Monday, August 5, 2013

'2 Guns' shoots to No. 1 at weekend box office

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Denzel Washington, left, and Mark Wahlberg in a scene from "2 Guns." (AP Photo/Universal Pictures, Patti Perret)

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Denzel Washington, left, and Mark Wahlberg in a scene from "2 Guns." (AP Photo/Universal Pictures, Patti Perret)

This image released by Universal Pictures shows Bill Paxton, left, and Denzel Washington in a scene from "2 Guns." (AP Photo/Universal Pictures, Patti Perret)

This publicity image released by Sony Pictures Animation shows from left, Grouchy, voiced by George Lopez, Vanity, voiced by John Oliver and Papa Smurf, voiced by Jonathan Winters a scene from the film "Smurfs 2." (AP Photo/Sony Pictures Animation)

This publicity image released by Sony Pictures Animation shows a scene from the film "Smurfs 2." (AP Photo/Sony Pictures Animation)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The action-packed "2 Guns" is No. 1 at the weekend box office.

The Universal film starring Denzel Washington and Mark Wahlberg pulled the trigger to capture the top spot with $27.4 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

The picture is based on a graphic novel of the same name and features Washington as a DEA agent and Wahlberg as a Naval Intelligence officer who must team up for an undercover operation involving drug traffickers and the CIA.

Nikki Rocco, head of distribution for Universal, said "2 Guns" opened at the studio's expectations and attributed the film's success to Icelandic director Baltasar Kormakur and the first-time pairing of Washington and Wahlberg.

"It was super casting," she said. "There was remarkable chemistry. The two of them work so well together. You see it on screen. Baltasar really gave them the energy to be able to do what they did in this film."

Fox's Japan-set superhero flick "The Wolverine" starring Hugh Jackman as the clawed warrior scratched out the No. 2 spot with $21.7 million in its second weekend, bringing the Marvel icon's total domestic haul to $95 million. "Wolverine" earned another $38.5 million in 67 international territories.

"The Smurfs 2" launched in the No. 3 position with $18.2 million. While Sony's kid-friendly computer-generated sequel based on the blue-hued cartoon franchise debuted below expectations in North America, "Smurfs 2" earned a bright $52.5 million in 43 international markets.

"It is one of those films that seems to resonate on every continent," said Rory Bruer, Sony's president of worldwide distribution. "We have about 36 big territories to go, including China. They love the blue ones."

The Warner Bros. haunted house tale "The Conjuring" crossed the $100 million mark at No. 4 domestically after exorcising $13.7 million in its third weekend.

Elsewhere at the box office, Sundance Film Festival favorite "The Spectacular Now" starring Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley earned $190,000 in four theaters in its debut weekend, while "The Canyons" made just $16,000 at two theaters, though "Canyons" distributor IFC Films said the erotic thriller starring Lindsay Lohan is performing strongly through video-on-demand services.

Other smaller films continued to perform solidly at the box office, including Sundance winner "Fruitvale Station" with $2.7 million in 1,086 theaters and director Woody Allen's "Blue Jasmine" with $2 million in 50 theaters.

"Summer is not just about blockbusters," said Paul Dergarabedian of box-office tracker Hollywood.com. "It's also about Woody Allen. It's about specialized films that challenge the audience ? or are just different from the traditional, cookie-cutter, summer-style movie."

Overall ticket sales this weekend were up more than 15 percent over the same weekend last summer, Dergarabedian said.

___

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Where available, latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released on Monday.

1. "2 Guns,"$27.4 million.

2. "The Wolverine," $21.7 million ($38.5 million international).

3. "The Smurfs 2," $18.2 million ($52.5 million international).

4. "The Conjuring," $13.7 million ($11.6 million international).

5. "Despicable Me 2," $10.4 million ($13.8 million international).

6. "Grown Ups 2," $8.1 million ($2.8 million international).

7. "Turbo," $6.4 million ($6.9 million international).

8. "Red 2," $5.6 million ($9.3 million international).

9. "The Heat," $4.7 million ($6.9 million international).

10. "Pacific Rim," $4.6 million ($53 million international).

___

Estimated weekend ticket sales at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada) for films distributed overseas by Hollywood studios, according to Rentrak:

1. "Pacific Rim," $53 million.

2. "The Smurfs 2," $52.5 million.

3. "The Wolverine," $38.5 million.

4. "Snowpiercer," $18 million.

5. "Despicable Me 2," $13.8 million.

6. "Now You See Me," $13.1 million.

7. "The Conjuring," $11.6 million.

8. "Monsters University," $11.4 million.

9. "The Terror Live," $9.5 million.

10. "Red 2," $9.3 million.

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang

___

Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-08-04-Box%20Office/id-b8f0a58a55a14f9b928edcd9725bcafc

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HTC One dual SIM arriving in India

HTC One dual SIM arriving in India

HTC has silently listed the dual-SIM version of its much-awaited smartphone HTC One on its India website.

As you would expect, the HTC One dual SIM - first spotted by Gizbot - has nearly matching specifications just like the HTC One, with the greeting adding up of expandable storage, which was particularly missing in the One.

Just like the single-SIM variant of the phone, the HTC One dual SIM comes with 1.7GHz quad-core processor with 2GB RAM. It runs on Android Jelly Bean with a layer of HTC Sense 5 on top with features like BlinkFeed. Connectivity options include Wi-Fi 802.11, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS, NFC, Infrared, and Micro-USB.

HTC One dual SIM technical specifications

? 4.7-inch full-HD display

? 1.7GHz quad-core processor

? 2GB RAM

? 16GB internal storage, expandable by another 64GB via microSD card

? Dual-SIM support

? UltraPixel camera

? Wi-Fi 802.11 a/ac/b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS, NFC, Infrared, Micro-USB

? 2,300mAh battery

? 137.4 x 68.2 x 9.3mm

? 143g

Source: http://www.mynews.in/News/htc_one_dual_sim_arriving_in_india_N552572.html

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Ankit Jain Departs as Head of Search for Google Play Store

All Things D writes, Ankit Jain, Google employee of the past three years, left his position as head of Search and Discovery for the Google Play Web store last week. Before leaving, Jain?s position entailed maintaining the Google Play storefront infrastructure and helping build the search backends for finding apps, music, e-books and movies on the site, according to his LinkedIn profile. ?It?s time to start the next 5 years by giving myself a chance to build something from the ground up,? Jain wrote in a post on his Google+ page. ?It?s another unknown journey, but if it?s even half as good as the one?

Continue reading Ankit Jain Departs as Head of Search for Google Play Store at All Things D

Source: http://technewstube.com/all-things-digital/251150/ankit-jain-departs-as-head-of-search-for-google-play-store/

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From Recession's Wake, Education Innovation Blooms - Higher ...


by Justin Pope, AP Education Writer

College TechSCOTTSDALE, Ariz. ? Hundreds of investment bankers, venture capitalists and geeky tech entrepreneurs gathered near the pool of the Phoenician, a luxury resort outside Phoenix. The occasion? A high-profile gathering of education innovators, and, as guests sipped cocktails, the mood was upbeat.

Major innovations forged by the struggles of the Great Recession and fostered by technology are coming to higher education.

Investment dollars are flooding in with a record-smashing 168 venture capital deals in the U.S. alone last year, according to the springtime conference?s host, GSV Advisors. The computing power of ?the cloud? and ?big data? are unleashing new software. Public officials, desperate to cut costs and measure results, are open to change.

And everyone, it seems, is talking about MOOCs, the ?Massive Open Online Courses? offered by elite universities and enrolling millions worldwide.

As with so many innovations from the lightbulb to the Internet, the technology is emerging mostly in the United States, fueled by American capital. But, as with those past innovations, the impact will be global. In this case, it may prove even more consequential in developing countries, where mass higher education is new and the changes could be built into emerging systems.

One source of this spring-like moment is the wintry depths of the financial crisis that struck five years ago, pushing higher education as never before to become more efficient. Another is simply the arrival of a generation demanding that higher education, at long last, embrace the technologies that have already transformed other sectors of the economy.

?The consumer, after five years on a tablet and five years on an iPhone, is just sick of being told, ?you can?t do that,?? said Brandon Dobell, a partner at William Blair & Co., an investment bank and research firm based in Chicago. ?I can do everything else on my phone, my tablet, why can?t I learn as well??

But, while technology is at the center of this wave of innovation, many argue it is merely the pathway to something even bigger.

Cracks are opening in the traditional, age-old structures of higher education. Terms like ?credit hour? and even the definition of what it means to be a college are in flux.

Higher education is becoming ?unbundled.? Individual classes and degrees are losing their connections to single institutions, in much the same way iTunes has unbundled songs from whole albums, and the Internet is unbundling television shows and networks from bulky cable packages.

Technology isn?t just changing traditional higher education. It?s helping break it down across two broad dimensions: distance and time.

But that doesn?t necessarily mean, as some contend, the traditional university is dead.

At his desk at a telecom company in Lagos, Nigeria, Ugochukwu Nehemiah used to take his full one-hour lunch break. Now, he devours his meal, then watches his downloaded MOOCs. He?s already finished courses in business, energy and sustainability, and disruptive innovation, taught by institutions like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Maryland.

Nehemiah needs a master?s to advance at work but cannot afford the United Kingdom program where he?s been admitted. The MOOC learning doesn?t translate into a widely recognized credential. But the teaching is free, not available locally, and helps him even without a credential.

?It?s a form of self-development,? said Nehemiah, a father of two. ?The way I would speak when I have meetings to attend,? he added, ?would be much different than the way I had spoken if I had not taken this course.?

When non-profit edX offered its first MOOC in ?Circuits and Electronics? in 2012, 154,000 students from more than 160 countries signed up (though only 8,000 lasted to the final). Now edX has more than a million unique users in about 60 courses. For-profit rival Coursera has exploded with 4.1 million students, 406 courses and 83 partner institutions.

From radio to television to the Internet, technology has always promised to revolutionize higher education. So far, it?s enabled good teachers to lecture to thousands or even millions of students. But truly teach them, with individualized interaction and feedback?

It?s not clear the MOOCs can do that, either, and only 10 percent who sign up for a course are completing it. But with their more advanced interactivity, they are arguably the most sophisticated effort yet to solve the central problem of college access and affordability: the difficulty of ?scaling up? learning.

?This is virgin territory in terms of having tens or hundreds of thousands of people engaged in the same educational experience simultaneously in a way you can capture what you?re doing,? said Kevin Carey, director of the Education Policy Program at the New America Foundation. ?We?ve never had that. The assumption is we?ll learn lots of things and that will lead to better classes in the future.??

The MOOCs are just one part of this new landscape.

Sal Khan, a charismatic former hedge-fund adviser, discovered his knack for explaining things while tutoring his young cousins in algebra in 2004. In 2006, he uploaded his first YouTube video and two years later founded Khan Academy.

Today, Mountain View, Calif.-based Khan has 6 million unique users a month from 216 countries, who watch the 4,000-plus videos available on Khan Academy?s website. These are not full courses, but a connected series of free, bite-sized lessons about 10 minutes each taught by Khan and others in everything from math to art history.

Khan talks excitedly not just of shaking up education across distance, but time. He says students can learn what they need, when they need it, without having to take and pay for an entire course.

?Whether we?re talking basic literacy or quantum physics, it?s the ability to cater to one person?s needs,? Khan said.

Some at cutting-edge traditional universities are also rethinking notions of academic time.

One morning last spring, not far from the innovation conference, at Arizona State University, a handful of students worked through problems in a developmental math course that looks little like the traditional model. There?s no lecturer; software takes students through the material at their own speed, adjusting to their errors. An instructor is available to answer questions?a model that?s proven cheaper and more effective than the traditional class.

Yet what matters most is what isn?t here: Most students have mastered the material and moved on to other classes.

?We?ve organized higher education into this factory model where we bring a group of students in post-high school and march them through more or less in lockstep,? said Richard Demillo, director of the Center for 21st Century Universities at the Georgia Institute of Technology. ?People that don?t conform are rejected from the factory, and people that make it through are stamped with a degree.?

ASU has broken up the traditional model of two-semesters-per-year into six parts. Some classes have accelerated versions that run essentially at double-speed: six or 7.5 weeks. So students who quickly finish a flexible-time class don?t have to wait before starting a new one. They can move more quickly and cheaply toward their degree.

?We began to say, ?What are all these sacred cows about time??? said ASU President Michael Crow, who has transformed ASU into a laboratory of innovation. ?What we?re looking for is intensification by freeing up the clock.?

More than a century ago, the Carnegie Foundation invented the ?credit hour,? the basic unit of academic time, measuring hours spent in class but not necessarily what students learned.

Now, the foundation is reviewing that model and may move toward a competency-based approach awarding credit for what students learn, not how long.

In March, the Department of Education approved a competency-based program at Southern New Hampshire University, inviting other colleges to seek approval for programs that don?t mark time in traditional credit hours.

ASU?s challenges are a microcosm of the country?s and the world?s. Amid scarce resources, it?s trying to accommodate diverse and growing demand. Yet despite a 50 percent state funding cut during the Great Recession, ASU did something unusual: It kept growing, from 50,000 students to around 72,000 over the last decade. Completion rates are up, too.

Still, Crow?s careful to emphasize innovation?s purpose is to make traditional universities work better, not replace them. He wants technologies like those in use in the math class to free up faculty resources for upper-division and critical-thinking courses where personal interaction really matters, and for the other endeavors of a physical university.

?Technology cannot produce new ideas,? Crow said. ?Technology cannot produce new understandings. Technology cannot produce new connections between disciplines.?

In much of the world, the question isn?t whether innovation can make higher education more efficient and affordable. It?s whether it can help it function at all.

A year ago, the campus of Felix Houphouet Boigy University, the largest in the West African nation of Ivory Coast, was nearly deserted, an institutional casualty of recent post-election violence. During the conflict, so-called student groups had become armed militias, accused of racketeering and rape. Buildings were looted, and the university shut down for 17 months.

Today, the campus is open again but bursting at the seams and barely functional. It?s added 10,000 students, for a total of 60,000. But there?s a shortage of classrooms, and no books in the two libraries.

For students like Abdoulaye Coulibaly, it would be easy to see the appeal of other options. To reach his 8 a.m. class by bus, he leaves home around 5 a.m. He?s been robbed a half-dozen times en route.

Yet he?s skeptical.

?We?re going to be very lazy online,? he said. ?If you put my class online I?m going to take it and I?m not going to come to the university again. We need to come to class. They?re the teachers and they have to teach us. If we don?t understand, we need to ask questions. That?s the only way for us to understand.?

Fellow English student Stephanie N?Guessan was also unconvinced.

?Many of us don?t know how to manage the Internet very well,? she said. ?I myself am computer illiterate.?

Many experts argue the hype of technology transforming higher education in such places is overblown.

?Disadvantaged populations need higher-touch services, not self-services,? said Peter Stokes, an expert on education innovation at Northeastern University in Boston.

Still, roughly 40 percent of Coursera?s registered students come from developing countries, and close to half of edX?s.

India?s latest official five-year plan calls for increasing college enrollment by roughly 2 million students each year, to help it catch up with emerging economies like Brazil and China. Coursera co-founder Daphne Kohler says meeting its goals would require India to build 1,500 new universities when it can?t staff its current ones. Scaled-up teaching through technology is its only hope.

Francisco Marmolejo, a longtime Mexican university administrator who now leads the World Bank?s higher education efforts, said global policymakers are intrigued by technology like MOOCs, but also anxious. They fear such innovations will become an excuse to ignore the imperative of building local institutions.

Physical universities are ?a place where you train to become a citizen,? he said. ?It is not the new technologies against the old system. It is the blended component that I believe may be the key.?

Indeed, an experiment underway in California?s public universities has found students doing well when MOOCs used in conjunction with traditional classes, supplementing them. When they replace traditional classes, they have done worse.

In 1997, Marmolejo noted, the late management guru Peter Drucker predicted big university campuses would disappear within 30 years. Yet the importance of place, and human interaction, appears if anything to have been magnified.

Still, Drucker may well be proved correct in comparing the scale of the changes coming to higher education to the revolution unleashed by the printing press.

Universities ?need to change and they will change,? Marmolejo said. ?Technology will absolutely help them to change.?

Robbie Corey-Boulet reported from Abidjan, Ivory Coast.

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Source: http://diverseeducation.com/article/55027/

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The War On Words Continues ? 50 Banned Words from NYC ...

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The New York City Department of Education is waging a war on words of sorts, and is seeking to have words they deem upsetting removed from standardized tests. The fear is that certain words and topics can make students feel unpleasant, ... Also banned are references to ?divorce? and ?disease,? because kids taking the tests may have relatives or parents who split from spouses or are ill. Even some students think banning these words from periodic assessment tests ...

Source: http://amerinfidel.wordpress.com/2013/08/04/the-war-on-words-continues-50-banned-words-from-nyc-schools-standardized-tests/

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Parting Schotts: Clifton Park's Taylor heads Union hockey 2013-14 recruiting class (with video)

Jeff Taylor and his parents were long-time Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute hockey season-ticket holders.

Now, Taylor?s parents will need season tickets to see their son play at Union this season.

Taylor, a Clifton Park native and 2012 Albany Academy graduate, headlines the list of eight recruits who will be joining the two-time defending ECAC Hockey tournament-champion Dutchmen, Union coach Rick Bennett announced Thursday.

The 6-foot, 180-pound Taylor is one of four defensemen coming in. The others are Noah Henry from the British Columbia Junior Hockey League?s Powell River Kings, Matt Krug from the U.S. Hockey League?s Indiana Ice and Griffyn Martin of Avon Old Farms.

There are three forwards ? Alex Gonye from Deerfield Academy, Eli Lichtenwald of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League?s Nipawin Hawks and Mike Vecchione from the USHL?s Tri-City Storm.

The other recruit is goalie Alex Sakellaropoulos from the USHL?s Chicago Steel.

Taylor committed to Union while he was at Albany Academy. He spent last season with the USHL?s Dubuque Fighting Saints, who won the league title. Taylor had five goals and 22 assists in 57 games.

But Taylor and his family were fans of RPI before Taylor began going to Union games.
?I had RPI season tickets from 2 or 3 [years old] to 14,? Taylor said. ?It?s kind of ironic.?

With his skills, Taylor should fit right in on the blue line along with senior Mat Bodie and junior Shayne Gostisbehere.

?He?s a little bit of a hybrid between Mat Bodie and Shayne Gostisbehere,? Bennett said. [He?s a] defenseman that keeps it simple, but can jump into the offense, as well. I think he?s got a tremendous upside at Union, and I look forward to his progression.?

Henry started last season with the BCHL?s Penticton Vees before being traded to Powell River. In 52 combined games, the 6-0, 190-pound Henry had two goals and 14 assists.

The 6-1, 198-pound Krug spent the last two seasons with Indiana. He had five goals and 17 assists in 108 career games.

Martin, who is 6-0 and weighs 187 pounds, was Avon Old Farms? captain last season. He was named the team?s most valuable player after collecting three goals and 14 assists.
FORWARDS
The 5-10, 195-pound Vecchione originally committed to New Hampshire, but backed out of it. He spent the last two seasons with Tri-City. He was the Storm?s second-leading scorer last season with 26 goals and 34 assists in 63 games. Vecchione was the team captain.

Gonye, who is 6-1 and weighs 175 pounds, played for Deerfield Academy for four years. He was tied for second in team scoring last season with six goals and 18 assists in 24 games.

At 6-6 and 235 pounds. Lichtenwald is probably one of the biggest recruits Union has ever had. Lichtenwald started last season with the USHL?s Omaha Lancers and five goals and 14 assists in 19 games. Midway through the season, he went to Nipawin, the team he started his junior career with in 2010-11 and was the SJHL?s Rookie of the Year, and finished with nine goals and 13 assists in 19 games.
GOALIE
Shortly after junior Troy Grosenick announced that he was leaving the Dutchmen to sign with the San Jose Sharks, the Dutchmen landed the 6-3, 215-pound Sakellaropoulos. He posted a 22-20-2 record in 48 games last season with a 3.03 goals-against average and a .914 save percentage and three shutouts.

NOTE
Forward Tyler Hynes, who was a teammate of Taylor?s at Albany Academy and had been expected to be a part of this recruiting class, will spend another year with the Lancers before coming to Union next season. Hynes, who is from Slingerlands, had six goals and three assists in 53 games last season.

To see my interview with Bennett, click here.

Follow @slapschotts on Twitter. Follow @dgazettesports on Twitter.

Source: http://www.dailygazette.com/weblogs/schott/2013/aug/01/clifton-parks-taylor-heads-union-hockey-2013-14-re/

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Judge postpones ex-mayor?s bribery trial

by Associated Press

Published: August 4,2013

Tags: bench, bribe, bribery, city, city government, court, crime, David Bramlette, elected official, FBI, judge, judicial, judiciary, justice, law enforcement, mayor, municipal, municipality, Paul Winfield, politician, public official, trial

VICKSBURG ? A federal judge has postponed a trial for former Vicksburg Mayor Paul Winfield on charges he sought $10,000 in cash in exchange for awarding a city contract.

Paul Winfield?s trial was scheduled to start tomorrow in Natchez. On Friday, however, U.S. District Judge David Bramlette delayed it until Sept. 30 to give prosecutors and defense attorneys more time to negotiate a possible resolution of the case.

The Vicksburg Post reports that Winfield was arrested by the FBI earlier this year after he allegedly solicited a bribe from a confidential FBI informant for awarding a debris removal contract.

The Democrat served one term as mayor before losing his re-election bid this year.

If convicted at trial, Winfield faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

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Source: http://msbusiness.com/blog/2013/08/04/judge-postpones-ex-mayors-bribery-trial/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=judge-postpones-ex-mayors-bribery-trial

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Official: HSBC drops dozens of London consulates

(AP) ? A London-based consular official says that HSBC bank has dropped dozens of foreign missions in London.

Bernard Silver, who serves as president of the Consular Corps of London, said that diplomats across the capital had been left scrambling to find a new bank after being told that HSBC would soon close their accounts.

Silver said he'd been told by British officials that more than 40 different embassies, consulates, and high commissions had been affected.

HSBC said Saturday there were a range of reasons for dropping the missions. The bank was reviewing all its businesses and "embassies are no exception."

Britain's Foreign Office declined to confirm the number of missions involved, saying only that it had sent an unspecified number of diplomats advice on finding a new U.K. bank.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-08-04-Britain-HSBC-Embassies/id-03a2e9c47bc448a891b059b358123db7

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'It will be beautiful again': Breezy Point couple returns home, and recovers through rebuilding

John Makely / NBC News

Christine and George Donley, both 63, are finally moving home after nine months of being displaced by Hurricane Sandy. All of their possesions that they could save are now piled up in one room on the second floor as workers finish repairing their home.

By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

BREEZY POINT, N.Y. -- Half of their neighbors are gone, piles of sand occupy lots where homes once stood, and they?re living out of one room of the two-story house they?ve owned for 10 years. This is one couple?s life nine months after Hurricane Sandy.

Christine and George Donley, both 63, desperately wanted to get home after Sandy tore through their quiet corner of New York City last Oct. 29. But now that they?ve finally returned, being among familiar things offers just some?comfort.

?Sixty-three years old sleeping on a mattress on the floor is tough,? Christine said as she presented the single habitable room of their Breezy Point home. ?He sleeps on the couch, and this is where we live now.

?Everyone says, ?Oh, isn?t it great? You?re back in your house.? I say no, because, look how I'm living. This isn?t living.?


?Oh, it?s pretty close to it,? countered George. Christine admitted that he was the more optimistic of the two of them.

They have a mini fridge, a TV and a shower that doesn?t stream water at full capacity. Their former bedroom, at the other end of the house and facing the Atlantic Ocean, is what George now calls a storage room: it?s filled with items salvaged from the first floor ? a comforter, clothes, little mementos from life before.

Near the window, overlooking the sea, is a white chair with a foot rest.

?This used to be my little corner to sit and read. That was my reading corner and I'd look out onto the ocean, and life was peaceful,? said Christine, a retired school teacher. ?This is, this was, our beautiful bedroom.?

George gently told her: ?It will be beautiful again.?

Nearly 74,000 homes and apartments in New York and New Jersey, where Sandy made landfall, sustained damage, according to FEMA. Some 450 homes in New York were destroyed by the storm, while approximately 46,000 in New Jersey were destroyed or sustained major damage, the agency said.

The Donleys returned home July 20 after refuging in three different locations: the homes of two relatives (including one in the early days that housed 11 adults, two kids and a baby) and a rental apartment in Brooklyn.

Apart from dealing with the inconvenience of transient existence, the Donleys have spent untold hours wrestling with their insurance company over coverage, forcing them to take money out of their retirement savings for home. (They?re still challenging the firm?s decision not to pay $12,000 for foundation damage.)

They?ve watched their two daughters struggle, too, to get back to their damaged homes, helping them where they could with money, repairs and babysitting.

?It?s a loss of a year of your life, that?s what it?s like,? said George, a CPA who is mostly retired. ?It?s the loss of being near your friends and neighbors, and it?s because they?re suffering from the same loss that you don?t have contact with them.?

More than 75 percent of the homes in close-knit Breezy Point were damaged in the storm ? including nearly 130 that burned down in a fire triggered by Sandy?s surging waters (it was the largest blaze in New York City?s modern history).

In front of the Donley?s house is an empty lot, and another large one nearby is vacant.

?Four houses there,? George said, gesturing across the street. ?They floated up like an entire team, came up, and crashed into some of the houses here. So it was one, two, three, four.?

George said that observing the rebuilding of their house has given them a lift ? new appliances are waiting to be installed and they?ve ordered furniture just like their former pieces to make the downstairs feel homey. They?ve also figured out how to carve out a new room for the grandkids ? one, a grandson, who was born a little more than a week ago.

But the Donleys are still awaiting final word ? like many others across the city and in New Jersey ? from the federal government about new building requirements for homes situated in regional flood zones.

New, preliminary federal flood maps for the region mandate that people living in vulnerable areas like the Donleys will have to elevate their homes a certain number of feet ? about four in their case ? or face steep increases in their insurance. Some homeowners will have to get new kinds of foundations, too, among other adjustments.

John Makely / NBC News

Christine and George Donley, both 63, are finally moving home after nine months of being displaced by Hurricane Sandy.

The requirements could go into effect for all homeowners in the Breezy area, though some whose homes were significantly damaged or demolished will have to do the work sooner.

?We were living in the apartment and we?re saying, well, maybe we won?t go back in until we find out how high we have to go,? Christine said. Ultimately, ?we don?t have two to three years for them to decide how high we have to go. We can?t afford to pay the rent and pay a mortgage while they?re deciding.?

Elevating is an expense that can range from tens of thousands of dollars to more than $100,000 depending on the type of residence and foundation.

Returning to the Breezy community has made dealing with all of the uncertainty bearable.

?We?re able to see and spend time with our friends and neighbors who are here and we?re sharing (our) struggling stories with them,? he said. ?It?s good to see them.?

A neighbor and good friend, Catherine Palummeri, had tidied up the Donley home and put up a big sign reading, ?welcome home,? to greet the couple upon their return. ?I couldn't wait for them to come back,? she said.

?You need people, that?s it ? let?s get back to normal,? said Palummeri, who moved back in late March. ?The worst part was having no neighbors ? you had no interaction.?

Also giving the Donleys a boost: family time on the beach.

?The water has been beautiful. The beach has been great,? George said.

As she sat in a rocking chair on her new deck, where a city building department flyer was posted listing their home?s condition and new insulation clung to the outside walls, Christine said they would make it through the storm ? one that she said she would not ?honor? by calling it by its given name.

?We will get through this,? she said. ?I am stronger than the storm. I am. It took me a long time to say that, but I said it the other night. I am stronger.?

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2f85eb91/sc/10/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A80C0A30C1983830A90Eit0Ewill0Ebe0Ebeautiful0Eagain0Ebreezy0Epoint0Ecouple0Ereturns0Ehome0Eand0Erecovers0Ethrough0Erebuilding0Dlite/story01.htm

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Recall Effort Against Pelosi-Picked Mayor Of San Diego Gets Going

Getting rough for old Onion Breath?

San Diego?s embattled mayor, facing sexual harassment allegations from a string of women, was dealt a setback on Friday when a liberal Democrat and a Republican businessman joined forces in a campaign to force a recall election.

Bob Filner, the 70-year-old Democratic mayor of California?s second-largest city, has faced mounting pressure to resign over a sexual harassment lawsuit filed against him last month by his former press secretary, who accused him of telling her she would work better without panties.

This cretin would have been shamed out of office weeks ago were he Republican but, as the co-founder (with Botox Hag Pelosi) of the California Progressive Caucus, he is without shame.

Side note: aren?t Filner, Weiner and Spitzers three of the creepiest looking dudes you have ever seen? Horror movies can?t make up faces that awful.

Stephen Kruiser is a professional comedian and writer who has also been a conservative political activist for over two decades. A co-founder of the first Los Angeles Tea Party, Kruiser often speaks to grassroots groups around America and has had the great honor of traveling around the world entertaining U.S. troops.

Source: http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2013/08/02/recall-effort-against-pelosi-picked-face-licking-perv-mayor-of-san-diego-gets-going/

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Nvidia wants its Shield to combine PC, mobile gaming

nvidia

Aug. 2, 2013 at 9:45 PM ET

The Shield from Nvidia

Nvidia

The Shield uses the Android operating system.

One of the biggest surprises from this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas came when Nvidia, a tech company primarily known for its powerhouse graphics processing units and chipsets, revealed?it was making a full-fledged mobile gaming device of its own to stand alongside the many devices that Nvidia's technology already powers.

After a slight name change, a month's delay and drop in price from $349 to $299, the Nvidia Shield hit store shelves this week. But what is Shield, exactly?

"We don?t consider Shield a console," Bryan Del Rizzo, Nvidia senior PR manager of consumer products, explained when I first emailed him inquiring about what I thought was a new mobile gaming console through-and-through. "It?s a mobile Android gaming platform that also is able to stream PC games."

The idea behind Shield was to create something that sits on the border between high-end PC gaming and its mobile counterpart on Android, so the Nvidia Shield is a mish-mash of different elements.

On one hand, it's a fancy Android platform with a gaming controller attached to it. On the other, it's a device that can interact with a PC in a manner similar to how Sony is promising the PlayStation Vita will once the PlayStation 4 comes out ? Shield users, when equipped with the right hardware and in wireless range, can stream games straight from their PC gaming setup to the mobile device.

It's a great idea for anyone who wants to play "Skyrim in bed," as one early reviewer put it. And like Sony's similar promise for cross-play between the PlayStation 4 and PS Vita shows, it's an ambitious idea to bring high-end video game experiences to not-so-high-end devices.

But as with any new emerging technology, there are hiccups along the way. In addition to needing a stable Wi-Fi connection, the streaming part of the Shield's functionality relies on an H.264 encoder that's built into Nvidia's GeForce GTX 650 or higher graphics-card models ? a requirement that could set you back at least another $100 if you don't have one of the company's PC graphics cards, let alone a functioning PC gaming tower in its own right. And the limitations of Wi-Fi range seems to either render this "mobile gaming device's" most promising features inert, or not allow it to be truly "mobile."

Nick Stam, Nvidia's technical marketing director, told NBC News that ideally the device could eventually be set up to stream games from?GRID, its cloud gaming-esque system also unveiled at this year's CES. But for the time being, they're still focused on working out the kinks in the current streaming system.

"Not every game works perfectly," Stam said. "That's why we still have it in beta."

It might seem like a peculiar choice for an established chipmaker to wade into the chaotic and competitive arena of console development. But Nvidia could actually be in a better position than some of its leaner rivals because it doesn't really need to make much money off this device yet.

Piers Harding-Rolls, director of games at market research firm IHS Global Insight, told NBC News that the Shield could basically function as a souped-up business card for Nvidia, helping court fellow gaming companies and mobile gadget makers alike (not to mention average consumers) to its line of graphics cards.

"We expect the platform to be a niche seller at this point," Harding-Rolls wrote in an email to NBC News. "We don't expect it to sell at the level of other handheld consoles, but we don't believe that is necessarily a major issue for Nvidia, as this strategy is as much about provoking interest in Nvidia technology, engaging gamers outside of the PC sector especially in the mobile space and driving brand awareness, as it is generating direct revenue from a handheld console."

But Michael Pachter, a prominent game industry analyst at Wedbush Securities, is less optimistic about the Shield's chances of success.

"I really don?t care about Shield," Pachter wrote when I emailed him asking about the device this week.

"It is not going to sell well at all, reminds me of N-Gage," he added, referring to Nokia's famously hideous flop of an attempt to make a mobile console in 2003.

Yannick LeJacq is a contributing writer for NBC News who has also covered technology and games for Kill Screen, The Wall Street Journal and The Atlantic. You can follow him on Twitter at @YannickLeJacq and reach him by email at: Yannick.LeJacq@nbcuni.com.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2f8010c4/sc/28/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cnvidia0Ewants0Eits0Eshield0Ecombine0Epc0Emobile0Egaming0E6C10A835459/story01.htm

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Positive Thinking Attitude: 5 Simple Steps To Achieving It | NLPiste ...

A positive thinking attitude can help you cope with the stresses and pressures of everyday life. We are all faced with challenges at work, at school or even at home ? we can?t avoid these.

What we can do is to develop and strengthen a positive thinking attitude that can help us see the brighter side of life. The following are some easy ways which can help you develop this very important and useful habit.

Step 1: Take Care Of Yourself.

A healthy body makes for a healthy mind. Eating well, exercising regularly and getting enough rest will help you take on the difficulties you face everyday.

When you overwork or stress yourself too much, it becomes more difficult to be in a positive mental state. Having a positive thinking attitude is much easier when you have a healthy body.

Step 2: Count Your Blessings.

There will always be good times and bad times in life. Reminding yourself of all the happy times and the good things that have happened will help you deal with the challenges that come your way.

You will realize that these challenges aren?t as bad when you take into account all the blessings that you?ve received or those problems that you have been able to conquer in the past.

Step 3: Be Physical, In A Good And Warm Way.

A simple hug or squeeze can do wonders. Expressing your love to your friends, your family members, or even your pets through physical contact can instantly make you feel better and can greatly help in developing a positive thinking attitude.

Step 4: Don?t Make Assumptions.

Always be reminded that our thoughts don?t necessarily mean the truth. If something is bothering you, especially if it concerns someone you can talk to, don?t hesitate to ask and clear it up with that person.

Don?t worry about something that may or may not happen in the future. We can never really predict what will happen in the coming days; the important thing is to live in the present moment and make the most out of it.

Step 5: Go Out There And Be More Social.

Loneliness is a breeding ground for negative thoughts. You can avoid being lonely by surrounding yourself with people who are positive and happy, as you will soon find their optimism and positive energy affecting you as well.

A positive thinking attitude will help you find happiness and success in life. Being optimistic can fill you with light that will change not only your own life, but the way you view the world as well. Start choosing to be happy today.

To help you achieve your dreams fast, I?d like to give you instant access to more than 100 of the best free self-improvement ebooks that could greatly change your life! Download them free at http://www.20daypersuasion.com/goldaccess.htm

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Source: http://www.nlpiste.com/positive-thinking-attitude-5-simple-steps-to-achieving-it/

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APNewsBreak: Sikhs added to hate crime stats

FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTING ANNIVERSARY STORIES - FILE - In this Aug. 6, 2012, file photo worshipers from the Sikh community gather for a candle light vigil after prayer services in Brookfield, Wis. Twelve months ago, a white supremacist walked into a the temple and opened fire on worshippers he didn't know, killing six and devastating a Sikh community whose religion is based on peace and forgiveness. Monday is the one-year anniversary of the shooting. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTING ANNIVERSARY STORIES - FILE - In this Aug. 6, 2012, file photo worshipers from the Sikh community gather for a candle light vigil after prayer services in Brookfield, Wis. Twelve months ago, a white supremacist walked into a the temple and opened fire on worshippers he didn't know, killing six and devastating a Sikh community whose religion is based on peace and forgiveness. Monday is the one-year anniversary of the shooting. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File)

FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTING ANNIVERSARY STORIES - FILE - In this undated file photo provided by the Federal Bureau of Investigation is Wade Michael Page. Page walked into the Milwaukee-area Sikh temple a year ago Monday, Aug. 5, 2013, and opened fire. He killed six priests and worshippers and wounded five others, and then fatally shot himself after he was wounded in the parking lot by a police sniper. Authorities investigated the Page's background for months before concluding that his motive for attacking the temple died along with him. (AP Photo/FBI, File)

FOR USE AS DESIRED WITH SIKH TEMPLE SHOOTING ANNIVERSARY STORIES - FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2012, file photo bystanders stand outside the scene of a shooting at the Milwaukee-area Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wis. Twelve months ago, a white supremacist walked into a the temple and opened fire on worshippers he didn't know, killing six and devastating a Sikh community whose religion is based on peace and forgiveness. Monday is the one-year anniversary of the shooting. (AP Photo/Jeffrey Phelps, File)

(AP) ? The Justice Department will begin keeping numbers on hate crimes committed against Sikhs and six other groups, in connection with Monday's one-year anniversary of the killing of six Sikh worshippers in Oak Creek, Wis.

Attorney General Eric Holder made the announcement Friday in a blog post, which The Associated Press obtained ahead of its official release. Holder said FBI Director Robert Mueller had approved a recommendation from the agency's advisory policy board to track hate crimes against Sikhs, Hindus, Arabs, Buddhists, Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses and Orthodox Christians.

"Having accurate information allows law enforcement leaders and policymakers to make informed decisions about the allocation of resources and priorities ? decisions that impact real people, and affect public safety in every neighborhood and community," Holder wrote in the blog post. "Today, I am proud to report that we have taken steps to collect this information."

The addition had long been sought by members of the Sikh community.

Holder also announced a $500,000 grant for mental health and trauma services to those affected by the Oak Creek shooting, including survivors and family members.

A year ago Monday, Wade Michael Page, who had ties to white supremacist groups, walked into the Milwaukee-area Sikh Temple of Wisconsin and opened fire. He killed six priests and worshippers and wounded five others, and then fatally shot himself after he was wounded in the parking lot by a police sniper. Holder on Friday called the attack a "heinous act of hatred and terror."

Pardeep Kaleka, son of former temple president Satwant Singh Kaleka, who died in the massacre, said he appreciated anything that can draw attention to people being victimized for things like their race, religion or gender.

"Progress is sort of a climb, and it takes a step at a time. This is one of those steps toward progress," he said.

Amardeep Singh, program director of the Sikh Coalition, said that while he welcomed the announcement as a "critical first step," the underlying conditions that caused the killings remain.

"The last year has once again seen violent shootings and beatings of Sikhs throughout the country," he said. "It will take more than tracking hate crime statistics to stem the tide."

Holder wrote that since the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the Justice Department has investigated more than 800 incidents involving violence, threats, assaults, vandalism and arson targeting Arabs, Muslims, Sikhs, South Asians and those perceived to be members of these groups.

Federal officials in Milwaukee held a remembrance Friday for the local Sikh community, where U.S. Attorney James Santelle read Holder's announcement of the new policy. The event drew several hundred people, including the six victims' families, temple members and Wisconsin's senators, Ron Johnson and Tammy Baldwin.

Temple officials introduced the victims' relatives, who lit candles in memory of their loved ones. Dr. Kulwant Dhaliwal, the temple president, said his community was grateful for the chance to raise awareness of Sikh values and honor those who lost their lives.

Oak Creek Mayor Stephen Scaffidi told the audience he refused to let last year's rampage be his city's lasting legacy. When the nation thinks of Oak Creek, he said, it should be as a city of compassion and resilience, not as a town targeted by a hateful individual.

Baldwin said she was inspired by way the Sikhs reacted in the shooting's aftermath ? with gentleness and peace, not with calls for vengeance.

"You've reminded us of the American values that hold us together as one community," she said. "You've reminded us of the values that define us as one people."

____

Associated Press writer Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee contributed to this report.

____

Follow Fred Frommer on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ffrommer

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-08-02-US-Sikhs-Hate-Crimes/id-cb36db3d532e48509c2dd5eb98f8117e

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Governor Quinn Signs Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Act - With Some of Nation?s Strongest Regulations, Law Will Help Ease Pain for People With Chronic Conditions, Cancer Patients and Veterans with Disabilities

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

Source: http://www3.illinois.gov/PressReleases/ShowPressRelease.cfm?SubjectID=1&RecNum=11400

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Latest Android distribution numbers show continued growth for Jelly Bean but Gingerbread is still holding on

Google_Distribution_Numbers_August_01_2013

It?s that time of the month again!! This is when we find out how badly Android is fragmented. According to Google, Jelly Bean is on about 40.5% devices, up from 37.9% the previous month. If you look at Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich and Jelly Bean combined, the total is at 63.1%, up from 61.3% last month.

I know a lot people seem to get excited how great this is, but seriously folks. Ice Cream Sandwich debuted in October of 2011 and Jelly Bean debuted last June 2012. I?m sorry, this is nothing to get excited about. In fact, Gingerbread, which was announced in November 2010, is still on 33.1% of devices.

The good news is that Android device sales continue to rock & roll while Tim Cook keeps arguing about fragmentation. Translation ? nobody cares.

source: Google

? See more articles by Robert Nazarian

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AndroidNewsGoogleAndroidForums/~3/TSGXDkhzJPM/

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Google relaunches Zagat website and mobile apps

After acquiring the crowd-sourced dining guide Zagat in 2011 to much fanfare, Google has launched a revamped website and free mobile apps as part of the brand?s rebirth.

The new Zagat has launched in nine US cities, with plans to expand to 50 more international destinations in the coming months.

For the first time, the app is being offered for free, no registration required.

An early look at the revamped site and a statement from Zagat, meanwhile, hints at a stronger editorial approach that may rely less on user-generated reviews, and more on local editors.

"These days, the challenge in deciding where to go is not about a lack of information or user reviews, but finding accurate information and trusted opinions so you can quickly make informed decisions," said Gannon Hall, head of Zagat.

For example, already the site provides curated lists compiled by Zagat editors like the spiciest restaurants in London, news on the latest restaurant openings and reviews of dishes.

Before being acquired by Google and leaning heavily on digital, Zagat was also known as the burgundy guide for the color of its book cover and the original crowd-sourced restaurant guide, as ratings are based on reviews submitted by regular diners.

Google is also tapping into Zagat?s review system in a major tie-in with its Google mapping service, as users can choose nearby restaurants based on reviews.

For its part, Michelin is likewise focusing on its digital operations, having added an instant online reservation service with Livebookings.com for listed restaurants across Europe.

The Zagat app is available on both Android and on iPhone.

story continues below

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/money/56672855-79/zagat-google-reviews-guide.html.csp

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Tips To Simplify Repairs To Your Credit | - JGVFinance

Debts that you may have forgotten about or been unaware of can seriously hurt your credit. There?s no better time than now to start repairing your credit. The following information is quick, simple and can help repair your credit if followed correctly.

If your credit card is carrying more than half of its credit limit, your first priority should be paying it down until it is below 50%. Credit card balances are among the factors taken into account when determining your credit score. Maintaining balances over 50% will lower your rating. You can attain lower your balances by using balance transfers to move debt from accounts with higher balances to those with lower balances, or by simply paying off some of your higher balances.

Having a good record allow you to qualify for things like a home mortgage. You will get a better credit score by paying your mortgage payment on time. Owning a home gives you secure financial assets. This will make taking out future loans much easier.

Begin paying your bills to repair your credit. More specifically, pay them on time and in full. Your FICO score will begin to increase immediately after you pay the bills that are past due.

Try joining a credit union to begin a credit score. They may offer better rates and more credit due to local conditions as compared to national ones.

If you notice credit reporting errors, always file a dispute. Compose a letter of dispute to every agency that reported errors, and include as much documentation as you can. Use a return receipt when you mail your package so that you can prove that the agency received it.

Too many credit cards is a common cause of financial strain, so close all of your accounts aside from one. Transferring multiple balances to one single card is a way to gain control of your finances. By doing this, you can concentrate on a single credit card payment, as opposed to a lot of smaller ones each month.

If a creditor agrees to give you a payment plan, get that payment plan in writing. You need to have a contract in writing so if the creditor goes belly up or they change your terms, you can catch them on it. Once you make the final payment, get a statement that verifies that the debt has been satisfied and send it to the various credit reporting agencies.

Bankruptcy should only be viewed as a last resort option. Bankruptcy does not drop from your credit report until ten years have passed, so you will deal with the fallout for a significant period of time. You may think that bankruptcy is your only option to rid yourself from debt, however look at your long term financial goals before deciding to file for it. Once bankruptcy has been filed, it could permanently halt your chances of ever obtaining credit again in the future.

To fix damaged credit, pay off your credit card balances as fast as you can. Pay down credit cards that have the highest amount owed, or the highest interest rates. Your debt will not grow as fast as before, if you get rid of high interest rates first, and your creditors will see you are making efforts.

Take the time to carefully go over your monthly credit card statement. Really analyze the purchases on your card to make sure you are not receiving any errant charges for items you never purchased. You are the person responsible for checking that there are no errors.

You should keep a low balance on your credit cards to improve your credit rating. You can raise your score by lowering your balances. The FICO system notates when a balance on a card is at 20,40,60,80, and 100 percent of the total available credit.

An experienced, honest credit restoration agency can be very helpful. Too many of these services will use your desperation to make money. Indeed, some people have fallen prey to credit score repair scams. Use online reviews and other resources to find an honest agency that can help you.

You should have noticed that the preceding tips have a common theme?they are mostly based on common sense. You can easily achieve your goal by using these tips.

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Source: http://www.jgvfinance.com/credit/tips-to-simplify-repairs-to-your-credit/

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Congress: Divided, discourteous _ taking a break

FILE - In this Aug. 1, 2013 file photo, House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. The accomplishments are few, the chaos plentiful in the 113th Congress, a discourteous model of divided government. "Have senators sit down and shut up, okay??? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid blurted out as lawmakers milled about noisily at a time Sen. Susan Collins was trying to speak. There was political calculation even in that. Democrats knew the Maine Republican was about rip into her own party?s leadership. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 1, 2013 file photo, House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. The accomplishments are few, the chaos plentiful in the 113th Congress, a discourteous model of divided government. "Have senators sit down and shut up, okay??? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid blurted out as lawmakers milled about noisily at a time Sen. Susan Collins was trying to speak. There was political calculation even in that. Democrats knew the Maine Republican was about rip into her own party?s leadership. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 1, 2013 file photo, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev. speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington. The accomplishments are few, the chaos plentiful in the 113th Congress, a discourteous model of divided government. "Have senators sit down and shut up, okay??? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid blurted out as lawmakers milled about noisily at a time Sen. Susan Collins was trying to speak. There was political calculation even in that. Democrats knew the Maine Republican was about rip into her own party?s leadership. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this July 10, 2013 file photo, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, left, heads to the floor of the Senate on Capitol Hill in Washington. The accomplishments are few, the chaos plentiful in the 113th Congress, a discourteous model of divided government. "Have senators sit down and shut up, okay??? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid blurted out as lawmakers milled about noisily at a time Sen. Susan Collins was trying to speak. There was political calculation even in that. Democrats knew the Maine Republican was about rip into her own party?s leadership. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

FILE - In this July 19,2013 file photo, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif., speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. The accomplishments are few, the chaos plentiful in the 113th Congress, a discourteous model of divided government. "Have senators sit down and shut up, okay??? Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid blurted out as lawmakers milled about noisily at a time Sen. Susan Collins was trying to speak. There was political calculation even in that. Democrats knew the Maine Republican was about rip into her own party?s leadership. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? The accomplishments are few, the chaos plentiful in the 113th Congress, a discourteous model of divided government now beginning a five-week break.

"Have senators sit down and shut up, OK?" Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid blurted out on Thursday as lawmakers milled about noisily at a time Sen. Susan Collins was trying to speak.

There was political calculation even in that. Democrats knew the Maine Republican was about rip into her own party's leadership, and wanted to make sure her indictment could be heard.

Across the Capitol, unsteady bookends tell the story of the House's first seven months in this two-year term. Internal dissent among Republicans nearly toppled Speaker John Boehner when lawmakers first convened in January. And leadership's grip is no surer now: A routine spending bill was pulled from the floor this week, two days before the monthlong August break, for fear it would fall in a crossfire between opposing GOP factions.

A few weeks earlier, Boehner suggested a new standard for Congress. "We should not be judged on how many new laws we create. We ought to be judged on how many laws that we repeal," he said as Republicans voted for the 38th and 39th time since 2011 to repeal or otherwise neuter the health care law known as Obamacare.

Reaching for a round number, they did it for a 40th time on Friday, although the legislation stands no chance in the Democratic Senate and the GOP has yet to offer the replacement that it pledged three years ago to produce.

House Democrats claimed to hate all of this, yet couldn't get enough.

After attacking virtually every move Republicans made for months, they demanded the GOP cancel summer vacation so Congress could stay in session. The break, Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said, "shows shocking disregard for the American people and our economy."

To be sure, there have been accomplishments since Congress convened last winter, although two of the more prominent ones merely avoided a meltdown rather than advancing the public's preferred agenda.

A closed-door session helped produce compromise over President Barack Obama's stalled nominations to administration posts and important boards ? avoiding a blow-up that Republicans said would follow if Democrats changed the Senate's filibuster rules unilaterally.

Months earlier, at the urging of their leaders, House Republicans agreed to raise the government's debt limit rather than push the Treasury to the brink of a first-ever national default.

Legislation linking interest rates on student loans to the marketplace passed, and, too, a bill to strengthen the government's response to crimes against women. Two more measures sent recovery funds to the victims of Superstorm Sandy.

Among the 18 other measures signed into law so far: one named a new span over the Mississippi River as the Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge, after the late baseball legend. Another renamed a section of the tax code after former Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas.

A third clarified the size of metal blanks to be used by the Baseball Hall of Fame in minting gold and silver commemoratives: a diameter of .85 inches in the case of $5 gold coins, and 1.5 inches for $1 silvers.

The Senate passed sweeping immigration legislation to spend billions securing the nation's borders against illegal entry and creating a path to citizenship for an estimated 11 million immigrants currently in the country unlawfully. The vote was 68-32, with all Democrats and about one-third of Republicans in favor.

But House Republicans, many of whom oppose granting citizenship to anyone living in the country illegally, deemed the bill a non-starter. They intend to have alternative legislation this fall. If it succeeds, that will give the two houses about a year to somehow compromise before Congress' term expires.

The Senate approved a bipartisan farm bill that followed customary lines in providing funding simultaneously for growers and for government programs to feed the hungry.

But a revolt by tea party conservatives blocked passage of a combined bill in the House, which then approved a measure to aid farmers. The leadership promises one for nutrition programs this fall, and an attempt will be made to find common ground with the Senate.

So far, Congress' classic two-house compromises have been elusive.

Both houses have approved budgets.

But some Senate Republicans have blocked Democratic attempts to begin compromise talks, saying they will relent only if there is agreement in advance not to raise the federal debt limit as part of any deal.

"Let me be clear, I don't trust the Republicans," said GOP Sen. Ted Cruz, a tea party-backed first-term lawmaker from Texas. "I don't trust the Democrats, and I think a whole lot of Americans likewise don't trust the Republicans or the Democrats because it is leadership in both parties that has got us into this mess."

Indeed, most opinion polls over the past six months put public approval for Congress in the mid-teens, with disapproval generally over 70 percent.

And yet, says Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y., "Congress does reflect the American people and the American people are divided."

Sen. Deb Fischer, a Nebraska Republican who took office in January, said gridlock "is not as bad as I expected," and seems exaggerated by the frenzied 24-hour-a-day news cycle. She said she has been able to agree with several Democrats on amendments to bills in committee.

On a larger scale, though, even prior agreements are endangered. One example:

Under legislation already in effect, spending for one category of federal programs is supposed to total $967 billion for the fiscal year beginning on Oct. 1, with a portion set aside for defense and another share for domestic accounts.

In the House, Republicans approved a budget that adheres to the $967 billion figure but puts more into defense and less into domestic programs than is mandated.

In the Senate, Democrats opted for $1.058 trillion, far in excess of the agreed-upon total.

The difference, about $92 billion, must be reconciled before lawmakers can approve legislation to keep the government in operation after Sept. 30.

Further complicating matters, some tea party-backed Republicans say they will vote for such legislation only if it cancels all funding for the health care law that Congress passed three years ago ? a condition Democrats and Obama vehemently reject.

The alternative to compromise is a partial government shutdown, an outcome leaders in both parties say they can avoid.

But that's a struggle for after vacation.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-08-02-Congress%20in%20Chaos/id-bd554050b78e4fbe9e7ea4e51fff74c6

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The 100-Year-Old Charlie Chaplin Mashups That Are Lost Forever

The 100-Year-Old Charlie Chaplin Mashups That Are Lost Forever

Mashups, intellectual property laws, bootlegs, copyright. While those are all valid concerns today, they're hardly anything new. Just ask Charlie Chaplin.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/VwsW02R7fWY/the-100-year-old-charlie-chaplin-mashups-that-are-lost-983116940

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UN: AIDS-Related Deaths Fall 38% In East, Southern Africa

The number of AIDS-related deaths dropped 38 percent in Eastern and Southern Africa between 2005 and 2011, an enormous feat the UN attributes to increased availability of life-saving drugs and expanded awareness campaigns.

According to a July report released by UNAIDS, 800,000 people in the ?epicenter of the AIDS crisis? succumbed to the disease in 2011, down from 1.3 million in 2005. The heartening statistic coincides with the increase in the number of people in the region receiving antiretroviral therapy, but the UN says that this region still needs to ramp up its efforts on the innovation and human-rights fronts in order to usher in an AIDS-free generation.

Some of the most impressive gains in Eastern and Southern Africa have been in the areas of maternal and childhood health.

Between 2001 and 2001, the number of infants newly infected with HIV fell by half in the region.

Yet, treatment and prevention programs still remain alarmingly disappointing, according to UNAIDS. Just 33 percent of kids infected with HIV in the region received treatment in 2011.

In order to eliminate new infections among children and to keep mothers living with the disease alive, UNAIDS is implementing a four-pronged plan that will provide women with such fundamental basics as contraception, counseling and antiretroviral drugs to prevent transmission to their babies.

Though UNAIDS has made incredible leaps in keeping people alive in the region, the organization remains concerned about the oppressive stigma that still plagues those living with the disease.

One in five people in Ethiopia, for example, said they had been detained, quarantined or segregated because of their HIV status. Thirty percent of people surveyed living with HIV in Ethiopia and Kenya said that having HIV stood in the way of their securing employment.

What's Being Done

A number of on-the-ground local groups are playing a critical role in empowering HIV-infected women.

Project HOPE, for example -- a health program that?s stationed in 120 countries ? educates health professionals, brings medical supplies and treatment to women and children living with tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS.

But once the group helps to provide medical care, it also aims to help women to lead independent and meaningful lives.

When Juliazarda Fransico Jemo learned that she was HIV positive only after her husband passed away, she got the medical care she needed, but had no means to generate income, Dr. John P. Howe, III, president and CEO of Project Hope, explained in a HuffPost blog. A group formed by his organization helped Jemo access small loans so that she could launch a business trading second-hand clothes and bedding. She?s now supporting herself and adopted and recently adopted an orphaned child she?s raising in her new home.

In addition to on-the-ground grassroots efforts, UNAIDS is calling for more anti-discrimination laws and increased awareness about human rights to help grant people living with HIV and AIDS the chance to lead fulfilling lives.

?The eyes of the world are on this region. The pace at which eastern and southern Africa embraces and acts on new science, evidence and innovations will determine how quickly we will reach the vision of zero new infections, zero AIDS-related deaths and zero discrimination,? Michael Sidibe, UNAIDS executive director, said in a statement. ?In the words of Nelson Mandela, ?when the water starts boiling it is foolish to turn off the heat.??

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/02/aids-africa-deaths-drop_n_3691794.html?utm_hp_ref=black-voices&ir=Black%20Voices

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