Saturday, December 31, 2011

Hope reigns as US rings in 2012, after dud 2011

Pedestrians pass police vans in Times Square as city police officials begin ramping up security before Saturday's New Years Eve celebrations, Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, in New York. Behind the scenes, the police meticulously map out how to control crowds that can swell to 1 million while also preparing for potential terror threats. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Pedestrians pass police vans in Times Square as city police officials begin ramping up security before Saturday's New Years Eve celebrations, Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, in New York. Behind the scenes, the police meticulously map out how to control crowds that can swell to 1 million while also preparing for potential terror threats. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

The Times Square New Year's Eve Ball rises to the top of it's 135 foot spire, Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, in New York. A crowd cheered as the ball dropped in a dress rehearsal around noon Friday as preparations continued for New York's big welcome party for 2012. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Workers inflate balloons at the One Times Square building in preparation for the Times Square New Year's Eve celebration, Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Workers handle the massive cables attached to the Times Square New Year's Eve Ball as it drops from it's perch atop its 135 foot ascension spire, Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, in New York. A crowd cheered as the ball dropped in a dress rehearsal around noon Friday as preparations continued for New York's big welcome party for 2012. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Workers inflate balloons at the One Times Square building in preparation for the Times Square New Year's Eve celebration, Friday, Dec. 30, 2011, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Times Square was awash in hopeful sentiments as it prepared to welcome hordes of New Year's Eve revelers looking to cast off a rough year and cheer their way to something better in 2012.

For all of the holiday's bittersweet potential, New York City always treats it like a big party ? albeit one that, for a decade now, has taken place under the watchful eye of a massive security force.

Pessimism has no place on Broadway. Not this week, anyway. The masses of tourists who began streaming through the square Friday for a glimpse of the crystal-paneled ball that drops at midnight Saturday were there to kiss, pose for silly snapshots and gawk at the stages being prepared for performers like Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber. Glum wasn't on the agenda, even for those whose 2011 ended on a sour note.

"2012 is going to be a better year. It has to be," said Fred Franke, 53, who was visiting the city with his family even after losing his job in military logistics this month at a Honeywell International division in Jacksonville, Fla.

And here at the "Crossroads of the World," reminders of a trying 2011 around the globe could be seen in the multi-national faces of awe-struck visitors.

Asked how his 2011 went, a Japanese tourist who gave his name as Nari didn't know enough English to put it into words, so he whipped open his phone and displayed pictures he had taken of damage wrought by the earthquake and tsunami that ravaged the island nation and his home city of Sendai.

"Not a good year," he said. Then he smiled and added that things are now much better.

Moments after he spoke, the crowd oohed and cheered as workers lit the ball and put it through a test run, 400 feet above the street. The sphere, now decorated with 3,000 Waterford crystal triangles, has been dropping to mark the new year since 1907, long before television made it a national tradition.

"Not to be corny, but I think the American ideal is to be optimistic. It's in our character," said Sajari Hume, 22, of New York, whose own 2011 wasn't all that bad. He joined the Army National Guard, found a sense of purpose he hadn't had before, and is now planning on going to school and feeling pretty good about the future.

"I think we're at a turning point. People want something to look forward to. And what better place to celebrate that possibility than right here," he said, pausing to accept the well wishes of a group of visiting tourists from London, who stopped to shake his hand after seeing his fatigues.

Other tourists posed with police officers, of which there were many. Port Authority police officers beefed up security checkpoints at the city's bridges and tunnels in anticipation of the celebration. The New York Police Department's plans for protecting the city from any terror attack included sending 1,500 rookie officers to Times Square, where hundreds of thousands of revelers pack into closely-watched pens, ringed by barricades, stretched over 17 blocks. Officers, some heavily armed, others wearing radiation detectors and some blending into the crowd in street clothes, will also watch from rooftops and helicopters.

Cautious hope was the watchword elsewhere, too.

In New Orleans, crowds in the French Quarter were starting to build Friday, with New Year's visitors rubbing elbows with college football fans flocking here for Tuesday's Sugar Bowl matchup between Michigan and Virginia Tech.

"People are tired of being stressed and poor," said David Kittrell, a glass gallery owner from Dallas visiting the Crescent City for its New Year's celebrations with his wife, Barbara. The couple has endured a rough few years, as the recession cut into their sales. But they said business had been getting better.

Several people preparing to celebrate the holiday told the AP that they would usher in the New Year hoping the U.S. Congress would become a more cooperative place. Some talked about their hopes for the presidential election. Others said they hoped to hold on to their job, or find a new one to replace one they'd lost.

An Associated Press-GfK poll conducted Dec. 8-12 found that 62 percent of Americans are optimistic that the nation's fortunes would improve in 2012, and 78 percent hopeful that their own family would have a better year. Most wrote off 2011 as a dud.

Gina Aragones, of suburban Chicago, says she has a simple reason for being optimistic about 2012: It can't be any worse. In 2011, complications from gallbladder surgery kept her from working. That led to her being laid off from her job as a clerk. The cascade chased her from her Chicago home to less expensive accommodations more than an hour northwest of the city.

"I'm excited to do away with 2011, I'll tell you that," Aragones said as she readied to spend New Year's Eve at home with her husband and two children, ages 13 and 9, dining on a seafood feast.

"I could cry every day," she said. "But I don't think that's going to help my children, help the mood in the home every day. I try to stay positive."

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Associated Press Writers Michael Kunzelman in New Orleans and Nomaan Merchant in Chicago contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-31-US-New-Year's-Eve-US/id-3994c82f5f7c45ddbbb2a8b3661b99b3

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Friday, December 30, 2011

VIDEO: Interview with Sullivan's coach

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Source: http://www.wthitv.com/dpp/sports/pizza_hut_classic/video-interview-with-sullivans-jeff-moore-122811

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Ford Reports F-150 Ecoboost V-6 Truck Sales Hit 100,000 Mark

It seems as though Ford?s EcoBoost engines have not only boosted fuel-efficiency, but also sales, as the automaker is reporting that 100,000 full-size pickups with the V-6 EcoBoost engine have been sold this year. The efficient, powerful twin-turbo V-6 was one of the highlights that helped the F-150 win our 2012 Truck of the Year.

This may not come as a surprise to some, since Ford?s first-quarter sales provided a pretty accurate forecast for this milestone. The first pickups with the Ecoboost went on sale in late February, and shortly after in April, it had already accounted for 35 percent of F-150 sales, with Ford predicting incoming orders would track even higher at 40 percent. Fast forward to October, and the automaker upped its sales forecast to a 45 percent take rate, with the 75,000 units sold through September being a good indication.

The 3.5-liter Ecoboost V-6 is rated at 365 hp and 420 lb-ft of torque, returning five more horsepower and 40 more lb-ft of torque than the equivalent 5.0-liter V-8 engine. The truck is also offered with conventional naturally-aspirated 3.7-liter V-6 as the base engine, but the high demand continues to center around the more powerful EcoBoost. ?Keeping the momentum, Ford is aggressively rolling out other versions of the EcoBoost formula across its passenger cars and SUV lineup in both four and six-cylinder (and even three-cylinder) versions.

The 100,000 sales mark for the EcoBoost is significant, since the automaker had not seen V-6 pickups sell in such high numbers since 1985.

Source: The Detroit News

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Source: http://wot.motortrend.com/ford-reports-f150-ecoboost-v-6-truck-sales-hit-100000-mark-151141.html

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Black and white HTC Radar 4G Shows Up On Microsoft?s Website

White HTC Radar 4G was spotted on Microsoft?s website. This quite a little surprise since typically when the device first launch, it will come in black variant. However, in this case it seems the device striking the market with many?s fav color, white.

The funny thing is there?s no official words on the device black version. On top of that, we have not hear much regarding the Radar 4G specs.

[via Phonedog]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/slashphone/~3/sj8z-RMEHlE/black-and-white-htc-radar-4g-shows-up-on-microsofts-website-2719731

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Monitors arrive in Syria; carnage as tanks fire (Reuters)

BEIRUT (Reuters) ? Government tanks pounded neighborhoods of Homs on Monday, killing more than 30 people, city residents said, as Arab officials arrived in Syria to monitor compliance with a peace plan aimed at ending the crackdown on an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad.

Fifty monitors and 10 other officials from the Arab League arrived from Egypt on a private plane, the first international intervention on the ground to end nine months of violence between government troops and opponents of Assad.

Some monitors are due on Tuesday to visit Homs, scene of the worst violence, where there has been no sign of Assad carrying out a plan agreed with the Arab League to halt his offensive.

Amateur video posted on the Internet by activists showed tanks in the streets in the Baba Amr district. One fired its main gun and another appeared to launch bombs from a mortar.

Mangled bodies lay in pools of blood on a narrow street, the video showed. Power lines had collapsed and cars were burnt and blasted, as if shelled by tank or mortar rounds.

"What's happening is a slaughter," said Fadi, a resident living near Baba Amr neighborhood. He said it was being hit with mortar bombs and heavy machinegun fire.

An armed insurgency is eclipsing civilian protests in Syria. This has raised the prospect of a sectarian war pitting the Sunni Muslim majority, the driving force of the protest movement, against minorities that have mostly stayed loyal to the government, particularly the Alawite sect to which Assad belongs.

Fighting in Homs has intensified since a double suicide bombing in Damascus on Friday that killed 44 people.

Four army defectors were killed by security forces in a town near the Turkish border on Monday, an activist network said. Nine soldiers killed in fighting in Homs were buried, state media reported.

Homs resident Fadi told Reuters that residents and fighters were trapped by trenches dug by the army.

"Neither the people nor the gunmen or army defectors are able to flee. The army has been descending on the area for the past two days."

TWO-WAY FIGHT

Other residents said the fighters have still been able to inflict casualties on the army.

"The violence is definitely two-sided," said a Homs resident who gave his name only as Mohammed to protect his safety. "I've been seeing ambulances filled with wounded soldiers passing by my window in the past days. They're getting shot somehow."

Parts of Homs are defended by the Free Syrian Army, made up of defectors from the regular armed forces, who say they have tried to protect civilians.

"There are many casualties," activist Yazen Homsi told the Avaaz opposition group from Homs. "It is very difficult to access them and provide treatment as a result of the heavy shelling throughout the neighborhood."

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights documented names of those reported killed in Monday's clashes. It also reported three people killed on the outskirts of Hama, north of Homs, as security forces fired on protests.

It also said at least 10 and likely dozens of rebel fighters were killed in clashes with security forces in the Damascus suburb of Douma. It estimated a similar casualty toll on the government side.

It said explosions went off in Doumaas the army clashed with rebel fighters.

The Syrian government has banned most access by independent media, making it difficult to verify accounts of events.

GOVERNMENT TRANSPORT FOR MONITORS

The head of the observer mission, Sudanese General Mustafa al-Dabi, arrived in Damascus on Saturday.

"Our Syrian brothers are cooperating very well and without any restrictions so far," Dabi told Reuters.

But he added that Syrian forces would be providing transportation for the observers - a move which may anger the anti-Assad opposition and draw accusations of censorship.

The first group of monitors will be divided into five 10-man teams going to five locations. Those that are expected to visit Homs on Tuesday will try to assess whether Assad is withdrawing tanks and troops from Syria's third largest city as promised.

Delegates said they will try to keep an element of surprise.

"We will inform the Syrian side the areas we will visit on the same day so that there will be no room to direct monitors or change realities on the ground by either side," said monitor Mohamed Salem al-Kaaby from the United Arab Emirates.

The mission's mandate is to confirm that the Syrian government is carrying out the Arab League initiative by withdrawing the military from cities, releasing prisoners and allowing Arab and allowing international media to visit.

Despite the scenes of ravaged streets, Syrian state television has been regularly showing other areas of Homs, a city of one million, looking peaceful.

The United Nations says at least 5,000 Syrians have been killed since the revolt broke out in March, inspired by other Arab uprisings this year.

The Syrian authorities blame the violence on foreign-backed armed Islamists who they say have killed 2,000 members of the security forces. After six weeks of stalling, Damascus signed a protocol this month to admit the Arab League monitors.

Assad, 46, succeeded his father in 2000 to carry on 41 years of family rule. He has responded to calls to step down with a mixture of force and promises of reform, announcing an end to a state of emergency and promising a parliamentary election in February.

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny in Beirut, Ayman Samir and Marwa Awad in Cairo and Ayat Basma in Beirut; Writing by Douglas Hamilton; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Matthew Jones)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111226/wl_nm/us_syria

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

China Mengniu Dairy destroys contaminated milk

DBR Staff Writer Published 28 December 2011

China Mengniu Dairy has destroyed milk and products after the government's quality watchdog, the General Administration of Quality Supervision Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ), found elevated levels of a carcinogen in a batch of its milk.

The Inner Mongolia-based dairy producer said that AQSIQ testers conducted a random check at one of its plants in Meishan, in the southwestern province of Sichuan, and found excessive aflatoxin - a substance that can cause liver cancer.

The company spokesman Lu Jianjun said cattle that had eaten rotting, mildewed hay produced milk with excess levels of the chemical aflatoxin, reported wsj.com.

"Mengniu plans to increase oversight of its suppliers to ensure that cattle feed is properly stored and doesn't collect mildew. We plan to help farmers more in the future to prevent future incidents," Lu said.

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Source: http://dairy.drinks-business-review.com/news/china-mengniu-dairy-destroys-contaminated-milk-281211

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Final unit at The Mark sells for $2.2M ? San Diego Union

Courtesy of the RADCO Companies.
Courtesy of the RADCO Companies.

The last unit of a downtown San Diego condo project that opened with fanfare in July 2007 but sank during the housing bust has been sold, public records show.

The 32nd-floor penthouse of The Mark was purchased for $2,225,000, more than four years after the upscale project was completed. The original developer, Doug Wilson, sold the struggling 244-unit property at a loss in 2009 to the RADCO Cos., an Atlanta-based firm that turns around distressed real estate.

Property records show the buyers of the penthouse, north of Petco Park, are Daniel E. Welden and Kathy Welden. Daniel E. Welden is the president of EMPI Inc., an Anaheim-based automobile-parts company. The Weldens are residents of Newport Beach in Orange County.

?We own another one in that building,? Daniel E. Welden said Thursday. ?We?ve been there for over two years.?

Courtesy of the RADCO Companies.

The Mark condo project, north of PETCO Park. Photo courtesy of the RADCO Companies.

The home, essentially a shell, has 3,700 square feet of interior space and more than 1,700 square feet of outer area that includes a terrace and balcony, RADCO officials said.

?The penthouse is a blank canvas that will allow the new owner to build to their personal specifications,? Victor Valentine, director of sales at RADCO, said in a statement.

Kevin Price, an executive at RADCO?s Los Angeles office, said The Mark?s marketing strategy targeted two types of buyers: first-timers and Baby Boomers who sold larger homes to move closer to the city core.

When RADCO bought the distressed condo project, 125 of the 244 units were unsold. The company closed on 53 in 2009, 59 in 2010 and the rest this year.

Wilson, the original developer, told the Union-Tribune in July 2009 a big reason he sold The Mark was that his main financing partner, Lehman Bros., filed for bankruptcy protection. (See: Developer hoping to make its mark)

Did you miss these?

?Razor? house sells for $14.1 million

San Diego?s top real estate sellers, by dollars

Poll: Homebuyers still have high hopes of price appreciation

Email me: lily.leung@uniontrib.com | Tweet me: @LilyShumLeung | Subscribe to this blog.

Article source: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/dec/22/mark-update/

Tags: atlanta condominiums

Source: http://atlantacondominiums.us/12-final-unit-at-the-mark-sells-for-2-2m-san-diego-union-atlanta-condominiums.html

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Senator Risch selects Idaho nominees for U.S. Military Academics

(Updated 3:38 p.m.) - Dozens of young men and women made the nomination list for the United States Military Academics for the 2012 school year. The released list, featuring selections by Senator Jim Risch, covers all four academies: Air Force, Army, Marine and Navy.

This is just the first step of the selection process. Names marked in bold are North Idaho nominees.

U.S. Air Force Academy

  • Joseph Cardona III, Boise
  • Anthony deVera, Meridian
  • John French, Meridian
  • Kaylee Kostka, Heyburn
  • Adrianna Lutu, Boise
  • Kevin Miller, Idaho Falls
  • Zachary Morrow, Roswell
  • Jonathon Riggers, Nezperce
  • Nathaniel Rupp, Boise
  • Ronald Weimar, Payette

U.S. Military Academy at West Point (Army)

  • Adam Armour, Idaho Falls
  • Reid Boorman, Bonners Ferry
  • Layne Harper, Blackfoot
  • Joel ?Parker? Heisey, Coeur d?Alene
  • Colby Hyde, Eagle
  • Zachary LaBenne, Hayden
  • Parker Matthews, Rathdrum
  • Bryan Perry, Rigby
  • David Trompke, Eagle
  • Kristine Westergard, Boise

U.S. Merchant Marine Academy

  • Brennen Connolly, Meridian
  • Andrew Fletcher, Boise
  • Alex Foster, Ammon
  • Zane Hardin, McCall
  • Mason Menges, Nampa
  • Konnor-Lawrence Moden, Boise
  • Levi Sliwoski, Boise
  • Eric Whitman, Priest River
  • Kevin Wilmot, Jerome
  • Rebecca Winzer, Coeur d?Alene

U.S. Naval Academy

  • Nicholas Arnold, Boise
  • Hallie Bonnicksen, Kellogg
  • Andrew Brackebush, Silverton
  • Joseph Dlugosch, Eagle
  • Gaylen Edmo, Pocatello
  • John Foulger, Chubbuck
  • John ?Gil? Givens, Post Falls
  • Kylie Johnson, Coeur d?Alene
  • Skyler Means, Boise
  • Jonathon Riggers, Nezperce

Note: A reader pointed out that there was no nomination list for Coast Guard. After speaking with Senator Risch's Office in Washington D.C., they said that the Coast Guard academy does not need nominations.

Source: http://silvervalley.kxly.com/news/people/68823-senator-risch-selects-idaho-nominees-us-military-academics

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Commodity Trading Tips for Crude Palm oil by KediaCommodity

Crude Palm OilCrude Palm oil yesterday traded with the positive node and settled 1.2% up at 541.9 amid worries about bad weather in South America and Southeast Asia. The overall movement in risky assets was strong as on better-than-expected US economic data amid holiday mood in world markets. La Nina-driven dry weather in Argentina and Brazil could cause heat stress and sap soybean crop yields. In Asia, heavy rains brought on by the northeast monsoon in peninsular Malaysia and the La Nina are slowing harvesting rounds and disrupting transportation of the cooking oil from refineries to ports. Malaysia's weather office said in an updated advisory that heavy rainfall is expected over the major oil palm growing states of Johor and Pahang until Tuesday. In yesterday's trading session Crude Palm oil has touched the low of 533.7 after opening at 540, and finally settled at 541.9. For today's session market is looking to take support at 535.7, a break below could see a test of 529.5 and where as resistance is now likely to be seen at 546.1, a move above could see prices testing 550.3.

Trading Ideas:

Crude Palm Oil trading range is 529.5-550.3.

Crude palm oil rose amid worries about bad weather in South America and Southeast Asia

La Nina-driven dry weather in Argentina and Brazil could cause heat stress and sap soybean crop yields

Crude palm oil looks to test support at 535.70 and resistance is seen at 546.10 level.

Crude palm oil prices in spot market gained by 7.20 rupees and settled at 539.40 rupees.

Source: http://www.topnews.in/commodity-trading-tips-crude-palm-oil-kediacommodity-2350080

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Monday, December 26, 2011

U.S. stores hope for "Mega Monday" of brisk sales (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Shoppers found a mixed bag of bargains and so-so deals on Monday, as a day off for many Americans and warm, dry weather lured some out for what was likely to be the third busiest shopping day of the holiday season.

Chains were also hoping that shoppers coming in to redeem the millions of gift cards given as presents might be willing to spend a bit more cash of their own.

Many chains were still relying on the lure of bargains to bring in shoppers on the day after Christmas. Office Depot Inc advertised its "Ultimate After Christmas Sale," with stores opening at 8 a.m., while Carter's Inc, the children's apparel retailer, promoted discounts of up to 70 percent.

The potential shopping boom comes as a weak labor market that has dragged on the economy shows signs of a turn. The number of Americans filing new claims for jobless benefits hit a 3-1/2-year low in the week shortly before Christmas. And consumer sentiment scaled a six-month high in December with more Americans optimistic about the economic outlook.

Still, U.S. consumer spending, which accounts for about two-third of U.S. economic activity, rose less than expected in November.

This year marked the first time in six years that the day after Christmas fell on a Monday. Some dubbed it "Mega Monday" as the day takes on more prominence for shoppers, especially those who have the day off.

Shoppers who made their way to Saks Fifth Avenue in Boston's Prudential Center mall said the 60 percent and 70 percent discounts were well worth fighting the crowds.

"It was a stampede at 8 a.m.," said Sarah Klein, 46, a teacher from Cambridge, who said people were grabbing fistfuls of discount handbags when the doors opened.

This year, December 26 is expected to be the third busiest sales day, trailing Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, and Friday, December 23, according to ShopperTrak, which measures retail and mall foot traffic.

As procrastinators finished up shopping in the days just before Christmas, December 23 overtook December 17 as the second busiest day so far, said Bill Martin, founder of ShopperTrak.

ShopperTrak predicted that up to 60 percent more shoppers will visit stores on December 26 than on the same day last year.

Still, some shoppers were not impressed with the deals.

Catherine Arora, 33, who was visiting Boston from Australia, said sales back home are much bigger on the December 26 Boxing Day holiday.

"So far, the sales are a bit underwhelming," she said while out hunting for clothes and shoes.

Retailers may have a glut of winter clothing due to warmer-than-usual weather, but they made smart bets on other items, meaning they should not have to resort to lots of steep discounts to clean out inventory, experts said.

Steven DiLibero Jr, a 33-year-old attorney from Barrington, Rhode Island, said he was disappointed with some of the sales.

"I was hoping for a little bit more on the sales," he said. "I'm getting like 25 percent to 30 percent on things -- a shirt and tie. I've probably saved about $100," he said.

In Chicago, major shopping areas were not too crowded early in the day. Ken Ucho, a retired principal who now lives in La Porte, Indiana, came back to Chicago to shop early on Monday and had spent about $300 by 11 a.m.

After visiting a number of stores, including Macy's and Bloomingdale's, Ucho, 69, said he only saw crowds at the upscale Neiman Marcus.

Retailers could sell as much as $29 billion worth of merchandise on Monday, according to Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, who had predicted strong holiday sales before the season began.

Sales at the $29 billion level would even outpace the $27 billion in sales Johnson saw on Black Friday.

Chains had also used their Web sites to entice shoppers on Christmas Day. Target Corp, for example, offered $10 off online orders of $50 or more on Christmas.

Four in 10 Americans plan on hitting stores over the next few days, while 46 percent have no plans to shop, according to a poll from Consumer Reports. Of those who said they planned to shop, 82 percent said the biggest draw was post-holiday sales, 47 percent wanted to redeem gift cards, and 31 expected to return gifts.

Retailers hope that people coming in to redeem gift cards will buy merchandise at full price and spend more than the value of the cards they are using.

Another Consumer Reports poll found that 113 million Americans received gift cards last holiday season, and that 62 percent of adults planned to give them as gifts this year.

The Hodgson family, from Cleveland, was in Boston for the holiday and decided to go shopping together on Monday rather than exchanging gifts. Siblings Matt, 29, Chris, 26, and Catie, 21, said they had some gift cards to use from relatives, and expected their spending to top the cards' values.

(Reporting by Jessica Wohl in Chicago; Additional reporting by Lauren Keiper in Boston, Dena Aubin in New York and James Kelleher in Chicago; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111226/bs_nm/us_usa_retail_megamonday

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Holiday closures vary by community

Government offices throughout the area, excluding fire, paramedic and police departments that have emergency crews and patrol squads on-call, will be closed for the holidays, although the closures vary by community.

Lenoir County and Town of Snow Hill offices will be closed through Monday; all offices will be closed Monday, Jan. 2.

City of Kinston and Greene County offices will be closed through Tuesday.

Town of La Grange offices will be closed through Wednesday.

Pink Hill will be closed Monday and Tuesday and also closed on Monday, Jan. 2.

Jones County offices will be closed Monday and Tuesday and on Monday, Jan. 2.

All offices will be closed on Jan. 2 for New Year's, expect for Snow Hill, which will be closed Jan. 3.

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Garbage collection

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Monday and Tuesday?s garbage collection in Kinston will each be pushed back a day for the holidays.

Christmas garbage schedules in La Grange will be amended for a special pickup on Monday.

Yard waste and recyclable routes in La Grange will not run on Dec. 26. Instead, the two will be moved to Jan. 3. Household collection routes will run on normal schedule Thursday and Friday.

Routes for the Onslow Container Service ? the garbage collector for Lenoir, Greene and Jones ? will run as usual.

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Courts, libraries and mail

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Public library branches in Kinston, La Grange, Pink Hill, Comfort, Trenton, Maysville and Pollocksville will be closed through Monday. The Snow Hill library will reopen Wednesday.

The court systems in Lenoir, Greene and Jones counties will be closed Monday and Tuesday for Christmas, as well as Jan. 2 for New Year's.

All post offices will be closed Monday and Jan. 2.

Source: http://www.enctoday.com/news/closed-78738-kfpress-offices-monday.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Dan Walters: California Democrats didn't cheat on redistricting, but they played politics well

California political junkies are all atwitter about an article on the website ProPublica about a clandestine campaign by Democratic apparatchiks to influence the state's redistricting commission congressional map-drawing.

Republicans are crying foul, while Democrats say it's pure fiction.

Republican state chairman Tom Del Beccaro claims that the article "systematically lays out the Democrats' manipulation of what should have been an open and transparent process. It also demonstrated exactly how the redistricting maps were corrupted by partisan activists working in cooperation with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee."

Call The Bee's Dan Walters, (916) 321-1195. Back columns, www.sacbee.com/walters. Follow him on Twitter @WaltersBee.

But his Democratic counterpart, John Burton, insists, "The article charging California Democrats with manipulating California's Redistricting Commission is pure fantasy," adding, "Sadly, ProPublica chose to recycle talking points from the Republican-funded Rose Institute without checking with the Democratic Party."

Both party leaders are blowing smoke.

The article offers too much documentation to be "pure fantasy." The Democrats had opposed an independent commission to replace a Democratic-dominated Legislature in redrawing legislative and congressional districts, while most Republicans supported it.

However, once it was done, via two voter- approved initiatives, Democrats looked for ways to influence the line-drawing. In other words, they practiced politics.

Del Beccaro denounces it as "manipulation," but it was just heads-up, professional politics, and he should be castigating those in his own party for falling asleep at the switch.

That said, the authors miss, or gloss over, a couple of salient points.

While they concentrate on a couple of Democrats whose seats were protected by intervention of some clandestine front groups and, perhaps, the gullibility of commission members, they don't mention the plan's adverse effects on other Democrats, such as forcing a high-octane shootout looming between Reps. Howard Berman and Brad Sherman in Los Angeles County.

More importantly, the article doesn't mention that the Democrats' creation of "community of interest" front groups could be effective only because the 14-member commission, as chosen by a convoluted process, was hypersensitive to that approach.

The Democratic members of the commission tended to be partisans, its Republicans tended to be of the go-along variety, and the supposed independents turned out to be mostly liberals inclined to draw districts that favor ethnic and cultural enclaves.

That tendency ? coupled with underlying demographic and voter registration trends ? had the combined effect of not only protecting most incumbent Democrats but giving them a chance to make congressional gains.

Source: http://www.modbee.com/2011/12/23/1998464/dan-walters-california-democrats.html

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New technique makes it easier to etch semiconductors

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Creating semiconductor structures for high-end optoelectronic devices just got easier, thanks to University of Illinois researchers.

The team developed a method to chemically etch patterned arrays in the semiconductor gallium arsenide, used in solar cells, lasers, light emitting diodes (LEDs), field effect transistors (FETs), capacitors and sensors. Led by electrical and computer engineering professor Xiuling Li, the researchers describe their technique in the journal Nano Letters.

A semiconductor's physical properties can vary depending on its structure, so semiconductor wafers are etched into structures that tune their electrical and optical properties and connectivity before they are assembled into chips.

Semiconductors are commonly etched with two techniques: "Wet" etching uses a chemical solution to erode the semiconductor in all directions, while "dry" etching uses a directed beam of ions to bombard the surface, carving out a directed pattern. Such patterns are required for high-aspect-ratio nanostructures, or tiny shapes that have a large ratio of height to width. High-aspect-ratio structures are essential to many high-end optoelectronic device applications.

While silicon is the most ubiquitous material in semiconductor devices, materials in the III-V (pronounced three-five) group are more efficient in optoelectronic applications, such as solar cells or lasers.

Unfortunately, these materials can be difficult to dry etch, as the high-energy ion blasts damage the semiconductor's surface. III-V semiconductors are especially susceptible to damage.

To address this problem, Li and her group turned to metal-assisted chemical etching (MacEtch), a wet-etching approach they had previously developed for silicon. Unlike other wet methods, MacEtch works in one direction, from the top down. It is faster and less expensive than many dry etch techniques, according to Li. Her group revisited the MacEtch technique, optimizing the chemical solution and reaction conditions for the III-V semiconductor gallium arsenide (GaAs).

The process has two steps. First, a thin film of metal is patterned on the GaAs surface. Then, the semiconductor with the metal pattern is immersed in the MacEtch chemical solution. The metal catalyzes the reaction so that only the areas touching metal are etched away, and high-aspect-ratio structures are formed as the metal sinks into the wafer. When the etching is done, the metal can be cleaned from the surface without damaging it.

"It is a big deal to be able to etch GaAs this way," Li said. "The realization of high-aspect-ratio III-V nanostructure arrays by wet etching can potentially transform the fabrication of semiconductor lasers where surface grating is currently fabricated by dry etching, which is expensive and causes surface damage."

To create metal film patterns on the GaAs surface, Li's team used a patterning technique pioneered by John Rogers, the Lee J. Flory-Founder Chair and a professor of materials science and engineering at the U. of I. Their research teams joined forces to optimize the method, called soft lithography, for chemical compatibility while protecting the GaAs surface. Soft lithography is applied to the whole semiconductor wafer, as opposed to small segments, creating patterns over large areas ? without expensive optical equipment.

"The combination of soft lithography and MacEtch make the perfect combination to produce large-area, high-aspect-ratio III-V nanostructures in a low-cost fashion," said Li, who is affiliated with the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory, the Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory and the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the U. of I.

Next, the researchers hope to further optimize conditions for GaAs etching and establish parameters for MacEtch of other III-V semiconductors. Then, they hope to demonstrate device fabrication, including distributed Bragg reflector lasers and photonic crystals.

"MacEtch is a universal method as long as the right condition for deferential etching with and without metal can be found," Li said.

###

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: http://www.uiuc.edu

Thanks to University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116286/New_technique_makes_it_easier_to_etch_semiconductors

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

What The EPA Just Did (Balloon Juice)

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Vocal app uses your iPhone 4S to control your Mac

The trite thing to do when writing about any software that can handle converting your speech into text is to do so using that software. I?m nothing if not trite, so that?s precisely what I?m trying to do here, with Vocal. Vocal is a new app from developer Matthew Roberts that leverages the power of voice transcription on your iPhone 4S to control your Mac. Vocal can take dictation and send the transcription to your Mac, and also perform a variety of other actions based on your voice commands.

For Vocal to work its magic, you need to install a free companion app on your Mac. Then, of course, you also need to pick up the $2 app from the App Store. Run the Mac app, and then launch the Vocal app on your iPhone. The iPhone needs to run on the same Wi-Fi network that your Mac is using. In theory, the app should list the name of your connected Mac; the app and Mac see each other via Bonjour. In my own testing, however, I needed to force restart Vocal on my iPhone by quitting the app, double tapping the Home button to bring up the multitasking bar, holding down on the app?s icon there, and then tapping the minus sign. Restarting the app after doing so allowed my Mac and the app to see each other.

At that point, I tapped on my Mac?s name within the app, and was then prompted to enter the passcode that Vocal displayed on my Mac?s screen. Once that was done, Vocal was ready to listen?and act.

Because it uses the systemwide dictation built into the iPhone 4S, Vocal doesn?t use Siri?s normal timeout. Siri cuts you off automatically as you dictate emails or texts if you pause for too long; the dictation option (triggered by tapping the microphone on the virtual keyboard) listens for much longer. That?s quite beneficial within Vocal, since it gives you more time to gather your thoughts as you compose sentences. (After a while, Vocal still does stop listening, but I believe that happens only at some mandatory timeout implemented systemwide when using the iPhone 4S?s dictation option, based on data or memory usage.)

Vocal puts the virtual keyboard on screen, even though you likely won?t need to type into the app. Instead, you just need access to the microphone key. Tap that and start speaking; tap the Done button when you?re finished. Vocal then acts upon your spoken instructions immediately; you don?t need an extra tap to submit your text.

That autosubmission when you're finished speaking makes the process feel measurably faster. As soon as I finish speaking these sentences, I?ll tap the Done button, and Vocal will immediately paste this text into my text editor. (If the cursor isn?t positioned within a text entry field or document, Vocal still ensures that the transcribed text is copied to your Mac?s clipboard so that you can paste it manually.) Most of the time, that is. Sometimes, for reasons that I can?t quite understand, I still have to push the Send button manually within the Vocal app.

Now, handling transcription is only a small part of what Vocal?s claimed feature set is. The app is also meant to allow you to do things like control iTunes; send emails and tweets; look up definitions; select, copy, and paste text; search Amazon and Google; print; and create new documents. Some of those actions work brilliantly?when I said ?Tweet the people at the Apple Store are generally very nice,? Vocal successfully opened a New Tweet window within the official Twitter client and pasted in my text.

Other controls are less full-featured. The iTunes controls, for example, require a bit more stilted speech than Siri can handle. I said, ?Play ?Artificial Heart,?? and Vocal simply started playing iTunes from its current song, ignoring my specific request. When I tried ?Play the song ?Artificial Heart,?? Vocal reported that it ?couldn?t find a song in iTunes titled ?Play the song artificial heart.?? ?Play song ?Artificial Heart?? felt more mechanical, but got the job done.

By default, Vocal attempts to automatically determine whether you?re speaking text to be transcribed, or instead sending instructions to your Mac. In practice, it works well?unless you try to start sentences with words like ?tweet? or ?pause.? That?s easy enough to work around, since you can turn the feature off if it?s not working right for you at the time.

Other instructions that worked great were vocal directions like ?Define pugnacious,? which launched the Dictionary app to the right word; ?Search Amazon for The City and The City?; or ?Search Google for ?chocolate baskets?.? Some actions, on the other hand, seemed hard to justify; I can?t imagine ?Print this page? or ?Open a new document? could ever save much time if you?re close enough to your Mac to see its screen.

If you simply tell Vocal, ?Search for Great American Novel,? it?ll attempt to perform a Spotlight search. On my Mac, though, I?ve given Launchbar the Command-Space keyboard shortcut, and apparently that affects how Vocal works behind the scenes; the utility searched with Launchbar instead of Spotlight.

Vocal sorely needs a Siri-like info button that shows you all the commands it can handle. Right now, the Support tab at the developer?s Website is the easiest place to find available instructions.

In short, Vocal is definitely cool. You?ll be hard-pressed to find a cheaper way to get your Mac to take dictation. Its support for other actions is a mixed bag; some work well, some don?t. If nothing else, Vocal proves that Siri?natively?on the Mac could be nothing short of remarkable.

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Source: http://rss.macworld.com/click.phdo?i=c64ea1b7dafc630051967f20ce5e8435

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Friday, December 23, 2011

?The X Factor?: Florida?s Melanie Amaro outshines rivals

The "X Factor" finalists, from left, Chris Rene, Melanie Amaro and Josh Krajcik. Photo credit: Ray Mickshaw/Fox

Melanie Amaro had a huge advantage after the first round tonight on ?The X Factor.? Her?rival finalists, Josh Krajcik on ?Uninvited? and Chris Rene on ?Complicated,? sounded off-key as they began their songs. Of course, the judges used other words to explain the problem.

Nicole Scherzinger said Rene was ?a little shaky at the start,? and Simon Cowell said Krajcik seemed ?a bit intimidated at the beginning.? Whatever.

They were later joined by stars ? Krajcik by Alanis Morissette, Rene by Avril Lavigne ? and the songs improved vastly.

But Amaro, who is from Sunrise, was in superb voice on ?I Believe I Can Fly? before R. Kelly joined her. Amaro won the first round easily.

The second round was much closer. Krajcik forcefully delivered ?At Last? and played only his guitar. Going the unplugged route was a refreshing change of pace on the overproduced ?X Factor.?

Rene was at his?best on ?Young Homie? and confidently presided over a splashy production number.

Yet I?d give the edge again to Amaro, who plowed through an overproduced ?Listen? with startling intensity. She wasn?t going to let Cowell?s excesses drag her down.

The three are competing for a $5 million recording contract. The greatest praise was reserved for Amaro. Judge L.A. Reid said Amaro had delivered a $50 million performance, and Cowell predicted she would win based on the ?Listen? performance.

The results will be revealed in a two-hour finale that starts at 8 p.m. Thursday on Fox.

To fill up the time, ?The X Factor? in bringing in Justin ?I?m Everywhere? Bieber, Leona Lewis, Pitbull, Ne-Yo and ?others,? according to Fox. I hope the ?others? provide some surprises, because the singing competition won?t. Amaro won it. Easily.

Source: http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/entertainment_tv_tvblog/2011/12/the-x-factor-floridas-melanie-amaro-outshines-rivals.html

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Spring is over: China's e-commerce winter sets in (Reuters)

DONGFENG VILLAGE, China (Reuters) ? It was a Cinderella story: a pig-rearing and vegetable-growing hamlet in China's eastern Jiangsu province that transformed itself into a village boasting millionaires and expensive cars, all through plywood, ingenuity and the Internet.

In 2007 Sun Han, the 30-year-old de facto e-commerce chief in Dongfeng Village, fell in love with the designs of Swedish furniture giant Ikea and decided to make similar furniture of his own to sell on the Internet.

Others in his village soon followed suit and the fairytale of wealth was born.

What were once vegetable plots have been converted into workshops and storefronts. Sun's factory, sitting on just over an acre of land, now churns out knock-off Ikea shelves and beds to fill the 200 orders he gets a day on his two online shops.

But the story may not have a happy ending for everyone.

Intense competition has fuelled price wars among furniture vendors. That, combined with fee hikes from China's leading online e-commerce platform, Taobao Mall, this year forced the closure of some of fledgling businesses in this dusty village that is home to more than 1,000 Taobao furniture sellers.

"There is more competition now, but we need to continue to innovate and meet customer needs," said Sun, who looks more like a professor than a village business chief, in his black leather loafers, grey tweed jacket and half-rimmed spectacles.

Another furniture maker in the village, Wang Le, is more blunt about the situation. As others have rushed to imitate those making the copycat furniture, he says, profit margins have been undermined for all.

"With everyone making similar things and prices dropping, the competition is vicious," Wang, 29, said.

"You see that baby crib?" he said, pointing to an unfinished plywood crib on the floor of a decrepit brick room in his factory. "A few years ago, I could have sold it for 600 to 800 yuan ($95-$125). Now I can only sell it for 300 yuan."

FALL FROM GRACE

Dongfeng village's fall from grace is reminiscent of what is happening in China's wider e-commerce market. Once the darling of private equity and venture capital firms, it is now set for a period of intense competition and shake-out.

Money entering the sector and the relatively low barriers to entry have spawned a multitude of e-commerce companies that are jostling for consumers' attention. From shoes to junk food, there are an estimated 25,000 online stores in China.

"Every private investor, most of them with more money than sense, tends to think they can replicate the Amazon model in China. And so that is what really created the competition, this flood of capital," said Michael Clendenin, managing director at Shanghai-based consultancy RedTech Advisors.

With 173 million Chinese people shopping online, China's e-commerce industry is expected to surpass 750 billion yuan ($118 billion) in gross merchandise value this year, more than the gross domestic product of Vietnam. It is expected to become the world's largest e-commerce market in 2015, Boston Consulting Group said in a report recently.

Though the waters for this market look promising, analysts warn that they are shark-infested.

"It's very competitive and the margins are quite low, so it's hard to make money in it... When we think about books, how much are books in China? It's so low, but you still have to give free delivery for 29 yuan," said Hong Kong-based Samsung Securities analyst Paul Wuh.

Amazon.com Inc., the largest online retailer in the United States, usually reports operating margins of 3-5 percent. By comparison, Chinese online book retailer Dangdang Inc. reported negative operating margins in the third quarter.

Heavy spending on logistics, waging price wars, holding steep discount promotions and splurging on massive offline advertising are what it now takes to be an e-commerce player in China and to stay at the forefront of consumers' minds.

"It's going to be the guys with the most to lose who are going to win in the end. And what do they win? They win a business that is low margin. It's just so tough," RedTech Advisors' Clendenin said.

WHO ARE THE BIG PLAYERS?

Alibaba Group, founded by former tour guide Jack Ma, is the biggest e-commerce player in China. Its Taobao unit is now the single largest e-commerce platform in China, dominating more than 70 percent of all transactions made online and half of all parcels sent in China.

Taobao paved the way for other e-commerce players to compete, first by creating e-payment system Alipay and also by pioneering an overall e-commerce ecosystem that caters specifically to Chinese consumers.

For example, Chinese customers have a high trust barrier, so they frequently pay with cash when their goods arrive. By using the Taobao platform, they are also able to chat directly with sellers via instant messaging to ask about items on sale.

But Taobao is not spared the intense competition. Dangdang, Tencent Holdings, Wal-Mart Stores Inc and 360buy, backed by Russian internet investment group Digital Sky Technologies, are battling for a share of the pie.

Bricks and mortar appliance retailers such as Suning Appliance Co and Gome Electrical Appliances Holdings are also beefing up their online presence.

"When you compare online retail compared with offline retail, the growth rate cannot be compared. One is 100 percent year-on-year growth and the other is 15 to 20 percent," said Marie Jiang, a Shanghai-based analyst with Pacific Epoch.

Some analysts expect platform players such as Taobao, who have the least monetary outlay, and the traditional retail players such as Gome and Suning, who have superior logistics, to be the ones to thrive in the end.

"This isn't the old days of the Chinese Internet of higher margins. It's a whole new phase of the Internet where it's much, much, more competitive," Clendenin said, adding that the time when firms like search engine Baidu and Tencent, which operates social networking and online gaming sites, could build their businesses into monopolies are essentially over.

Wang Bing, a pig farmer turned logistics company boss back in Dongfeng Village, has mixed feelings about the sudden competitive turn in his industry. There are at least a dozen logistics companies operating out of Dongfeng village to support the e-commerce trade.

"When I first entered the business, I knew absolutely nothing about it. Now that I'm in it, I can see just how hard it is to compete," said Wang, whose newfound wealth has meant he can afford the gleaming white Hyundai that sits incongruously along Dongfeng's dusty main road as logistics trucks trundle by.

"But life now is so much better. Not just a little better, way better."

($1 = 6.3735 Chinese yuan)

(Additional reporting by Jane Lee; Editing by Jason Subler and Alex Richardson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111222/wr_nm/us_china_ecommerce

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Russian Winter: Putin Goes Prophylactic with the Protests (Time.com)

Earlier this month, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said he was casually watching television when a strange scene came on the news. There were lots of his fellow citizens in the streets, and many of them had something long and white pinned to their chests. "It's impolite to say it, but I'll be honest," Putin recalled on Dec. 15 during a live call-in show with the Russian public. "I decided it was propaganda against AIDS, that these were, pardon me, dangling contraceptives." In fact, what was hanging from people's clothing was a white ribbon, the symbol of what is being called the "snowy revolution" against Putin's rule. But in his version of events, he hadn't heard about it. "I didn't really get it," Putin said. In particular, he didn't get why people had unrolled the condom before pinning it to their chests. "But on the whole, my first thought was that this is good, that people are fighting for a healthy lifestyle." Then Putin looked around at the studio audience, expecting someone to laugh.

Nobody did. "Some people were outright offended. Others thought it was in very bad taste," says Nikolai Zlobin, a political analyst who was sitting in the studio with Putin. In the Russian language, the word gandon (condom) is an especially crass and juvenile insult, most often heard among boys too young to know the intricacies of contraception. But as far as anyone could tell, this was Putin's message to the people watching at home -- in particular, to the thousands of citizens who have donned white ribbons in the past week as a sign of solidarity and protest. As many of them quickly pointed out on Twitter, Putin seemed to be telling the ranks of his opponents that they are all a bunch of dangling condoms. (PHOTOS: Vladimir Putin: Action Figure)

That became more and more clear as the nearly five-hour call-in show progressed. Putin was hit with one question after another about the parliamentary elections held on Dec. 4, which his political party is accused of rigging, and about the subsequent wave of demonstrations, which have been the largest ever against Putin's rule. At one point, about an hour into the show, the moderator actually apologized for the mass of questions on this one topic. "I'm not doing it on purpose," he said. "There are just a whole lot of them." To which Putin responded, "I'm sick of your elections already, but all right."

As also became clear through the course of his performance, Putin seems to have made two basic calculations in the wake of this month's unrest. He has figured that the best way for him to get elected for a third term as President next year is to pick a fight with Washington, which he did with no holds barred. (Senator John McCain got the worst of it. "Mr. McCain famously fought in Vietnam," Putin said. "I think he has enough civilian blood on his hands.") This is a predictable ploy in Russian politics, where Cold War prejudices still shape the views of many voters. According to the most recent survey by the Levada Center, 73% of respondents said last year that the U.S. is "an aggressor trying to take control of all the countries of the world." That is the constituency Putin targeted on Dec. 15 when he said, "America does not need allies, it needs vassals." (PHOTOS: Protests and Counterprotests in Russia)

His other calculation had to do with the size of the demographic now turning against him -- the young, urban middle-class voters, who have packed demonstrations this month across the country. Judging by Putin's statements during the call-in show, they are not a large enough segment of society to deserve much more than his contempt, which he served up abundantly. At one point, he claimed that one of the slogans shouted from the stage during the Dec. 10 protest in Moscow -- the biggest so far, with up to 50,000 people in attendance -- was "Sheep, forward!" Not only was this patently false, but it amounted to another insult: the word sheep in Russian is roughly equivalent to jackass.

For Russia's scattered opposition groups, all these slights felt like a blessing in disguise. "Now all we have to do to get people out on the streets is remind them of Putin's insults," said Ilya Ponomaryov, the parliamentary deputy who has been organizing the biggest demonstrations in Moscow. As Ponomaryov also pointed out, Putin did offer the opposition a few olive branches, although one had to search for them between the lines. For one thing, Putin said he would consider gradually allowing Russians to elect their own governors. The Kremlin has appointed them since 2004. He also said he would allow more political parties to participate in elections and, most surprising, that he would consider freeing one of his enemies, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the oil mogul who was imprisoned in 2004 after challenging Putin in politics. "He can't admit these are concessions, because that would be like admitting defeat," said Ponomaryov. "But there is no other way to understand them." (See "Occupy the Kremlin: Russia's Election Lets Loose Public Rage.")

As for the main demand of the opposition -- the annulment of this month's allegedly rigged parliamentary elections -- Putin showed no sign of budging. "For me, it is clear that the attacks against these elections, which have already taken place, are secondary," Putin said. "The primary goal is the next election, the election of the President of the Russian Federation." That will take place in less than three months, on March 4, when Putin will seek to extend his mandate for another six years. His only goal between now and then will be to win those elections at any price, "to win them in the first round of voting with a clear sense of legitimacy and without any ballot-box stuffing," said Zlobin, the political analyst. To that end, he proposed during the call-in show to install Web cameras in all of the polling stations. "Let the country watch!" he declared. But that alone won't save his approval ratings, which dropped to a historical low of 44% last weekend, according to the state-run pollster FOM. On Dec. 24, the opposition plans to hold another wave of rallies around the country, demanding a new parliamentary vote. While Putin addressed the nation on Dec. 15, another 3,000 people said on Facebook that they would attend the protest in Moscow. The total now, thanks partly to Putin's condom joke, is 23,000 people.

See "Crackdown or Negotiation? Russian Protests Pose a Dilemma for Putin."

Read about Russia's billionaire rescuer, Mikhail Prokhorov.

View this article on Time.com

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20111217/wl_time/08599210262200

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Stanford study finds San Jose pension plan unsound (San Jose Mercury News)

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