be aware that politics is not the only subject we can discuss ?

?

You might be interested in:

  1. Softball: Kohala takes eighth
  2. HI-PAL Halloween Havoc basketball tournament open for entries
  3. Softball: All isle teams out of the title run
  4. Poi Pounder Baseball Classic champions announced
  5. UH-Hilo?s Sueda is the PacWest softball player of the week

Source: http://www.hawaii247.com/2012/11/27/hoffmann-on-softball-no-politics-involved/

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Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Returning to Bellevue Hospital After Hurricane Sandy - NYTimes.com

There?s no place like home. That?s not a phrase people typically utter about their hospitals, but those were the words on everyone?s lips when we returned to Bellevue last week, after nearly a month of dislocation since the hurricane-induced evacuation at the end of October.

It was a celebratory atmosphere last Monday, when Bellevue Hospital officially reopened its doors. Colorful balloons and ?Welcome Home? T-shirts filled the atrium, as staff and patients streamed in. The relief was palpable as we marked the end of this period, Bellevue?s first sustained closure since 1736.

All was not magically renewed, of course. The damage to the operational innards of the hospital building, caused when Hurricane Sandy flooded the basement with some 10 million gallons of seawater, was such that the inpatient service will not open for months. The medicine, pediatrics and gynecology clinics reopened last week. A handful of the subspecialty clinics opened Monday, but the other clinics and the operating rooms remain scattered in hospitals across the five boroughs, an arrangement that has come to be known affectionately as the Bellevue diaspora.

More than 500 of Bellevue?s doctors and physician assistants, and hundreds of other staff members and medical students, were sent to various local hospitals. Though the evacuation during the hurricane was a dramatic event, the number of inpatients affected (500 evacuated, 275 discharged) was quite small compared with the tens of thousands of outpatients who rely on Bellevue for their medical care.

The doctors of my clinic ? internal medicine ? had set up camp at Metropolitan Hospital, another New York City public hospital, in a tiny concrete-block annex in a parking lot. The experience was humbling and disorienting for us ? perhaps a taste of what life is like for our patients as they navigate the health care system in normal times.

I shared a cubicle with two other doctors and a stretcher overflowing with a dozen winter coats and bags. We three squeezed around an adjustable tray table, the kind bed-bound patients use for meals, where a single laptop for accessing medical records was set up. Ten residents and physician assistants shimmied in and out of the narrow space to discuss cases.

Patients thronged the makeshift clinic, desperate to renew medications, follow-up on X-rays, blood tests and consultations and continue evaluations initiated before the storm. At times the front door could not be opened because of the crush of bodies.

No one was complaining, of course: We were grateful for the space, as were our patients. Our hosts were welcoming beyond expectation, despite the strain. But logistical hurdles were legion.

For instance, electronic medical records. To generate prescriptions or order blood tests, we had to use Metropolitan?s system. This required the cumbersome clerical bottleneck of first registering these thousands of Bellevue patients into it. But we also needed to retrieve the medical records from the Bellevue system to figure out which medications patients had been taking for what conditions, the results of important blood tests, and other information vital to treatment.

So for each patient, we toggled back and forth on our single computer between two medical record systems and two different medical record numbers. The systems were similar enough that ? in a moment?s glance ? it wasn?t always obvious which system you were in, but different enough for reflexive habits to jam up the works. And then there was always the nerve-racking worry that this jiggling back and forth between systems could introduce errors along the way.

On top of this was the confusion of trying to figure out where our various medical services had ended up. Hand-scrawled messages were taped to our cubicle wall: Psychiatry was at Metropolitan; the Cancer Center at Woodhull Hospital in Brooklyn. Dermatology was seeing patients at Gouverneur Healthcare Services in Manhattan, but only on Wednesdays and Thursdays. Rheumatology was available by phone. Dialysis was at Jacobi in the Bronx. The surgeons were divided up between Harlem Hospital, Metropolitan, Gouverneur and Woodhull. Internal medicine was seeing outpatients at Metropolitan and Gouverneur, but also at Elmhurst, in Queens, and staffing two evacuation shelters 24/7. Internal medicine teams were also covering inpatients at nine different hospitals. But many of these were moving targets; each day a few locations were crossed out and new ones added.

Morale, though, was surprisingly buoyant. The Metropolitan staff members were superb and went out of their way to help us. A colleague who was sent to Jacobi sent me a photo of the chief of medicine there handing out welcome bags of snacks to the Bellevue medical residents. The chief made sure the Bellevue team had its own conference room, and installed a water cooler and microwave to make life easier.

The first time I ran into one of my patients at Metropolitan, we practically knocked each other over in a bear hug. We were so relieved to have found each other; it was almost like a family reunion. We commiserated about our respective experiences post-hurricane, living without electricity, water, heat and phone. She was nearly out of her blood pressure medications and worried that she wouldn?t be able to get more.

It has been an exhausting and challenging time for all of the Bellevue staff, but there were also unexpected positives. ?At my age,? confided one of my colleagues who had been posted to Queens Hospital, ?any change is reinvigorating and maybe even rejuvenating.?

Most of us have spent years figuring out the kinks and shortcuts in the complicated warren of Bellevue. Now we attempted to replicate those procedures in unfamiliar hospital buildings, stumbling through new medical records systems and trying to find the point persons for IT, phlebotomy, pharmacy, and how to get X-rays, chemotherapy and coffee.

Despite the generosity of our hosts, most of us felt unsettled throughout this period. The sense of displacement was pervasive and distinctly uncomfortable. But if every change is a learning experience, this was an important one for the medical staff. Feeling lost, confused, unsure what to do or where to go is not too dissimilar to the experience of being ill. Navigating illness ? like navigating a post-hurricane displacement ? is disorienting, frightening and intensely disrupting.

For all the disquieting feelings the doctors experienced, the patients suffered the brunt of the dislocation. By the time we saw them, many had the exhausted look of refugees. It had taken days after the hurricane, sometimes more than a week, to figure out where to find us. Once arriving, they waited hours, navigating a confusing, foreign system. They had missed days of medication during the storm and its aftermath, and were worried about their scheduled colonoscopies, CT scans, cataract surgeries, physical therapy sessions. Would any of these take place? Frustratingly, we did not always have answers for them.

Bellevue continues the arduous cleanup and repair. Complete reconstitution will probably not occur until the new year, and many doctors will remain deployed at their host hospitals until then.

Those of us who were able to return to Bellevue in the first wave were deliriously grateful to treat our first patients ?at home.? But we would do well to hang on to some of the unsettling feeling of displacement. It may prove to be an unexpected gift of empathy for our patients? experiences.


This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: November 27, 2012

An earlier version of a picture caption with this article misstated the part of the power system at Bellevue Hospital that failed during Hurricane Sandy. It was the fuel pumps for the backup generators that failed when the basement flooded, not the backup generators themselves.

Source: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/11/26/a-return-to-bellevue-after-the-storm/

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Mervyn King says Carney an outstanding successor

DEAR ABBY: I'm a 51-year-old man. Three years ago, my first and only marriage ended after 20 years. Over the past two years, I have been in a wonderful relationship with a very bright woman, "Toni," who told me she had been married twice before.A year ago, her job required that she move out of state, but we have successfully maintained the long-distance relationship with frequent visits and daily phone calls.A few days ago, I learned by chance that she was briefly married a third time while she was in her early 20s. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mervyn-king-says-carney-outstanding-successor-161603709--business.html

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Early Oscar Buzz: 'Zero Dark Thirty' And 'Les Miserables' Finally Screen

Two of the awards season's biggest hold-outs, "Zero Dark Thirty" and "Les Misérables," finally screened over the holiday weekend, and any prognosticators who put big money on both films are probably feeling pretty proud of themselves today. Tom Hooper had just finished the final cut of "Les Mis" when he presented it in New York [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2012/11/26/zero-dark-thirty-les-miserables-oscar-buzz/

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Monday, 26 November 2012

SpaceX founder Musk eyes 'self-sustaining' Mars civilization

In Musk's vision, the ambitious Mars settlement program would start with a pioneering group of fewer than 10 people, who would journey to the Red Planet aboard a huge reusable rocket powered by liquid oxygen and methane.

By Rob Coppinger,?SPACE.com / November 26, 2012

This still from a SpaceX mission concept video shows a Dragon space capsule landing on the surface of Mars. SpaceX's Dragon is a privately built space capsule to carry unmanned payloads, and eventually astronauts, into space.

SpaceX

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Elon Musk, the billionaire founder and CEO of the private spaceflight company SpaceX, wants to help establish a Mars colony of up to 80,000 people by ferrying explorers to the Red Planet for perhaps $500,000 a trip.

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In Musk's vision, the ambitious?Mars settlement?program would start with a pioneering group of fewer than 10 people, who would journey to the Red Planet aboard a huge reusable rocket powered by liquid oxygen and methane.

"At?Mars, you can start a self-sustaining civilization and grow it into something really big," Musk told an audience at the Royal Aeronautical Society in London on Friday (Nov. 16). Musk was there to talk about his business plans, and to receive the Society?s gold medal for his contribution to the commercialization of space.

Mars pioneers

Accompanying the founders of the new?Mars colony?would be large amounts of equipment, including machines to produce fertilizer, methane and oxygen from Mars? atmospheric nitrogen and carbon dioxide and the planet's subsurface water ice.

The Red Planet pioneers would also take construction materials to build transparent domes, which when pressurized with Mars? atmospheric CO2 could grow Earth crops in Martian soil. As the Mars colony became more self sufficient, the big rocket would start to transport more people and fewer supplies and equipment. [Future Visions of Human Spaceflight]

Musk?s architecture for this human Mars exploration effort does not employ cyclers, reusable spacecraft that would travel back and forth constantly between the Red Planet and Earth ? at least not at first

"Probably not a Mars cycler; the thing with the cyclers is, you need a lot of them," Musk told SPACE.com. "You have to have propellant to keep things aligned as [Mars and Earth?s] orbits aren?t [always] in the same plane. In the beginning you won?t have cyclers."

Musk also ruled out SpaceX's?Dragon capsule, which the company is developing to ferry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit, as the spacecraft that would land colonists on the Red Planet. When asked by SPACE.com what vehicle would be used, he said, "I think you just land the entire thing."

Asked if the "entire thing" is the huge new?reusable rocket?? which is rumored to bear the acronymic name MCT, short for Mass Cargo Transport or Mars Colony Transport ? Musk said, "Maybe."

Musk has been thinking about what his colonist-carrying spacecraft would need, whatever it ends up being. He reckons the oxygen concentration inside should be 30 to 40 percent, and he envisions using the spacecraft?s liquid water store as a barrier between the Mars pioneers and the sun.

A $500,000 ticket

Musk?s $500,000 ticket price for a Mars trip was derived from what he thinks is affordable.

"The ticket price needs to be low enough that most people in advanced countries, in their mid-forties or something like that, could put together enough money to make the trip," he said, comparing the purchase to buying a house in California. [Photos: The First Space Tourists]

He also estimated that of the eight billion humans that will be living on Earth by the time the colony is possible, perhaps one in 100,000 would be prepared to go. That equates to potentially 80,000 migrants.

Musk figures the colony program ? which he wants to be a collaboration between government and private enterprise ? would end up costing about $36 billion. He arrived at that number by estimating that a colony that costs 0.25 percent or 0.5 percent of a nation?s gross domestic product (GDP) would be considered acceptable.

The United States' GDP in 2010 was $14.5 trillion; 0.25 percent of $14.5 trillion is $36 billion. If all 80,000 colonists paid $500,000 per seat for their Mars trip, $40 billion would be raised.

"Some money has to be spent on establishing a base on Mars. It?s about getting the basic fundamentals in place," Musk said. "That was true of the English colonies [in the Americas]; it took a significant expense to get things started. But once there are regular Mars flights, you can get the cost down to half a million dollars for someone to move to Mars. Then I think there are enough people who would buy that to have it be a reasonable business case."

The big reusable rocket

The fully reusable rocket that Musk wants to take colonists to Mars is an evolution of SpaceX's Falcon 9 booster, which launches Dragon.

"It?s going to be much bigger [than Falcon 9], but I don?t think we?re quite ready to state the payload. We?ll speak about that next year," Musk said, emphasizing that only fully reusable rockets and spacecraft would keep the ticket price for Mars migration as low as $500,000.

SpaceX is already testing what Musk calls a next-generation, reusable Falcon 9 rocket that can take off vertically and land vertically. The prototype,?called Grasshopper, is a Falcon 9 first stage with landing legs.

Grasshoper has made two short flights. The first was on Sept. 21 and reached a height of 6 feet (2 meters); the second test, on Nov. 1, was to a height of 17.7 feet (5.4 m). A planned milestone for the Grasshopper project is to reach an altitude of 100 feet (30 m). [Grasshopper Rocket's 2-Story Test Flight (Video)]

"Over the next few months, we?ll gradually increase the altitude and speed," Musk said. "I do think there probably will be some craters along the way; we?ll be very lucky if there are no craters. Vertical landing is an extremely important breakthrough ? extreme, rapid reusability. It?s as close to aircraft-like dispatch capability as one can achieve."

Musk wants to have a reusable Falcon 9 first stage, which uses Grasshopper technology, come back from orbit in "the next year or two." He then wants to use this vertical-landing technology for Falcon 9?s upper stage.

Musk hopes to have a fully reusable version of Falcon 9 in five or six years, but he acknowledged that those could be "famous last words."

A rocket stepping stone

Another?stepping stone toward the planned reusable Mars rocket is SpaceX?s?Falcon Heavy launcher. With a first flight planned for next year from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, the Heavy is a Falcon 9 that has two Falcon 9 first stages bolted on either side.

Musk expects the Falcon Heavy to launch from Florida's Cape Canaveral eventually. This triple-first-stage rocket will be able to put 116,600 pounds (53,000 kilograms) into a 124-mile (200 kilometers) low-Earth orbit. But the Falcon Heavy is still much smaller than Musk?s fully reusable Mars rocket, which will also employ a new engine.

While Musk declines to state what the Mars rocket?s payload capability will be, he does say it will use a new staged combustion cycle engine called Raptor. The cycle involves two steps. Propellant ? the fuel and oxidizer ? is ignited in pre-burners to produce hot high-pressure gases that help pump propellant into the engine?s combustion chamber. The hot gases are then directed into the same chamber to aid in the combustion of the propellants.

Because Raptor is a staged combustion engine ? like the main engines of NASA's now-retired?space shuttle fleet?? it is expected to be far more efficient than the open-cycle Merlin engines used by the Falcon 9.

While the Falcon 9?s engines use liquid oxygen (LOX) and kerosene, Raptor will use LOX and methane. Musk explained that "the energy cost of methane is the lowest, and it has a slight ISP [specific impulse] advantage over kerosene and doesn?t have any of the bad aspects of hydrogen." (Hydrogen is difficult to store at cryogenic temperatures, makes metal brittle and is very flammable.)

Follow SPACE.com on Twitter?@Spacedotcom. We're also on?Facebook?&?Google+.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2hg39TVwXMI/SpaceX-founder-Musk-eyes-self-sustaining-Mars-civilization

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DocScanner S now available on Android

DocScanner S

DocScanner, an app that has over 1.5 million downloads on the iOS platform, has just launched onto Android. The basic idea behind these types of apps is simple -- scan pretty much any type of document, business card or receipt and you now have a digital copy of it. Nowadays we don't want to deal with paper more than we have to, and if there's a simple way to manage it electronically we'll take it.

DocScanner S is now available for free in the Google Play Store at the link above. There's also a paid version for $3 if you are so inclined.

Source: DocScanner



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/AA6nsrEJ73w/story01.htm

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Sunday, 25 November 2012

Austin Real Estate Secrets: Tim's Top 10 Rules of Real Estate in 2012

Rule 1.?

Experience is truly measured by the number of closed transactions during the past year--not measured by one's "Years in the business".
A Realtor's experience is only as good as the deals they have done during the past 6-12 months. Just because a Realtor has "been in the business for the past 25 years", does not mean that they have sold more than a few houses a year or that they know and understand this current market.

Rule 2.

You won't get a better deal by going directly to the listing agent.

If you are buying a home and hope that you can negotiate 3% off of the top by going directly to the listing agent--you should understand why this does not work in Texas. The commission for both Realtors has already been written into the listing agreement between the seller and listing agent and if you go into a transaction unprotected without a Buyer's Agent--the listing agent will actually be "paid twice"--their commission will potentially increase as much as double* when there is no other Realtor involved--regardless of how much is negotiated off of the price of the house.? Unfortunately, when you do this, you get ZERO representation and almost no information that you should be getting if you had a Realtor represent you. An experienced buyer is never as experienced as a Realtor who buys and sells houses all day, every day, 25-30 times a year. A good Buyer's Agent can tell you about things about a particular property--things that the listing agent can't tell, because the listing agent is representing the seller--exclusively. The Texas Real Estate Commission is very clear in explaining the roles of the Buyer's Agent and the Seller's Agent. A Realtor either represents the Buyer or the Seller--never both at the same time for the same property. Red Flags that a Buyer's Agent may see in a home, property or locations are often not what shows up on a Seller's Disclosure about the property. Because the Seller's Agent represents the seller, there are some things that he may believe to be true, but just can't tell you, like unverified potential problems with the foundation, roof or other features of the home. And there may be things about the area that the listing agent can't tell you, but you should know. If there is no certified or professional documentation for the potential concern, it is not something that the seller is likely going to disclose and the listing agent can't tell you what he does not know to be true about undisclosed potential issues like an old roof or AC system**. This would not be in his client's best interest. And you are not his client.

?

Rule 3.?

Every Market is different.

Every state, city, community and street are different in the business of Real Estate. Generalizations don't work and what is happening in one city or area has nothing to do with what is happening in another. This is true of appreciation, growth, foreclosures, short sales and virtually every aspect of the real estate process.?

Rule 4.

Living in a community does not make someone the real estate expert.
The "business" of Real Estate is far more than knowing where the community pool is located and which neighbors are the ones that people talk about. Everyone can figure out the community map and local "gossip". Having an expert perspective on a community requires real-time experience and an understanding of the local real estate business.

Rule 5.

Building or buying new requires just as much experience.
New homes are a unique corner of the Real Estate Market and your Realtor should be well versed in all the normal aspects of Real Estate (community, comps, growth, schools, etc), and the Realtor should understand Time to Market appreciation of new communities, Construction, and when a new home builder is most likely to negotiate on a particular house and to what degree. It's a whole different ball game and the strategies are different out of necessity.?

Rule 6.?

Every deal is unique.
Having as much information as possible on the history of a home, the seller and what is going on around a specific property is critical to strategic negotiations. Since Texas is a "Non-Disclosure State", published public information is limited to the guesstimates that the county uses to determine tax value in a zip code, not actual sold sales data from the MLS. The county does not have access to MLS sold data and brokers are prohibited from publishing this data publicly.

Rule 7.?

Buyers determine Market Value for a home--not the Listing Agent. A Realtor that loves your home and is excited about your property will not affect either market value or the appraised value of the home. Buyers and their agents are smart. Pricing a home above market value only prolongs the inevitable re-pricing game.

Rule 8.

The Listing Agent does not sell your home.
A robust listing of a home is a function of Marketing and Online Advertising--not Salesmanship. Listing Agents almost never bring "the buyer" to your home and the Listing Agent and their brokerage will almost never be the one that sells your home--no matter how good they feel they are at "selling". The internet has changed this dimension of the business forever.

Rule 9.

An experienced Realtor should always know more.

More about the history of the house, community and area. More about what has sold during the past 6-12 months. More about what is selling in other areas of town and why. More about financial alternatives, reputable inspectors, the contract documents, title and all aspects of the end-to-end Real Estate contracting process. Your Realtor should be a business person who represents your best interests in a Real Estate transaction. Ask him lots of questions. Lean on him. Find out what he knows that you should know before you buy your next house.

Rule 10.

See Rule Number 9.

Disclaimers:

*I am not a real estate attorney and nothing written here should be construed as legal advise or legal counsel. If you have legal questions about any real estate transaction or property, you should seek the advise of a Texas real estate attorney.

**When speaking of commissions and fees, the actual commission rates that a listing agent has contractually negotiated with a seller to sell his/her property is negotiable at the time of the agreement to list the property for sale. There are no set amounts that sellers and listing agent must adhere to when a property is listed for sale.

Source: http://austinrealestatesecrets.blogspot.com/2012/11/tims-top-10-rules-of-real-estate-in-2012.html

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'Dallas' star Larry Hagman dies in Texas

In this Thursday, Oct. 9, 2008 photo, actor Larry Hagman listens to a reporter's question while visiting the Southfork Ranch in Parker, Texas, made famous in the television show "Dallas." Actor Larry Hagman, who for more than a decade played villainous patriarch JR Ewing in the TV soap Dallas, has died at the age of 81, his family said Saturday Nov. 24, 2012(AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

In this Thursday, Oct. 9, 2008 photo, actor Larry Hagman listens to a reporter's question while visiting the Southfork Ranch in Parker, Texas, made famous in the television show "Dallas." Actor Larry Hagman, who for more than a decade played villainous patriarch JR Ewing in the TV soap Dallas, has died at the age of 81, his family said Saturday Nov. 24, 2012(AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

This 1981 file photo provided by CBS shows Larry Hagman in character as J.R. Ewing in the television series "Dallas." Actor Larry Hagman, who for more than a decade played villainous patriarch JR Ewing in the TV soap Dallas, has died at the age of 81, his family said Saturday Nov. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/CBS, file)

FILE - This 1967 file photo shows Barbara Eden, left, and Larry Hagman in a scene from the television show "I Dream of Jeannie." Actor Larry Hagman, who for more than a decade played villainous patriarch JR Ewing in the TV soap Dallas, has died at the age of 81, his family said Saturday Nov. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/NBC, file)

FILE - In this Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2003 file photo, actor Larry Hagman sits in front of a poster of himself during a news conference in Berlin during a tour to promote the German translation of his autobiography. Actor Larry Hagman, who for more than a decade played villainous patriarch JR Ewing in the TV soap Dallas, has died at the age of 81, his family said Saturday Nov. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

FILE - In this Nov. 4, 2011 file photo, actor Larry Hagman pauses during an interview on location during the filming for the upcoming new television show "Dallas" in Dallas. Actor Larry Hagman, who for more than a decade played villainous patriarch JR Ewing in the TV soap Dallas, has died at the age of 81, his family said Saturday Nov. 24, 2012. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez, File)

(AP) ? Larry Hagman, whose predatory oil baron J.R. Ewing on television's long-running nighttime soap opera "Dallas" became a symbol for 1980s greed and coaxed forth a Texas-sized gusher of TV ratings, has died. He was 81.

Hagman, who returned as J.R. in a new edition of "Dallas" this year, passed away Friday afternoon due to complications from his battle with cancer, according to a statement from the family provided to The Associated Press by Warner Bros., producer of "Dallas."

"Larry was back in his beloved hometown of Dallas, re-enacting the iconic role he loved the most," the family said. "Larry's family and closest friends had joined him in Dallas for the Thanksgiving holiday."

Linda Gray, his on-screen wife in the original series and the sequel, was with Hagman when he died in a Dallas hospital, said her publicist, Jeffrey Lane.

"He brought joy to everyone he knew. He was creative, generous, funny, loving and talented, and I will miss him enormously. He was an original and lived life to the fullest," Gray said in a statement.

Hagman was diagnosed in 1992 with cirrhosis of the liver and acknowledged that he had drank heavily for years. In 1995, a malignant tumor was discovered on his liver and he underwent a transplant.

Years before "Dallas," Hagman had gained TV fame as a nice guy with the fluffy 1965-70 NBC comedy "I Dream of Jeannie," in which he played Capt. Tony Nelson, an astronaut whose life is disrupted when he finds a comely genie, portrayed by Barbara Eden, and takes her home to live with him.

He also starred in two short-lived sitcoms, "The Good Life" (NBC, 1971-72) and "Here We Go Again" (ABC, 1973). His film work included well-regarded performances in "The Group," ''Harry and Tonto" and "Primary Colors."

But it was Hagman's masterful portrayal of the charmingly loathsome J.R. that brought him his greatest stardom. The CBS serial drama about the Ewing clan and those in their orbit aired from April 1978 to May 1991.

The "Who shot J.R.?" story twist, in which Hagman's character was nearly murdered in a cliffhanger episode, fueled international speculation and millions of dollars in betting-parlour wagers. It also helped give the series a ratings record for the time.

When the answer was revealed in a November 1980 episode, an average 41 million viewers tuned in to make "Dallas" the second most-watched entertainment show of all time, trailing only the "MASH" finale in 1983 with 50 million viewers.

It was J.R.'s sister-in-law, Kristin (Mary Crosby) who plugged him ? he had made her pregnant, then threatened to frame her as a prostitute unless she left town ? but others had equal motivation.

Hagman played Ewing as a bottomless well of corruption with a charming grin: a business cheat and a faithless husband who tried to get his alcoholic wife, Sue Ellen (Linda Gray), institutionalized.

"I know what I want on J.R.'s tombstone," Hagman said in 1988. "It should say: 'Here lies upright citizen J.R. Ewing. This is the only deal he ever lost.'"

On Friday night, Victoria Principal, who co-starred in the original series, recalled Hagman as "bigger than life, on-screen and off. He is unforgettable, and irreplaceable, to millions of fans around the world, and in the hearts of each of us, who was lucky enough to know and love him."

Ten episodes of the new edition of "Dallas" aired this past summer and proved a hit for TNT. Filming had been completed for five of the episodes for the second season and work on the sixth episode was in progress, the network said.

There was no immediate comment from Warner or TNT on how the series would deal with Hagman's loss.

In 2006, Hagman did a guest shot on FX's drama series "Nip/Tuck," playing a macho business mogul. He also got new exposure in recent years with the DVD releases of "I Dream of Jeannie" and "Dallas."

The Fort Worth, Texas, native was the son of singer-actress Mary Martin, who starred in such classics as "South Pacific" and "Peter Pan." Martin was still in her teens when he was born in 1931 during her marriage to attorney Ben Hagman.

As a youngster, Hagman gained a reputation for mischief-making as he was bumped from one private school to another. He made a stab at New York theater in the early 1950s, then served in the Air Force from 1952-56 in England.

While there, he met and married young Swedish designer Maj Axelsson. The couple had two children, Preston and Heidi, and were longtime residents of the Malibu beach colony that is home to many celebrities.

Hagman returned to acting and found work in the theater and in such TV series as "The U.S. Steel Hour," ''The Defenders" and "Sea Hunt." His first continuing role was as lawyer Ed Gibson on the daytime serial "The Edge of Night" (1961-63).

He called his 2001 memoir "Hello Darlin': Tall (and Absolutely True) Tales about My Life."

"I didn't put anything in that I thought was going to hurt someone or compromise them in any way," he told The Associated Press at the time.

After his transplant, he became an advocate for organ donation and volunteered at a hospital to help frightened patients.

"I counsel, encourage, meet them when they come in for their operations, and after," he said in 1996. "I try to offer some solace, like 'Don't be afraid, it will be a little uncomfortable for a brief time, but you'll be OK.' "

He also was an anti-smoking activist who took part in "Great American Smoke-Out" campaigns.

___

AP Television Writer Frazier Moore in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-11-24-Obit-Hagman/id-735bb672c0b04c1cae9024564161b13d

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Little progress in "fiscal cliff" talks, senior lawmaker says

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers have made little progress in the last 10 days toward a compromise to avoid the harsh tax increases and government spending cuts scheduled for January 1, a senior Democratic senator said on Sunday.

The United States is on course to slash its budget deficit nearly in half next year. Closing the gap that quickly, which in Washington is referred to as going over a "fiscal cliff," could easily trigger a recession.

"Unfortunately, for the last 10 days, with the House and Congress gone for the Thanksgiving recess ... much progress hasn't been made," Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Senate Democrat, told ABC's "This Week" program.

A deadline is looming. Absent action by lawmakers and President Barack Obama, roughly $600 billion in tax increases and spending cuts will start to hit households and companies in early January.

Republicans and Obama's Democrats are at an impasse over the president's wish to raise income tax rates on the wealthiest Americans, which Republicans say would hurt job creation.

Republicans also want to cut spending on social programs more than Democrats say they will accept.

Durbin said Democrats are willing to allow small changes to parts of these entitlement programs, including public health insurance programs for the elderly and poor, but the Social Security government pension program should not be on the table.

"Bring entitlement reform into the conversation. Social Security, set (it) aside," Durbin said.

(Reporting by Jason Lange; editing by Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/little-progress-fiscal-cliff-talks-senior-lawmaker-says-161636953--business.html

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Saturday, 24 November 2012

Ducks rebound with 48-24 win over Beavers

CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) ? Kenjon Barner ran for 198 yards and two touchdowns despite leaving the game for a time with an injury and No. 5 Oregon defeated No. 16 Oregon State 48-24 in the Civil War on Saturday, keeping alive the Ducks' hopes for a spot in the Pac-12 title game and even an outside chance at the national championship.

De'Anthony Thomas, who helped picked up the slack while Barner was on the sidelines, ran for 122 yards and three scores for the Ducks (11-1, 8-1).

After Oregon's undefeated season was thwarted by a 17-14 overtime loss to Stanford last weekend, the Ducks had to wait for UCLA's game against the Cardinal later Saturday to see who would be headed to the conference championship game. Both Oregon and Stanford started the day with one conference loss in the league's northern division.

It was Oregon's fifth straight victory in the 116-game rivalry series with the Beavers.

While the Civil War is normally the season finale for both teams, Oregon State (8-3, 6-3) will host Nicholls State next Saturday in a matchup that was supposed to open the season but was put off when Hurricane Isaac bore down on the Colonels' Thibodaux, La., campus.

The Beavers will have to wait to find out where they're headed for a bowl game, but already their season can be counted a success after they went just 3-9 last year.

Barner appeared to hurt either his abdomen or ribs late in the first half and headed to the locker room. He returned after the break, but much of the work went to Thomas until he returned on a scoring drive that made it 41-17 early in the fourth quarter.

Oregon redshirt freshman Marcus Mariota threw for 140 yards and a score, and also ran for 85 yards and a touchdown.

His Oregon State counterpart, Sean Mannion, threw for 311 yards and a touchdown but was intercepted four times. Storm Woods rushed for 70 yards and two scores.

Mannion started the first four games of the season, throwing seven touchdowns and averaging 339 yards, but injured his left knee and required surgery. Vaz, who hadn't started since high school, took over and helped the Beavers to win in the next two games, and later became the team's starter.

But Vaz sprained his left ankle in the final moments of a loss to Stanford two weeks ago, and sat out last Saturday during Oregon State's 64-14 victory at home over California. Mannion got the nod for the Civil War.

A 47,249 fans attended the game, setting Reser Stadium record.

Oregon put the Stanford loss behind them by striking quickly on their first possession with Mariota's 42-yard keeper. The touchdown drive took just 1:46, but the Ducks' 2-point try to cap it off failed.

The Beavers took a 7-6 lead on Woods' 7-yard touchdown run, but the Ducks answered on the next series with Thomas' 2-yard TD dash. Barner added a 1-yard scoring run before he was hurt.

Stanford held Barner to 66 yards the week before, but he had 141 yards before halftime against the Beavers. With his first 15 yards rushing Saturday, he moved past Derek Loville (1986-89) for second on Oregon's career rushing list.

Trevor Romaine kicked a 36-yard field goal to narrow it to 20-10 at halftime and the Beavers pulled closer with Woods' 2-yard scoring run on their first series of the second half.

It was all Ducks the rest of the way. Thomas scored on a 6-yard run to extend Oregon's lead to 27-17, before the Ducks capitalized on a Beaver fumble that led to Thomas' 29-yard touchdown run. Barner returned with his 1-yard run and Mariota found B.J. Kelley with a 2-yeard scoring pass.

Mannion hit Micah Hatfield with a 6-yard touchdown pass with 20 seconds left for the final margin.

The Ducks hold a 60-46-10 advantage in the Civil War which dates back to 1894 and is the seventh-most contested rivalry in the nation.

It was the fourth time that both teams were ranked for the Civil War. The last was in 2009, when Oregon was No. 7 and Oregon State was No. 13. That game was dubbed the "War of the Roses" because the winner was guaranteed a Rose Bowl berth. Oregon won 37-33.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ducks-rebound-48-24-win-over-beavers-234357960--spt.html

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Leonid meteor shower: When and where to watch

Leonid meteor shower: The meteor shower peak will come tonight (3 a.m. E.T.? Saturday). The Leonid meteor shower is a product of the Earth passing through the tail of the Tempel-Tuttle comet.

By Joe Rao,?Space.com / November 16, 2012

Colorful streaks of Leonid meteors are seen in the sky over suburban Beijing in 2001. The Leonid meteor shower will peak Saturday Nov. 17 at 3 a.m. E.T. in the US..

(AP Photo/Xinhua, Li Jundong)

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This weekend brings us the return of the famous Leonid meteor shower, a meteor display that has brought great anticipation and excitement to night sky watchers around the world.

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This will be a favorable year to look for the Leonid meteor shower because the moon will be only crescent and will have set in the west long before the constellation Leo begins to rise into the night sky. The Leonids appear to radiate out of Leo (hence their name), and with the moon out of the sky completely, viewing conditions could be perfect for stargazers with clear weather and dark skies.

The Leonid meteors are debris shed into space by the comet Tempel-Tuttle, which swings through the inner solar system at intervals of 33 years. With each visit the comet leaves behind a trail of dust in its wake. Much of the comet?s old dusty trails litter the mid-November part of Earth?s orbit and the Earth glides through this debris zone every year.?

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Occasionally, Earth passes directly through an unusually concentrated dust trail, or filament, which can spark a meteor storm resulting in thousands of meteors per hour. That?s what happened in 1999, 2001 and 2002.? Since the Tempel-Tuttle comet passed the sun in 1998, it was in those years immediately following its passage that the Leonids put on their best show.?

But now, the comet and its dense trails of dust have all receded far outside Earth's orbit and back into the outer regions of the solar system. So odds are that there is little, if any chance of any unusual meteor activity. [Photographer Spots Early Leonid Meteors (Video)]

Peak times to see the Leonids

In the 2012 Observer?s Handbook of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, meteor experts Margaret Campbell-Brown and Peter Brown, indicate that this year?s peak activity should occur on Saturday morning, Nov. 17, at about 3 a.m. ET (0800 GMT). This is the moment when the Earth will be passing closest to the orbit of the long-departed comet, and when our planet seemingly is most likely to encounter some residual comet material. This time is highly favorable for North Americans, especially those in the eastern United States and eastern Canada. [Top 10 Leonid Meteor Shower Facts]

But while Leonid rates are unpredictable, it is unlikely that more than 10 to 20 meteors per hour may be seen this year.

Other meteor researchers, however, such as Jeremie Vaubaillon of France, and ?Mikhail Maslovof Russia have examined Leonid prospects for this year and also suggest watching for some meteor activity three days later, on Tuesday morning, Nov. 20.?

View Vaubaillon?s depiction of Earth?s track through the meteor stream. View Maslov?s website on the 2012 Leonids here.

For example: Sometime around 1 a.m. EST (0600 GMT), the Earth may interact with material that was shed by comet Tempel-Tuttle back in the year 1400. But at best, only about 15 to20 Leonids per hour may be seen.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/HYJVJxK_DwA/Leonid-meteor-shower-When-and-where-to-watch

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