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Friday, January 30, 2009

Dinner with T. Boone Pickens: Bidding Starts at $100,000 auction starts at 5 p.m. Monday, Feb. 2

If you've ever wanted to break bread with billionaire T. Boone Pickens here's your chance.

Pickens is auctioning himself off on eBay. The winner gets to bring seven friends for lunch at Nick & Sam's in Dallas. Bidding starts at $100,000 and the money goes to Big Brothers Big Sisters of North Texas.

The auction starts at 5 p.m. Monday, Feb. 2 and ends at 5 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12, but bidders must prequalify on eBay. source>>>

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Turn your Nintendo DS into a math trainer

Personal Trainer: Math" is a high-tech way to do a low-tech thing: Learn math facts with flashcards.

Instead of parents putting their kids through their math paces using a set of flashcards, this Nintendo DS game does it for them when kids play the game for 10 minutes a day. Is this method better than using flashcards? Not really. Is it more fun? Yes. The use of technology and the variations on traditional flashcards make this method more engaging.

To attain mastery of addition, subtraction, multiplication and division facts, kids need to memorize the facts using repetition. "Personal Trainer: Math" provides a way to consistently practice essential math facts in an ordered, sequential way. It keeps track of accuracy and speed over days and months of practice.

When kids first sign into "Personal Trainer: Math," they meet a cartoon version of professor Hideo Kageyama of the Center for Research and Educational Development in Higher Education at Ritsumeikan University in Kyoto, Japan, who acts as host and math coach. Kageyama pioneered the 100-Cell Calculation Method, which is used in the game. Kageyama encourages kids to play the game every day.

From the main menu, kids have three choices: Daily Test, Kageyama Method or Practice Exercises.

The Daily Test involves three exercises (pulled from the 40 Practice Exercises and the Kageyama Method) geared toward kids' level of math mastery. They start on Level 1 and work their way up to Level 20. On Level 1, kids will be shown flashcards with objects from one to 10 and their task is to quickly identify the number of objects and write that number on the screen. Kids will also be shown addition and subtraction facts and have to write answers as quickly as possible. At the end of each exercise, accuracy and times are recorded and compared with optimal scores. Completion of the Daily Test results in a check mark on an in-game calendar.

The Kageyama Method has kids practice addition, subtraction or multiplication by using 100-Cell Math, which features a 10X10 grid where numbers from 1 through 10 have been placed randomly along the side and top. For each test, kids combine the numbers from the top and the side and place the answer in the corresponding square in the grid. Kids can start with grids as small as 10 cells, and then progress to 30, 50 and finally 100. This method can also be played with up to 15 other people using one game cartridge where all are vying for the best time.

In the Practice Exercises, kids can target their area of math practice. For example, if they want to practice multiplication tables involving the number 9, they can do that. They can also select how they want to practice, with exercises including flashcards, completing math sentences and exploring math ladders (where kids add or subtract a number repeatedly).

"Personal Trainer: Math" is not a traditional video game, rather it is an educational learning aid. By presenting math drills on the Nintendo DS, the video game format helps to take some of the drudgery out of memorizing math facts. The drills are varied and the handwriting recognition works well.

"Personal Trainer: Math" is pretty dry, and not as much fun as others in the Nintendo Touch Generations series, like "Brain Age" or "Big Brain Academy." What it does do well is get kids to drill math facts to improve their calculation speed and accuracy, in just 10 minutes a day. All you have to do is remind them to turn on their Nintendo DS and use it.

Rating: 3.5 stars (out of 5)

Best for ages 10 and up

From Nintendo, www.nintendo.com, $19.99, Nintendo DS source>>>

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Former Oregon congressman, Cooley ,indicted Thursday on federal money laundering and tax charges

A former Oregon congressman was indicted Thursday on federal money laundering and tax charges that prosecutors said were related to an investment fraud scheme that bilked victims out of more than $10 million.

Former Rep. Wes Cooley, who represented Oregon's 2nd District in Congress from 1995 to 1997, is charged with six counts of concealment money-laundering and one count of subscribing to a false tax return.

He is accused of participating in the scheme from December 1999 until April 2004. In 2002 alone, Cooley took $1.1 million from investors, laundered it to conceal the fraud scheme and falsified his tax return to avoid paying taxes, prosecutors said.

If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of 38 years in prison.

According to the indictment, Cooley and two other men, George Tannous and De Elroy Beeler Jr., lured victims into purchasing unregistered stock in Bidbay.com Inc. by telling them the company would be acquired by eBay for $20 per share. Cooley was the vice president of Bidbay.

Prosecutors said eBay had no plans to buy the company and even sued Bidbay.com for trademark infringement over the use of "bay" in its name.

Tannous and Beeler both pleaded guilty to charges related to the case.

Cooley's attorney, Richard Moss, said his client cooperated with the investigation but might have difficulty recalling things that happened several years ago.

"He's 76, but he's not a young 76," Moss said. "He's not in good health."

In 2005, a civil jury in St. Louis found Cooley and Tannous lied to investors in the Internet startup. The two were ordered to pay $2.2 million to 11 investors.

Cooley denied any involvement in fraud, testifying that he had suffered three strokes and could remember nothing from the previous 15 years of his life. He now lives in Palm Springs. source>>>

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Sarah Palin’s shoes sell for $2,000 on eBay

Hey, remember Sarah Palin's giant shoes she wore the night she wowed the GOP convention?

Well, maybe "giant' isn't the right word for them. After all she wasn't wearing huge green Frankenstein-like clodhoppers.

But you know, those red high-heels she was wearing. Some might describe them as sexy. We wouldn't, of course. But those other people might.

For sale

Anyway, they're back in the news.

It's not because she has announced she's going to wear them at this weekend's Alfalfa Dinner in Washington, DC or anything. It's because apparently they were for sale.

A TV station in Anchorage is reporting that her niece decided to put the shoes - a pair of red, Naughty Monkey Double-Dare pumps - up for sale, saying that they "don't fit to [sic] well."

eBay

So, just like her Aunt's decision to put the Alaska state plane up on eBay, she went the same route.

Her alleged niece's ad read:

"Up for bid are thee actual Red Naughty Monkey Heels owned/worn by Sarah Palin. I got the shoes from Aunt Sarah after mentioning that I liked them. They don't fit to well, so I decided to let someone else enjoy them.

"These are the exact heels that made headlines. If you search "Sarah Palin's Red Shoes" on a serach [sic] engine, you will find multiple blogs, articles, and stories on these shoes. You could own a piece of history!!!

"The shoes are NOT autographed, but the buyer has the option of having them autographed!! I included pictures of the shoes, the autographed pictures, the Sharpie pen, and me and my aunt (just taken a couple days ago)."

Bidding has ended

Unlike her Aunt, however, who was unsuccessful in selling the state plane online, she was able to secure a winning bid. And for a pretty good haul. The highest bidder shelled out $2,025 for the pair.

Before you call the FEC to report a violation, her niece wanted to set the record straight.

"These shoes were bought in a small store in Juneau, AK. They were NOT paid for by the RNC. They were purchased by Sarah!!!"

2012

Well maybe the proceeds will go toward her presidential bid in 2012?

She hasn't announced that she's running for anything. Sure, she formed a political action committee a couple days ago, but as we told you earlier today, she says that doesn't signal any presidential aspirations. source>>>

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Amazon.com Soars After Outpacing EBay in Sales, Profit Growth

-- Amazon.com Inc., the world's largest online retailer, topped sales and profit estimates yesterday after its biggest holiday season ever, outpacing EBay Inc. and its e-commerce rivals.

Amazon.com rose as much as 14 percent in late trading after reporting that net income increased 8.7 percent to $225 million, or 52 cents a share. Sales climbed 18 percent to $6.7 billion. That compared with estimates of 38 cents in profit and $6.45 billion in sales from a Bloomberg survey of analysts.

The company used low prices, shipping promotions and product selection to attract shoppers during a recession. At EBay, holiday sales fizzled, with quarterly revenue dropping for the first time in the company's history. Amazon's size and customer service gave it an edge, said Scott Devitt, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus & Co.

"Amazon is a company that treats its customers better than EBay," he said. The Manassas, Virginia-based analyst recommends buying Amazon.com shares and has a hold rating on EBay. "From a competitive standpoint between the two, I don't think there's any turning back."

Amazon.com, based in Seattle, rose $7 to $57 in late trading after closing at $50 on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The shares had dropped 2.5 percent this month before today. EBay, down 12 percent so far in January, fell 3.7 percent to $12.25 yesterday.

Sales Forecast

Amazon.com outpaced the rest of the e-commerce market over the past two years and that's likely to continue, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Even as the U.S. economy lost 2.6 million jobs last year, the company maintained growth.

First-quarter net revenue will rise to between $4.53 billion and $4.93 billion, an increase of as much as 19 percent, the company said. Analysts had estimated sales of $4.55 billion.

Amazon.com will continue to focus on low prices and free shipping to drive revenue, Chief Executive Officer Jeff Bezos said yesterday. Still, those sales will carry lower profit margins. Operating income, a measure of profitability, will decline as much as 37 percent to $125 million this quarter, from a year ago, the company said.

EBay, an online forum that lets sellers auction items or set fixed prices, reported a 6.6 percent sales decline last week. The San Jose, California-based company blamed the global e-commerce slump.

Listing Fees

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No immediate reports of damage from a 4.5 magnitude earthquake that rattled the Seattle today

no immediate reports of damage from a 4.5 magnitude earthquake that rattled the Seattle and Puget Sound area early Friday, but it was a reminder the urban area is sitting on shaky ground.

The quake at 5:25 a.m. was centered 14 miles northwest of Seattle near Kingston, in Kitsap County, at a depth of 36 miles.

The U.S. Geological Survey initially reported it as a 4.6 quake, but a University of Washington report on the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network listed it at 4.5.

The network shows it was felt throughout the Puget Sound area in Western Washington, and people reported feeling it in Victoria, British Columbia, 71 miles to the north.

Seismic Network director John Vidale said the quake was from the same general source as the 6.8 magnitude Nisqually earthquake on Feb. 28, 2001.

That quake, under the Nisqually River delta between Tacoma and Olympia, was the largest quake to shake the area in more than a half-century. It disrupted operations at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, and damaged the Capitol in Olympia and buildings and the Alaskan Way Viaduct in Seattle.

Vidale said such quakes are not the type of "megathrust" quake that would catastrophic damage on the West Coast. A megathrust quake would involve the breaking of a tectonic plate - a piece of the earth's outer shell - and would have a magnitude of about 9, he said. The last one happened in the Northwest in 1700.

Small earthquakes are common in the Pacific Northwest. The Friday morning shaker was the largest in Washington since a 4.6 in October 2006 near Mount Rainier.

"It shook the house like something had hit the roof," said Robert Lyden on Anderson Island south of Tacoma in Puget Sound. "It just woke us up." Other than knocking a water fountain off his deck there was no damage, he said.

Lacey Menne says it shook her home as she was preparing to go to work at the Coastal Cafe in Kingston.

"It wasn't strong enough to make anything fall," she said. "It was like, what is that? I think it might be an earthquake. It's totally an earthquake!"

Seattle radio and TV stations heard from callers who said they felt the shaking for 10 or 15 seconds.

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Others near the epicenter said they didn't feel anything.

"My brother called me all the way from California and asked about the earthquake and I said, 'What earthquake?'" said Cheryl Lannoye, 61, of Indianola, about 2 miles south of Kingston, who was among a group gathered at the Indianola Country Store.

The state Transportation Department sent inspectors to check bridges and overpasses in the region, including the downtown viaduct, but said there were no immediate reports of damage. source>>>

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The aid money from Hamas came with a heavy dose of politics.

The aid money from Hamas came with a heavy dose of politics. A Hamas Cabinet minister carried a carton stuffed with checks worth nearly $2 million into a Gaza tent camp pitched on the ruins of the Salam neighborhood, close to the Israeli border.

But before hundreds of homeless residents could collect, they had to listen to a political speech. Social Affairs Minister Ahmed al-Kurd told them Israel's military machine was defeated and that the Hamas government would rebuild their neighborhood bigger and better.

"There's a lot of talk," resident Zayed Khader, 45, said after the speech, as he waited for his name to be called so he could pick up relief checks worth a total of $6,000 for his family of nine. "When I see them actually building my house, I'll say these are good words."

Israel's three-week war on Gaza's Hamas rulers ended 10 days ago, but many here complain that political maneuvering -- both between Hamas and its moderate West Bank rivals, and in the international community -- is slowing the delivery of urgently needed aid to Gaza.

Israel and Egypt have not significantly eased their blockade of Gaza since a shaky cease-fire took hold Jan. 18, aid officials say.

A lifting of the blockade, a key Hamas demand, is being held up because of slow-moving negotiations over the terms of a durable truce.

Israel says it will only open the gates if Hamas halts weapons smuggling under international supervision. Egypt has said that on its border with Gaza, it will only deal with forces loyal to moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, and not with troops from Hamas, Abbas' rival.

In the meantime, thousands of tons of supplies are not reaching Gaza, said John Ging, the top U.N. aid official in the territory. "The ordinary people here in Gaza are not getting enough help and are not getting it quickly enough," Ging told reporters this week.

Israel said U.N. trucks are given priority at crossings into Gaza and denied aid was getting stuck. "Over 40,000 tons of aid have entered Gaza since the cease-fire and that is despite ongoing Hamas rocket attacks," said Peter Lerner, an Israeli military official.

The U.N. Relief and Works Agency is the biggest aid organization in Gaza. It is responsible for 1 million refugees and their descendants, out of a population of 1.4 million. Its initial war emergency budget was $100 million, and on Thursday it filed an aid appeal for $613 million.

But without a deal to open the devastated territory's borders, it wasn't clear the appeal would do much good. More than two dozen trucks loaded with food, aid and goods intended for Gaza were stranded on the Egyptian side of the border Thursday.

"There are thousands of tons of assistance generously donated, sitting in Egypt, Jordan and also in the ports in Israel," Ging said. "That aid should be right here, right now, helping the people who need it."

In recent days, UNRWA expanded food aid, with some 900,000 Gazans now getting rations of flour, oil and sugar. On Thursday, each of 200,000 students in UN schools received about $25.

During the war, U.N. schools sheltered 50,000 displaced Gazans, and the agency is paying nearly $150 to each family to try to find another place to stay.

UNRWA operates independently of the Hamas government, and the Islamic militants have been careful not to interfere with U.N. aid programs. However, Hamas has insists on supervising the projects of foreign and local volunteer groups.

On Thursday, government representatives took charge of a tent camp pitched in the Salam neighborhood of the town of Jebaliya, near Israel.

Dozens of tents stood on a newly cleared lot, ringed by the rubble of houses that had been demolished or badly damaged by Israeli forces. Hundreds of residents, now homeless, milled around, chasing rumors about the size of the eventual aid payment as they waited for other deliveries. Two U.N. trucks eventually dropped off 460 mattresses and 2,540 blankets.

The camp was divided into an area for residents and a fenced off compound for official business, with bearded Hamas police in black uniforms standing guard. In the administration tent, equipped with a computer, the chiefs of the 10 local clans presented lists and ID card numbers of family members to prove their aid claims.

By mid-afternoon, two Hamas Cabinet ministers arrived to the sound of Hamas marching music, carrying a cardboard box with 332 white envelopes. Each envelope held two checks totaling $6,000, to enable each family to buy food and supplies -- after they heard al-Kurd, the Cabinet minister, deliver his speech on the Gaza victory.

But many are skeptical.

As a result of the border blockade, imposed after Hamas seized Gaza in June 2007, there are barely any building supplies, such as concrete, window glass and aluminum. Without a full opening of the border, the rebuilding of thousands of homes is impossible, Ging has said.

Jumma Dardona, whose nearby three-story family house has been rendered uninhabitable, fears he'll live in a tent for a long time. "No one knows the accurate period," said Dardona, 34, as he cut firewood behind the last row of tents, his 6-year-old son Mohammed by his side.

Dardona and several others in Salam said they want Hamas and Abbas' Fatah movement to put aside their rivalries. They say the infighting is one of the main reasons for the misery of Gaza civilians. "As long as they fight, I feel I am lost," said Dardona, who served as a policeman before the Hamas takeover.

However, Abbas' government has not been visible among the aid groups, sidelining him even further in the eyes of many Gazans.

He still pumps huge sums into Gaza every month, paying the salaries of tens of thousands of civil servants and police, like Dardona. But his promised $3.5 million for the families of the dead -- according to Gaza health officials nearly 1,300 -- has not been disbursed, in part because Gaza banks suffer from a shortage of bank notes, another fallout from the closure.

Hamas, which smuggles cash through border tunnels instead of using bank transfers, has no problems with distribution.

Khader watched Thursday's bustle of Cabinet ministers, bodyguards and aid deliveries with disdain. He said he has told visiting Hamas politicians that the civilians are the losers and that they oppose continued rocket fire on Israel -- the attacks that triggered the war.

"It's all hot air," he said of the officials' promises. "What do they care if my house is bombed?" source>>>

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Today in Strangeness

According to the Guinness Book of World Records, on this date in 1887 at Fort Keogh, Montana, the largest snowflake fell during a blizzard. It was said to be 15 inches wide and 8 inches thick. In other records on this day, in 1938, German race car driver Bernd Rosemeyer, known as the 'Silver Comet' reached the speed of 268 mph on the Autobahn, just before his death. source>>>

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A Message by Billy Graham; The Second Coming Of Christ: Are You Ready?

The Bible says, "Scoffers will come in the last days, walking according to their own lusts, and saying, 'Where is the promise of His coming? For since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were from the beginning of creation.' For this they willfully forget: that by the word of God the heavens were of old, and the earth standing out of water and in the water, by which the world that then existed perished, being flooded with water. But the heavens and the earth which are now preserved by the same word, are reserved for fire until the day of judgment and perdition of ungodly men" (2 Peter 3:3-7).

In other words, there's going to come a judgment on this earth, and it will be a judgment of fire.

The Word of God speaks of the certainties of the end of the world. Jesus said, "As the days of Noah were, so also will the coming of the Son of Man be" (Matthew 24:37). What were the days of Noah like? And is there a parallel now?

One word that is used to describe the days of Noah is wickedness. The people were wicked: "Every imagination of their thoughts was evil" (Cf. Genesis 6:5). It seems as if they stayed awake at night thinking up new ways to do evil. It was a world in which marriage was abused. The people were corrupt and violent. It was a world in which violence prevailed: murders, wars, insurrections.

It was a world in which there was a lot of religion, but it was a decadent religion. They were preoccupied with things, and they were taken up with their everyday living. They didn't have time for God.

It was a world that was threatened by the judgment of God. But in the middle of all that, there stood one man. God had said that with all the sin and violence and corruption, He was going to destroy the whole world. But He didn't do it because of one man who was going against the tide of that day. His name was Noah. In all that corruption Noah dared to walk with God. Noah believed in God, and true faith determined how Noah lived.

And true faith determines how you live. Do you worship God in your home? Do you have Bible reading and prayer?

The Bible says, "By faith Noah, being divinely warned of things not yet seen, moved with godly fear, prepared an ark" (Hebrews 11:7). God told Noah to build an ark, or ship, out in the desert. Noah had no place to sail the ship, but he was to build it. God told him that he would save Noah and his family when the destruction came.

So Noah started out, and judgment eventually came. God spoke to Noah again and said, "Noah, I'm going to give the world seven more days, and then the flood will come" (Cf. Genesis 7:4).

Today the only bright spot on the horizon of this world is the promise of the coming again of Christ, the Messiah. We can't go on much longer morally. We can't go on much longer scientifically. The technology that was supposed to save us is ready to destroy us. New weapons are being made all the time, including chemical and biological weapons.

In Isaiah 66 we read that "the Lord will come with fire and with His chariots, like a whirlwind, to render His anger with fury" (Isaiah 66:15). In the New Testament we read that Christ said, "I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you to Myself; that where I am, there you may be also" (John 14:2-3).

Jesus promised that He is coming back, and we are to comfort one another with these words. We're not to wait in terror, because as believers we have the hope of the coming again of Christ.

When Jesus was getting ready to go back to the Father, some of the disciples and His friends from Galilee were watching and waiting. Two angels said, "Why do you stand gazing up into heaven? This same Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will so come in like manner as you saw Him go into heaven" (Acts 1:11). That is God's promise to you and me.

It has been 2,000 years since then. Why hasn't He come? The disciples asked the same thing, and Jesus said, "It is not for you to know times or seasons which the Father has put in His own authority" (Acts 1:7). He also said, "of that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, but My Father only" (Matthew 24:36).

Don't guess or speculate. We don't know. It may be a thousand years from now, or it may be tomorrow.

Regardless, the end of the world is coming for you the moment you die, and that could be at any time for any of us. We never know. What have you done to prepare for that moment when your heart stops beating?

How will Christ come? "The Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first" (1 Thessalonians 4:16).

If that happens today, are you ready? God said, "Prepare to meet your God" (Amos 4:12). The Bible says, "Then we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And thus we shall always be with the Lord" (1 Thessalonians 4:17). We're going to go as believers and meet Him.

A man came forward at a meeting and gave his life to Christ. Then he said, "Now I'm ready to meet God."

Another man, who had been in jail, attended a Crusade, and he went forward to receive Christ as his Savior. Now the man has been given new life in Christ, and he said, "I'm a totally different man." And he is.

God is giving you the same opportunity that He gave to that man. The Bible says, "You must be born again" (John 3:7). You need to make a commitment to Christ today. This is your moment with God.

I'm going to ask you to open your heart and say, "Lord Jesus, come into my heart."

You ask, "What do I have to do?"

First, you have to be willing to repent of your sins. You may not have the strength to change your way of living. Repentance means that you say to God, "I have sinned. I am sorry for my sin. I am willing to change my way of living. But You have to help me change: I can't do it alone."

You need to make a commitment to Jesus Christ, and let Him come into your heart. I'm going to ask you to do that.

Second, you come by faith. What does faith mean? Faith means that you put your trust in Him and say, "Lord, I give myself to You."

You may have been baptized, you may have been confirmed, you may be a member of a church, you may be a good person, you may help other people. You may do all the good that you can think of, but all of that isn't enough. You must come in childlike faith to Jesus, who died on the cross for you, who rose again, who is waiting for you to make that commitment. Do it today.
Billy Graham
Billy Graham has preached the Gospel to more people in live audiences than anyone else in history -- over 215 million people in more than 185 countries and territories. Hundreds of millions more have been reached through the various ministries of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. source>>>

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Billions of your tax dollars in possible subsidies for ACORN

Billions of your tax dollars in possible subsidies for ACORN? $50 million for the National Endowment of the Arts? Billions of dollars more for other liberal pet projects?

What exactly are our elected leaders doing? On Wednesday, the House of Representatives voted largely along party lines to pass the so-called "Obama stimulus bill."

But the only thing the bill will stimulate is BIG GOVERNMENT. It does very little to accomplish its stated purpose, which is to create jobs and stimulate the struggling economy.

Congressman Mike Pence said it best:

"[The] bill won't stimulate anything but more government and more debt. The slow and wasteful spending in the House Democrat bill is a disservice to millions of Americans who want to see this Congress take immediate action to get this economy moving again."

And what exactly is in this so-called stimulus bill?

$1.1 billion for Amtrak;

$50 million for the National Endowment for the Arts;

$400 million for NASA to conduct climate change research;

$300 million for Americorps;

$1 billion for the Census;

$400 million for localities to buy "green" buses;

$650 million for the Digital-to-Analog Converter Box Program;

$600 million for the acquisition of "green" cars;

$7.7 billion for the Federal Buildings Fund;

The list goes on... ALL of it funding by your hard-earned tax dollars.

Here's what Senator David Vitter (R-LA) had to say about the bill:

"It's just a long list of spending items. Not a real economic stimulus job creation bill. It's line after line after line of favorite liberal spending programs, and it amounts to a big government bill - not a job creation bill."

As Congressman Pence put it:

"What does $50 million for the National Endowment for the Arts, $200 million to plant sod on the National Mall, $400 million for climate change research, and $200 million for contraception have to do with creating jobs?"

"Republican lawmakers are raising concerns that ACORN, the low-income advocacy group under investigation for voter registration fraud, could be eligible for billions in aid from the economic stimulus proposal... " [Emphasis Mine]

Senator Vitter went so far as to say that the $4.19 billion that this so-called "stimulus bill" allocates to "neighborhood stabilization programs" could be viewed as a "payoff" to ACORN (or organizations similar to ACORN).

The good news is there is hope to defeat this monstrosity of a bill. Yes, the House passed it, but not without bipartisan opposition. And, every Republican member in the House voted against it.

That means our message is being heard. But as the Senate considers its version of this disastrous bill, we must redouble our efforts.

In fact, according to US News and World Report, the Senate version of this $825 billion House spending bill is already up to $887 billion and it could go even higher once it reaches the floor of the Senate.

There is not a moment to lose. We must demand that conservatives in the Senate stand firm and stop this massive liberal boondoggle!

Use the hyperlink below to send your personalized faxes to Barack Obama and the Republican Members of the United States Senate!

Tell them to put a HALT to the so-called Obama stimulus bill now! Tell them that decent people are suffering financially and an economic downturn IS NOT an excuse to give payoffs and handouts to causes favored by liberal elected officials.

Moreover, tell them you know the lessons of history and that the American people will NOT tolerate policies that will turn the current recession into a decade-long depression simply to advance the agenda of liberals in our government. It's time to pass real stimulus for the American people by letting them keep more of their hard-earned money. Tell them the time has come for government to get out of the way! source>>>

- Send My Blast Faxes -

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Monday, January 26, 2009

How to make money using Myspace

This is the first in a series of posts on social-networking sites and how artists can work to monetize them effectively. Most of the content in this series of posts originated from a presentation I gave at Musictoday to our Account Management team. Although this post will deal mostly with music profiles, and contains advice for musicians it could be applied to many other fields.

Myspace has always been about music fans and musicians connecting. A few months ago with the complete overhaul on their music platform they increased their dedication to this portion of their user base, and with Myspace profiles generally showing up in the top 5 Google results for any given artist, it's absolutely essential to make the most of the attention and traffic the profile receives. The following information will provide an overview of some of the basic things an artist should be doing.

1. Banners. The first and most obvious promotion tool are banner links from the profile page itself. Hopefully your profile is not too cluttered and you can throw in a banner or two linking to your merch store, your itunes page, and the best place for fans to buy tickets. If it's part of your income as an artist, you better be linking to it from your profile. TIP: Use photobucket to upload your banner image and get the HTML code for banner placement.

2. Widgets. If you want to take a step beyond banners, widgets are where you want to be. Use widgets to display videos, audio, merch products, tour-dates, rss feeds, you name it. The best part of widgets is that they can be posted anywhere. Encourage your fan-base to spread the widget on their own Myspace pages, blogs, or websites. TIP: Checkout reverbnation.com for some really easy widgets. If you want to get a little more fancy, check out Widgetbox or Sprout.

3. Bulletins. Beyond passive linking from the profile, you need to be taking an active roll in getting information out to your fans. If a fan is your friend on Myspace, odds are that they have at least a passing interest in anything you're doing. Send out a bulletin. On Myspace a bulletin is a message you post to a virtual bulletin board that all your friends can see. Keep in mind that your fans' bulletin boards are most likely full of bulletins from their other friends. So, it may be necessary to post the same information more than once; there's a fine line to walk between re-posting and spamming however. Be cautious. TIP: Only send bulletins when you have major news, send the bulletin a few times on the day of the announcement, and then leave your fans alone!

4. Blog Posts. Blogs show up on your main Myspace profile, and it's an excellent place to post timely information such as a tour announcement, show cancellation, or the release of your new single. TIP: The title of your post is like the subject of an email, make it enticing or your fans won't click to view it.

5. Events. If you're playing shows, you better list them on Myspace. Myspace provides a basic event listing platform which is probably the best way to go. TIP: Make sure you include ticket links and information for each event.

6. Status Updates. Status updates are a quick easy way to make short updates or announcements. Your status update is displayed on the homepage of each of your fans and also on your main profile next to your profile image. TIP: Update your status at least once per day to keep up visibility to your fan-base.

7. PPC. Myspace recently launched their own pay-per-click advertising platform. If you've got a few bucks to spend sign-up and target some banner adverts to fans of "like-artists." TIP: Monitor your spending closely, and kill any ineffective campaigns.

8. Major Announcements. If you've got a major announcement like a new tour, or a new album release, it may be time to give your profile a complete redesign to reflect the news. While working with Jay-Z on the marketing of his Heart of the City Tour with Mary J. Blige we decided it was a good idea to design his myspace profile to promote not just the tour, but specifically the ticket pre-sale. TIP: Your Myspace profile should visually mirror your official site as closely as possible. source>>>

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Texas high school basketball coach fired after beating opponent 100-0

For one Texas high school basketball coach even when you win, you lose.

Micah Grimes, who made national headlines when his team beat up an undermanned opponent 100-0, was fired on Sunday.

The firing of the girls varsity basketball coach comes after the Covenant School issued an official apology on its Web site following the Jan. 13 blowout of fellow Dallas-area private school, Dallas Academy.

Grimes, who was in his fourth season at the school, disagreed with the school's apology and said his team played with "honor."

"I respectfully disagree with the apology, especially the notion that the Covenant School girls basketball team should feel 'embarrassed' or 'ashamed,'" Grimes wrote in an e-mail posted on a youth basketball Web site on Sunday and published in The Dallas Morning News.

"We played the game as it was meant to be played and would not intentionally run up the score on any opponent. Although a wide-margin victory is never evidence of compassion, my girls played with honor and integrity and showed respect to Dallas Academy."

Kyle Queal, Covenant's headmaster, confirmed the firing to the Dallas Morning News, but said he could not say if the dismissal was a direct result of Grimes' disagreeing with the school.

Queal signed the original statement along with board chair Todd Doshier.

"The Covenant School, its board and administrators, regrets the incident of January 13 and the outcome of the game with the Dallas Academy Varsity Girls Basketball team. It is shameful and an embarrassment that this happened. This clearly does not reflect a Christ-like and honorable approach to competition."

The Christian school also sought to forfeit the game saying "a victory without honor is a great loss."

Covenant, a contender for the state championship last year, held a 59-0 lead at the half in the mid-January game. According to reports, Covenant continued to shoot 3-pointers and employ a full-court press defense into the fourth quarter.

Dallas Academy, a school that specializes in teaching students with "learning differences," such as short attention spans or dyslexia, has only eight players on its varsity squad and is winless over the last four seasons. source>>>

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Oscar Night America tickets on sale tomorrow

Tickets go on sale Tuesday, Jan. 27 for Oscar Night America, one of 52 official parties sanctioned by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences that will be held across the country on Oscar Night.

Nashville residents can experience the thrills and surprises of the 81st Academy Awards Feb. 22 at Nashville's Oscar Night America party, which benefits the Belcourt Theater.

This year marks the 10th year that the Belcourt's party has been officially sanctioned by the Academy.

Nashville's Oscar Night celebration will begin at 7 p.m. at the Belcourt Theater. Tickets will be on sale at www.belcourt.org and at the Belcourt box office.

The Belcourt's audience will watch the Academy Awards telecast in on the Belcourt's movie screens courtesy of the ABC Television Network, which broadcasts the Academy Awards presentation.

Official Oscar Night parties last year raised more than $3.3 million in 51 cities. All money raised stays in the local community.

The Academy will provide party guests in Nashville the same official program distributed to guests at the Oscar presentation at the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood. Copies of the 80th Academy Awards commemorative poster also will be available.

Just like the Oscars in Hollywood, Music City partygoers stroll the red carpet, and have their pictures taken by the "paparazzi". Attendees will also feast on foods from some of Nashville's top restaurants and bid on items in the silent auction.

For more than 80 years, The Belcourt Theatre has provided a space for entertainment in Hillsboro Village. Opening in 1925 as a silent movie house, the theatre was home to the Children's Theatre of Nashville (1930's) and the Grand Ole Opry (1934-36).

Renamed the Nashville Community Playhouse in 1937, the theatre housed both film and live theatre until 1966 when it became The Belcourt Cinema until 1997. With the conversion of the Belle Meade Theatre in 1993, the Belcourt became the last traditional neighborhood movie house in Nashville.
source>>>

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On this date in history

On this date in 2004, a rare spontaneous whale explosion occurred in Taiwan. In 1966, the most notorious unsolved crime in Australian history happened, when three children went missing while on a trip to the beach. The case saw numerous twists and turns, including failed input from psychics and a series of hoaxed letters alleged to have come from the missing Beaumont children. source>>>

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Karen McHale didn't bother telling her husband last month that she had purchased two raffle tickets

Karen McHale didn't bother telling her husband last month that she had purchased two raffle tickets for the chance to win a million-dollar house in Edgewater. The Idaho Springs, Colo., woman viewed the $100 she spent as a contribution to a Maryland charity, not an opportunity to actually acquire out-of-state property.

Then on Friday, Ryan McHale came home to find his wife in a frenzy, calling family members about some luxurious new digs. His question was simple: "What is going on?"

Karen McHale, 47, had just won a 6,000-square-foot house with an appraised value of $1.25 million. The house had been the top prize in a raffle organized by mortgage broker Tom Walters, who thought a lottery might be a more lucrative way to unload his Edgewater property than a standard sale during a tough economy.

Maryland law requires that a charity run the raffle, so Walters teamed up with the Annapolis-based We Care and Friends. The charity, which helps at-risk youths, was set to receive 10 percent of the proceeds if Walters reached his goal of selling 31,500 tickets, said president and founder Larry Griffin.

Walters, though, sold only about 24,000 tickets, leaving the amount of the charity's cut in limbo, Griffin said. He said he and Walters would figure out tomorrow how to split the proceeds.

"Whoever won it, it was a serious present for them for this year, especially with the economy," Griffin said. "The lady was like, 'Are you joking?' She never won anything in her life."

The raffle had garnered international media attention, and that's how McHale heard about it and decided to buy tickets. When she got the call that she had won, she "was completely in shock, in disbelief," she said by telephone yesterday.
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Then came the more practical question.

"What am I going to do with a house in Maryland?" she asked.

She has decided to sell -- in an auction, not a raffle. She still has to pay about $300,000 in income taxes on the prize, she said, and she has no desire to uproot her family from Colorado.

Both of her sons, ages 19 and 24, live nearby, and she and her husband both have stable jobs as engineers. They live in a house that's half as big but one that they designed and built themselves, she said.

"I obviously want someone to buy the house who would live there and obviously enjoy it," she said. "It really looks super nice."

Karen McHale said she is flying to Maryland this weekend to finalize the paperwork and look at the property in person for the first time. She hopes to unload it as quickly as possible after that, using the cash to pay for her oldest son's upcoming wedding or perhaps pay off the debt on her own house.

"I figure this is my once-in-a-lifetime winning," she said. "And I'm done." source>>>

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Calif. governor wants to tax golf, auto repairs,amusement park operators and.veterinarians extra !0%

Golf course owners and some of their customers are teed off at Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. So are veterinarians, auto mechanics and amusement park operators.

Their anger is directed at the Republican governor's proposal to extend the state sales tax to cover more services, an idea that has surfaced in other states as they race to plug crippling budget deficits. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a research clearinghouse, predicts such deficits nationwide could reach $350 billion by 2011.

In California, Schwarzenegger wants to help close a nearly $42 billion budget deficit by taxing rounds of golf, auto repairs, veterinary care, amusement park and sporting event admissions and appliance and furniture repairs.

Democratic Gov. David Paterson in New York has proposed levies on MP3 downloads, taxi rides, movies, concerts, sporting events, and personal services such as haircuts, manicures and massages.

Schwarzenegger's fellow Republican in Utah, Gov. Jon Huntsman, has shelved a proposal to tax attorney and accounting services but promises to bring it back next year.

Service taxes in other states include levies on pet grooming, water well drilling, fur storage, massages, shoe repairs, swimming pool cleaning, taxidermy, and dating and diaper services. But that doesn't make the groups affected by Schwarzenegger's proposal feel any better.

"We're old and retired. We don't need any more taxes," said Fred Mayers of Sacramento as he played golf recently at a public course in the state capital. "The only luxury we have is playing golf. They can't charge us any more."

Scott Pattison, executive director of the National Association of State Budget Officers, said more states could be looking at service taxes as they get deeper into legislative sessions.

"It's one of those things that's so politically difficult and controversial that it's usually one of the last proposals that's floated," he said.

California already taxes some services, including gift wrapping, tuxedo rentals and video rentals for home use. But virtually every other state applies its sales tax to more services, said Jean Ross, executive director of the California Budget Project, a Sacramento think tank.

The tax on services is part of $14.3 billion in hikes Schwarzenegger has proposed to help close a budget deficit that's projected to total $41.6 billion over the next 17 months. He also is seeking $17.7 billion in spending cuts and $10 billion in additional borrowing.

In addition to the service tax, Schwarzenegger proposes hiking the sales tax by 1.5 percent through the end of 2011, boosting taxes on alcoholic drinks, increasing the vehicle registration fee by $12 and taxing companies that extract oil.

Local sales taxes in California range from 7.25 percent to 9.25 percent, varying from county to county and even from city to city. A 1.5 percentage point increase would boost the rate to nearly 10 percent in many areas of the state.

Republican lawmakers have refused for months to consider raising taxes but recently indicated a willingness to consider hikes if they're tied to tough spending controls.

Schwarzenegger and lawmakers have little time left to strike a deal. The state controller has said he will have to delay tax refunds and some other payments for 30 days starting Feb. 1 because of a cash shortage. The governor also has ordered tens of thousands of state employees to take two days off a month without pay, starting Feb. 6.

"There's no good time to raise taxes," said H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for Schwarzenegger's Department of Finance. "This is not something that the governor is putting forward because he enjoys it."

He said the six types of services Schwarzenegger is proposing to tax were picked because they involve businesses that commonly collect sales taxes on goods they sell and could quickly adjust.

The affected industry groups say they are being unfairly targeted and that similar businesses are exempt.

"You don't see a tax on movies," said Bob Bouchier, executive director of the California Alliance for Golf. "You don't see a tax on bowling. You don't see skiing. You don't see a tax on any other sport."

The administration estimates that the service taxes would raise $1.4 billion through the fiscal year that ends June 30, 2010. Schwarzenegger wants to implement the taxes on appliance and furniture repairs, golf, veterinary care and vehicle repairs by March 1. The taxes on amusement park and sporting event tickets would kick in on April 1.

Opponents question whether the taxes would raise that much, saying they would result in layoffs and fewer customers.

"You're looking at a $50 increase on a $500 (repair) bill at a time when people are not buying new cars and instead are having their old cars repaired so they can keep them on the road to drive to work," said Peter Welch, president of the California New Car Dealers Association.

"This is really going to hit people when they're down."

Opponents also suggest that other increases, such as a boost in income taxes or restoration of the annual vehicle license fee that Schwarzenegger cut when he took office, would be less damaging.

Not everyone that would be affected is upset.

Sean Grace, a home remodeling contractor from the Sacramento suburb of Elk Grove, said die-hard golfers will find a way to pay the tax if lawmakers approve it.

"Ten percent is not too much," he said before slamming a long drive down the fifth fairway at Sacramento's Land Park golf course. "You've got guys paying $100 (for green fees). What's another $10? They're going to find it somewhere." source>>>

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Bill Clinton seeks 'How generation' to solve world's ills

People worldwide need to take action to help solve the global problems of political and economic instability, inequality and environmental unsustainability, former President Bill Clinton said Monday.

"I don't think it's good enough anymore to define your citizenship by being a good, honest worker and a taxpayer and someone who votes," Clinton said in a speech at North Carolina State University.

Bill Clinton at N.C. State
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Bill Clinton addresses world's problems, solutions

Unlike his upbeat appearances in North Carolina last year for his wife's presidential campaign, Clinton was somber and matter-of-fact during his 40-minute speech about the difficulties facing the state, the nation and the world.

The global recession has destroyed about half of the world's wealth. Terrorists continue to strike at targets but are difficult to retaliate against. Most of the world's wealth and access to education and health care is concentrated among a minority of the population. The benefits of development have to be balanced against the cost of global warming.

Because the world has become so interdependent in recent decades, small problems in one part of the globe often affect the U.S. and other countries, Clinton said. Such interdependence means that people's fortunes rise or fall together and that "divorce is not an option" because we all continue to share the globe, he said.

"We should be trying to create a world where we share the future," he said. "We share the benefits and the opportunities; we share the burdens and the responsibilities."

One of those responsibilities is to work to solve the world's problems, Clinton said, calling on people to become part of "the how generation."

"How do you go about taking the best of intentions and turning them into a positive changes in people's lives?" he asked. "You've got to say, 'I want to be a person involved in the how.'"

Some people have started the process, he said, noting about 500,000 non-governmental organizations were started in the last decade to take on specific issues. But much more needs to be done, he said.

"We have a crisis of doing in the world," he said. "We have all of these problems out there that people know are problems, that they can talk about till the cows come home, but nobody knows the how - how do you turn good intentions into real changes."

After the speech, Clinton attended a lunch fundraiser for western North Carolina Congressman Heath Shuler.

Clinton and Shuler have been building a relationship since Clinton reached out to the former NFL quarterback as Democrats recruited him to run for Congress in the 2006 election.

In 2008, Shuler endorsed Clinton's wife, now Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, in her run for the White House after she won the primary in his district. source>>>

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West End theatres buck the trend with record-breaking year

Last year was the best on record in the West End as theatre proved a refuge from mounting economic gloom.

While Broadway is floundering, figures out today from the Society of London Theatres (SOLT) show that attendances rose by 1 per cent on 2007, the previous best year, to 13,807,286. Box-office revenue also hit a record total of £480,563,674.

Just over nine million people went to see musicals last year. However, it was the old favourites that triumphed. Nearly every new production folded, leading to talk of a divided sector in which a few hit shows attract spectacular attendances while most others struggle to stay afloat.

The most successful show of the year in terms of paid admissions was the Queen tribute We Will Rock You, while Wicked and Billy Elliot did their best business over Christmas.
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New musicals, which accounted for two thirds of ticket sales in 2007, were a different story. Only Zorro, with music by the Gipsy Kings, bucked an inglorious trend.

Gone With the Wind, directed by Sir Trevor Nunn, never recovered from a critical panning and closed after 79 performances. Imagine This, a musical about the Holocaust, folded after a month. Marguerite, from the team that created Les Misérables, failed to capture the public's imagination, and Never Forget, the Take That musical, never took up its announced transfer from the Savoy into the Lyric and will be swiftly forgotten.

The £12.5million Lord of the Rings musical also admitted defeat and shut after 14 loss-making months.

This year already looks more promising, with the blockbuster revival of Oliver! up and running after taking an unprecedented £15million in advance bookings and the imminent arrival of two shows based on hit films -- Priscilla, Queen of the Desert and Sister Act.

Attendance at plays was 1 per cent down at slightly under 3 million. But they enjoyed a strong final quarter.

It was an impressive year for dance, opera, performances and entertainments, which rose by 5 per cent.

The figures relate to SOLT's 52 member theatres, which include all the commercial West End venues and the big grant-aided London theatres.

Theatre owners are keen to attribute the numbers to astute programming, but the weak pound and a hankering for escapism also played a part.

Richard Pulford, chief executive of SOLT, said that theatre, like cinema, often did well in a downturn. "I think people are more inclined to cherish those few hours when they can get lost in some other world," he said.

"Looking at the year ahead, I don't have any fears, although I think that the balance between caution and optimism is shifting towards caution. Obviously it depends on the economy -- if unemployment shoots up into the stratosphere, then there comes a certain point where you can't be immune to genuine economic difficulty.

"These figures are good news for the performing arts and for the UK economy. Theatregoers are out there spending money not just at our box offices but in hotels, restaurants and shops in the capital.

"2009 will undoubtedly be tough, but we start the year with the theatre capital of the world in good health. source>>>>

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Salvatore F. DiMasi is set to become the latest to leave the top post under a cloud of controversy,

House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi is set to become the latest to leave the top post under a cloud of controversy, setting the stage for a bitter power struggle with his announcement last night that he is ending his 30-year political career, effective tomorrow.

DiMasi, reeling from ethics probes connected to his former campaign treasurer, ended months of speculation during which his subordinates have openly campaigned to replace him.

DiMasi, who also will give up his North End representative's seat, follows Charles Flaherty and Thomas Finneran as the third consecutive House speaker to leave amid scandal. DiMasi has been under investigation for receiving a loan from a friend who was seeking support for a ticket-scalping bill.

"I am excited on the one hand to move on to other challenges and new opportunities. I am sad to leave the House of Representatives," DiMasi wrote. He has faced mounting pressure and revelations of potential impropriety. Despite widespread rumors he may be directly implicated, he has not been charged with any wrongdoing.

House Ways and Means Chairman Rep. Robert DeLeo (D-Winthrop) and Majority Leader Rep. John Rogers (D-Norwood) both claimed last night to have the support to succeed DiMasi.

Rogers issued a list of names for his potential transition team while DeLeo planned to release a list of 88 lawmakers' names he says have pledged to support him. The winner will need 81 votes.

Meanwhile, six members of Ways and Means and two members of the Legislature's Committee on Professional Licensure fired off a terse letter last night calling for a probe into DeLeo's involvement in a pair of legislative issues that landed DiMasi's friend and accountant, Richard Vitale, in prosecutors' crosshairs.

"There is a grave concern among many members of the House regarding Rep. DeLeo's involvement in the Ace ticket legislation and the Cognos budget item," the letter stated. "Both of those pieces of legislation were altered in the Ways and Means Committee and were not subject to an executive session in which other members could scrutinize the changes.

"Chairman DeLeo needs to offer a full explanation of his involvement in the Ace Ticket and Cognos scandal, which is the very reason why Speaker DiMasi is resigning his post." The letter called for a delay on a vote for the next speaker until DeLeo addresses the questions.

Vitale, who reportedly once loaned DiMasi $250,000 and paid his in-laws' legal bills, faces improper lobbying charges for pushing legislation to assist ticket brokers, including soliciting DiMasi. DiMasi has denied having a hand in the ticket legislation. Federal prosecutors are reportedly probing millions in fees paid to Vitale and other DiMasi associates for work on a $13 million contract to Cognos.

DiMasi said he remained "proud" of his accomplishments, "no matter what the critics and the cynics will say."

"I leave with no regrets. Not one," he wrote. "It is time - time to move on, time to return to private life and time to return to my first professional love, the law."

He also hinted at a lobbying or consulting career.

DiMasi's resignation comes four years after he replaced Finneran, who was convicted in 2007 of obstruction of justice for his role in a statewide redistricting plan. Flaherty pleaded guilty in 1996 to tax evasion. source>>>

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Friday, January 23, 2009

Muslim youth request Obama's help in fighting extremism

As Barack Obama begins his tenure as the first U.S. president with Muslim ancestry (though he is a Christian), a group of 300 young Muslim activists from 76 countries has asked him to promote policies that can help peacefully curtail religious extremism.

The Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow, a grassroots movement aiming to foster a new generation of civic engagement, issued the open letter after convening the group's first international conference last weekend in Doha, Qatar.

Participants, all between the ages of 20 and 45, included artists, academics, religious leaders and business owners. About 40 came from the U.S., including comedian Azhar Usman, journalist Souheila Al-Jadda and faith-based activist Saleemah Abdul-Ghafur, who recently wrote the book Living Islam Out Loud: American Muslim Women Speak.

Among its recommendations, the group's statement asks Obama and other world leaders to support human rights, youth participation in political and civil society, and mutual respect and engagement between civilizations.

In addition to debating how to combat radicalization of Muslim youths, organize their communities and represent progressive values, participants discussed controversial issues ranging from Islam's position on homosexuality to whether Islamic and Western values are in conflict.

The conference's timing -- with participants closely monitoring Palestinian deaths in Gaza and the birth of a new administration in Washington -- added a sense of urgency to the discussions, organizers agreed.

"The time for change," the letter concluded, "is now." source>>>

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Ticket holder to Inauguration left out in the cold,missed a moment that will never happen again.

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This post was written by Amy Hunt, 18, an author of RED the Book, a collection of personal essays written by 58 American teenage girls, recently released in paperback. She is a freshman at Juniata College.

I wish I could write here about my glorious inauguration experience, about the overwhelming emotion as I watched Barack Obama sworn in, about getting to witness his first speech as our 44th president, about the adrenaline that pulsed through the crowd of millions on the Mall.

Well, I can write about that last bit, the charge of the crowd, sure.

But not like that. No, I can talk about the energy as we pleaded with security to open the gate, to let us purple ticket-holders in. Not those silver tickets released to the general public, but the ones given out to staffers, DNC employees, union leaders -- "the people who had really worked for this," according to Katie Kellum, a friend of mine and a field organizer for the Obama campaign. She was kind enough to make me her plus-one, and on Monday night, drove from Lexington, Kentucky, to Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, to pick me up from college before heading to D.C.

For Katie and me, this was our first election, our first chance to vote, and attending the inauguration was a way of celebrating the fact that the candidate we chose is now our president. And it ended in big purple heartbreak.

A friend in the blue section later told us he didn't make it in, either.

And to think: If I'm crying here -- me, the lucky plus-one of a friend who, for months, uprooted her life and devoted herself to Barack Obama -- then imagine Katie. "Really, the only thing we wanted was to see him sworn in," she told me.

Instead, we were just two of the thousands of people who missed exactly that. We held up our purple tickets to prove that we all deserved a place on the other side of the gates, and watched with envy as anyone who made it through ran in with joy. We heard rumors of security breaches; there was only one gate open, or no gates open, or nobody was being let through or some people were being let through but slowly.

What happened? Why were these people unable to be a part of the inauguration they worked so hard to make happen? Why were our pleas and tickets ignored? We can think of people to blame: security and law enforcement? The inauguration committee? Republicans? We don't know, and no one bothered to tell us. All we wanted was an explanation or an apology, but we received neither.

We're calling it our riot of '09, though it was probably more of a peaceful protest. First we stood unmoved for two hours, wondering if the gates had opened, a little starstruck as Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson pushed past us. Eventually, we eased forward a few feet only to stop and wait again, little by little making it into the sunlight. "Open up the purple gate!" people demanded. Word started going around that the gates were closed, that none of us would be let in.

That's when the phone calls started: crying phone calls to friends or frantic phone calls to parents, asking them to put the receiver up to the television so we could try to hear the ceremony. And when the cannon fire marked the end of the inauguration and the beginning of this momentous administration, we jumped and shouted for joy--but a bittersweet, via cellphone-and-TV kind of joy. We's missed a moment that would never happen again.

To be clear, I think I can speak for that entire, freezing, disappointed crowd when I say that all of us are so happy to know that Barack Obama is our new president. Yes, we cheered when word reached us that Biden was sworn in, then again for Obama. When my friends and I watched parade footage while eating lunch in a shabby little restaurant--when we saw Michelle and Barack step out of the car and walk along the parade route waving and smiling--our hearts flipped.

But, at least for me, it took a while for it to sink that he really truly is our president. After all, we didn't get to hear the speech. We didn't get to see the swearing-in. And sometimes, this being one of those times, watching the clips on YouTube just doesn't do the trick. No, the only YouTube videos that seem fully real right now are those of the ticket-holders like Katie and me who didn't get in, who chanted and yelled and pleaded.

We're all for that reverend's benediction we heard about days later--yellow will be mellow, the red man can get ahead man, all that. But what in the world rhymes with purple? And, however charming, it's painful to hear about the day we're all supposed to be working toward when ours shut us out. source>>>

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Will They Be Scalping Tickets At The Blagojevich Trial?

Now that the circus in New York seems to have been resolved, the continuing circus in Illinois -- the impeachment trial of Gov. Rod Blagojevich -- is expected to move on to a new phase on Monday.

And that leads to this question from James McKinstra of Freeport, Ill.:

Do you know if the general public will be allowed to attend and observe the Blago impeachment trial?

I didn't know the answer, so I turned to NPR's David Schaper, who has been following the fun.

I was just looking over the rules as I prepare to cover the trial, so here is the rule regarding the openness of the trial:

Rule 23. Sessions; open or closed.

(a) At all times while the Senate is sitting upon the trial of an impeachment, the doors of the Senate and the Senate galleries shall be kept open, unless the Senate directs the doors to be closed while deliberating upon its decisions. A motion to close the doors may be made by any member of the Senate, and the motion shall be deemed granted only if sustained by two-thirds of those elected to the Senate by record vote.

(b) By granting a motion under subsection (a), the Senate finds that it is in the public interest for the Senate, as provided in Section 5(c) of Article IV of the Constitution, to conduct deliberations and debate on impeachment matters in closed session.

I would expect most if not all of the impeachment trial, including deliberations, will be open to the public.

There is a gallery for the general public to view all the action on the floor of the Illinois Senate, but there may be space limitations. I believe the trial will be broadcast online, and can be viewed through the Illinois General Assembly's web site: www.ilga.gov

A Delay? Samuel Adam, Blagojevich's new attorney, is considering a lawsuit to halt the trial, calling the Senate rules "completely unfair." And the governor himself said he had no intention of mounting a defense if the rules don't change. In light of the overwhelming vote in the state House to impeach Blago, it is unlikely that the Senate vote to convict will be much different. Pat Quinn is expected to be the next governor of Illinois sometime in February.

That Explains It. In an interview this morning on WLS radio, Blagojevich said the reason Illinois lawmakers are anxious to get rid of him is so they can go ahead and raise taxes once he's gone.

Rod And Reel. He's not going to go willingly, but nonetheless a group called "Rod Must Resign" has been holding demonstrations in Chicago in the past couple of weeks calling for the gov to leave. Spokesman Phil Molfese said, "We believe that the governor can no longer lead our state, because he has lost the trust of the people he was elected to represent. His effectiveness as an elected official has been compromised beyond all repair." Scott Cohen, a local businessman who founded the group, said, ""Blagojevich has been asked by President Obama and Senator Durbin. Now, he's being asked by the voters, the people who put him in office, to resign." The group has the buttons to show for it. And that's good enough for us. source>>>

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The Algerian bubonic plague incident should be a wake-up for the Obama administration.

The report that some forty al-Qaeda terrorists died after the bubonic plague swept through their Algerian training camp has been treated with some glee in the media. But that schadenfreude may be misplaced. One question being investigated is whether the North African fanatics fell victim to the naturally-occurring pathogen or the possibility the group mistakenly released the killer bug while brewing it for terror attacks. This incident provides the Obama administration the impetus to assess whether our nation is prepared for a bioterrorist attack.

The Algerian terrorist franchise, al-Qaeda in the land of the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), is the largest al-Qaeda group outside the Middle East. AQIM has a deadly terrorism record and a declared intention to attack American targets which makes the potential bioterrorism threat credible but not a surprise for American experts.

Last year, Dr. Jeffrey Runge, chief medical officer at the US Department of Homeland Security, told Congress that the risk of a large-scale biological attack on the nation is significant and the US knows its terrorist enemies have sought biological weapons. Runge said al-Qaeda is the most significant threat.
Continued
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Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has long shown an active interest in biological weapons. In the late 1990s, bin Laden set-up 19 chemical and biological weapons laboratories in Afghanistan stocking them with deadly pathogens: anthrax, plague, and botulinum toxins. He hired Ukrainian and Russian experts to train his people and, according to then-CIA director George Tenet, bin Laden trained his operatives "...to conduct attacks with toxic chemicals or biological toxins."

The group's biological weapons expert, Midhat Mursi al-Sayid Umar, who was reportedly killed by a US missile in 2008, published a 5,000-page encyclopedia of jihad devoted to chemical biological warfare (CBW). Al-Sayid's manual, which is available in print and on the Internet, provides instructions on how to manufacture rudimentary biological weapons.

The availability of al-Sayid's CBW cookbook makes it possible for independent jihadist cells like the AQIM to attempt to manufacture rudimentary biological weapons. That's why it shouldn't be a surprise when there are attempts to manufacture agents by franchise groups such as the 2003 incident in London where six Algerians were charged with plotting to produce the poison ricin and the 2005 French government claim that al-Qaeda cells in the Pankisi Gorge region of Georgia are producing anthrax bacteria, ricin, and botulinum toxin.

Any bioterror attack on America will likely come from suicidal jihadists armed with small containers of toxins made in remote sites like AQIM's training camps rather than pathogen-filled bombs launched from rockets, because weaponizing biological agents is very difficult. It requires the manufacturer to isolate the virulent strain, convert it into a weaponized form and then integrate it with a weapon system that can evenly distribute the agent in lethal doses to the intended targets.

A bioterrorist attack would go something like the following. A lone suicidal bioterrorist could cause significant suffering by spreading killer agents in a public place -- dumping a vile of anthrax spores in a ventilation system or subway -- or even more sinister, contaminate himself with the bubonic plague and then cough and sneeze the deadly plague in a closed area like an airplane or office building.

It could be 36 hours after a terrorist spreads anthrax or up to a week after someone is exposed to bubonic plague before victims become ill with classical symptoms. That's why health care providers must be alert to identify the threat and notify public officials. Quick action will save many lives, but the cost could be high.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that an intentional release of anthrax by a bioterrorist in a major city could result in an economic impact of up to $26 billion per 100,000 persons exposed.

The AQIM incident came to light when Algerian security forces found the bubonic plague-riddled body of a known terrorist by a roadside. Reportedly, AQIM chiefs fear the highly contagious plague has spread to other terror cells because some of the nearly 1,000 Algerian insurgents abandoned the contaminated camp for others in Morocco, Tunisia and Nigeria.

The Sun, a British newspaper, broke the AQIM story on January 19th. The paper reported that the epidemic began in AQIM's camp 90 miles east of the capital Algiers. The group turned the camp's shelters into mass graves and fled, reported the Sun.

The plague, also known as "black death," is believed to have killed an estimated 75-200 million people in the 14th century. Today, the World Health Organization reports several thousand cases a year, mainly in southern Asia, Africa and Central America.

The killer bug is caused by a bacterial agent, yersinia pestis, which infects rodents, producing blood poisoning. Fleas that feed on the dying rodents carry the toxic bacteria to humans. This may explain how AQIM terrorists contracted the pathogen if not from a terror weapon mishap.

Left untreated by antibiotics, the plague's symptoms begin with a headache, then chills and fever which lead to exhaustion. The condition may include nausea, vomiting, back pain, soreness in the arms and legs. Swellings, called buboes, which give the bubonic plague its name, appear around the lymph nodes -- the neck, arms and inner thighs. They are hard knobs that turn black, split open to ooze pus and blood. The survival rate among the untreated is small.

Both offensive and defensive programs must be in place to reduce the likelihood of a successful bioterrorist attack launched by groups like AQIM or homegrown radicals.

The best offensive effort is to shutdown bioterrorists at the source. That's why the possibility that AQIM is working on deadly pathogens matters. Our special operation forces working with allies and friendly governments must eliminate threats before they mature.

But trying to stop threats at the source is insufficient. Our borders must be guarded with special biological agent sensors which are still under development. That places the burden on our border guards who must recognize clinical symptoms and deny access or quarantine suspect visitors.

Fortunately, we have in place the beginning of an effective bioterrorist response program. In 1997, Congress passed the Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act which established the Chemical and Biological Incident Response Force (CBIFR) unit based in Camp Lejeune, NC. The CBIFR is the nation's self-contained and self-sufficient unit for responding to CBW attacks. Its back-up force includes the National Guard's 52 weapons of mass destruction civil support teams, but these 22-man units only advise first responders and that's the nation's CBW Achilles heel.

Most city fire departments have the responsibility to provide first response to CBW attacks but too often that capability is underfunded. Small cities and towns may have no response capability at all. Besides, few US hospitals can handle a mass casualty scenario and most hospitals have very limited capability to decontaminate patients.

The fact is that America isn't prepared for most catastrophic disasters. Paul McHale, assistant secretary of defense for homeland defense and America's security affairs, claims that the nation is only prepared to respond to a pandemic flu and a major hurricane.

Our preparedness for a bioterrorist attack was tested by the September 2001 anthrax contaminated letter incident. A handful of anthrax contaminated letters resulted in approximately 32,000 persons with potential exposures taking antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent anthrax infections and the attack killed five people.

That incident was quickly exposed because it involved congressional officials who are provided special protection. Likely, had the anthrax letters gone to ordinary offices, the attack would not have been exposed as early and many more people would have died.

The Algerian bubonic plague incident should be a wake-up for the Obama administration to reassess its bioterrorism preparedness. Enemies such as al Qaeda and its franchises are almost certainly producing deadly biological weapons and will use them for mass murder. America must be aggressive in defeating the bioterrorist before he attacks and should that fail our network of first responders must be prepared for a potentially catastrophic attack. source>>>

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