Saturday, December 31, 2011

Israeli police arrest 6 suspects in settler riot (AP)

JERUSALEM ? Israeli police say they have arrested six Jewish extremists wanted for their role in a riot at a military base earlier this month.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld says police made the arrests overnight in several West Bank settlements and in Jerusalem. He said on Thursday those arrested are five adults and a minor.

Several dozen settlers and supporters entered the West Bank base on Dec. 13, attacked soldiers and vandalized military property. The riot appeared to be linked to rumors that the military was about to evacuate an unauthorized settlement outpost.

The attack was condemned by Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who said he had ordered police to take action against extremists among Israeli settlers in the West Bank.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mideast/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_palestinians

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Kid Acne New Street Piece In Beijing, China

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Drivers on methadone twice as likely to crash (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) ? Men on methadone treatment for drug addiction were more than twice as likely to be involved in a traffic accident as the general population in a new study from Norway.

The researchers looked at two and a half years' worth of data on drug prescriptions and on motor vehicle accidents, and found that among the roughly 2,500 people prescribed methadone for drug addiction treatment, there were 26 vehicle accidents - a rate at least double that of the rest of the population.

Methadone can impair people's functioning, particularly in the beginning of treatment or if the dose is increased, said Miriam Mintzer, an associate professor at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine who was not involved in this study.

But she added that it's not clear that methadone is to blame for the increased crashes.

"I would be reluctant to draw strong conclusions from the study, given that they don't have a lot of information about the accidents," Mintzer told Reuters Health.

The study did not determine whether the people involved in the accidents were using alcohol or other drugs, for instance.

Nor could the researchers find out if people were at the beginning of treatment, or well into it.

Lead author Dr. Jrgen G. Bramness at the Norwegian Centre for Addiction Research at the University of Oslo agreed that any explanation for the increased rate of crashes would be speculation.

"Many different things go into increasing traffic accident risk, like reduced attention, slowed reaction, slowed psychomotor performance, less accurate psychomotor performance, etc," he wrote in an email to Reuters Health.

Bramness said that there are already regulations in place stating that people are considered fit to drive when they have been on a stable methadone treatment over time.

"This comes from the extensive knowledge we have of the total tolerance that you achieve from chronic opiate use," Bramness said.

The authors write in their study, published in the journal Addiction, that the number of accidents among methadone-treated patients is considered small.

The number of women on methadone in the study was also small, and they did not seem to share the men's increased risk for car accidents.

Bramness said that there needs to be more research into the potential risks of methadone treatment on people's driving performance before regulations warrant revision.

"A first step would be to enforce the current regulations more strictly," he added. "If you abuse other drugs, when on methadone, you should not be allowed to drive."

Mintzer said there's been a renewed interest in research on the effects of methadone on functioning, which is especially important given a recent trend to prescribe increasingly higher doses of the treatment.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/rqoLQn Addiction, online December 7, 2011.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111230/hl_nm/us_drivers_methadone

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Friday, December 30, 2011

European shares edge higher, Italy debt sale eyed

LONDON | Thu Dec 29, 2011 3:19am EST

LONDON Dec 29 (Reuters) - European shares rose on Thursday in low volume, recovering from the previous session falls, on hope there would be demand at an Italian auction of long-term sovereign debt after the European Central Bank's three-year funding operation last week.

"Volume is low and I hope we have a reasonable result at the Italian auction, but we are stuck in a trading range," Andrea Williams, manager of Royal London Asset Management's European Income fund.

"The ECB three-year funding has been a great thing as it has brought a lot of stability to the system and the market."

At 0807 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares was up 0.2 percent at 983.83 points.

Mining stocks featured among the top performers, STOXX Europe 600 Basic Resources index which fell in the previous gained 0.6 percent as risk appetite improved.

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/companyNews/~3/nA0nWgRAu2s/markets-europe-stocks-open-idUSP6E7NR00B20111229

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Check Out Paychex's Good Numbers (The Motley Fool)

Payment processor and human resources services provider Paychex (Nasdaq: PAYX - News) recently posted higher-than-expected profits in its second quarter. The company benefited from better revenue per check. Given the high unemployment rate in the U.S., results that exceeded expectations are a welcome development. However, the company remains cautious about the slow economy.

Let's dig deeper.

Economy matters
Paychex provides human resources and benefit services to small- and medium-sized businesses. Owing to a weak global economy, these businesses have been facing tough times. Paychex acts as a performance barometer for such smaller companies. The company has expressed concerns regarding its future sales due to weakness in its customer base. Growth in checks per client is expected to be moderate in 2012.

However, things may not be as bad as they appear. The company earns nearly 70% of its income from its payroll service business. By the year's end in May, revenue from this business is expected to grow at an average rate of around 6%. Moreover, revenue from human resource services is expected to grow at an even steeper rate of 12% to 15%.

The quarterly roundup
Revenue increased to $545.7 million, a 7% rise compared to the prior-year quarter, as the number of checks per client increased. Net income surged to $140.4 million, a 5% increase compared to last year.

Revenue benefited from price increases and lower discounting with clients. Smaller HR services helped the numbers by expanding the company's client base by 12% as it added clients and existing clients' employee counts increased.

Rival Insperity (NYSE: NSP - News) also posted a robust 32% growth in its earnings per share. The second-quarter results of competitor Automatic Data Processing (Nasdaq: ADP - News) are expected next month.

Paychex also expanded its software-as-a-service offerings by introducing a new single sign-on page for online users and an iPad application.

The Foolish bottom line
Paychex posted good numbers despite a sluggish economy. At the moment, the company remains threatened by the poor performance of small- and medium-sized companies. However, hiring is picking up. The number of jobless claims is declining. That's all good news for this payroll service provider.

Click here to stay up to speed on Paychex by adding it to your Watchlist.

Fool contributor Navjot Kaur does not own shares of any of the companies mentioned in this article. Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of Paychex and Automatic Data Processing. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personalfinance/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/fool/20111228/bs_fool_fool/rx171049

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Leanna?s most-used iPhone and iPad apps of 2011

Like Rene, my most-used apps of 2011 are probably the built in iPhone and iPad Safari browser, Mail app, and Reminders, Calendars, etc. via Siri. That’s just the...


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Wacky rules complicate race for GOP delegates (The Arizona Republic)

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

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Israel Risks New Turkish Ire with Recognition of Armenian Genocide

The Israeli Parliament on Monday held its first public debate on whether to commemorate the Turkish genocide of Armenians nearly a century ago, an emotionally resonant and politically fraught topic for Israel, founded on the ashes of the Holocaust and trying to salvage frayed ties with Turkey.

The session resulted from a rare confluence of political forces ? an effort under way for decades by some on the left to get Israel to take a leading role in bringing attention to mass murder, combined with those on the right angry at how Turkey has criticized Israel over its policies toward the Palestinians.

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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/27/world/middleeast/israel-risks-turkish-ire-with-recognition-of-armenian-genocide.html?pagewanted=print

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

itn: British troops in Afghanistan have enjoyed a festive treat, tucking into a traditional Christmas dinner: http://t.co/M7crpyVS

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British troops in Afghanistan have enjoyed a festive treat, tucking into a traditional Christmas dinner: bit.ly/vz5hVL itn

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Outside groups air barrage of ads in Mass. race (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Watch the political advertising and Elizabeth Warren, the leading Democratic Senate candidate in Massachusetts, either "sides with extreme left" protesters or has a history of being too cozy with Wall Street. Or Republican freshman Sen. Scott Brown, whom she hopes to defeat next year, is portrayed as an enemy of the environment.

Outside groups on both sides are spending millions of dollars on the race, highlighting the national prominence of the fight over the seat held for nearly 50 years by the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. But the level of spending also foreshadows the role that such groups, including special political action committees, will play in many of next fall's big political matchups.

The flood of money and ads from outside the state is expected to surge as the Warren-Brown race intensifies.

"Massachusetts is at the end of the spear of what will be the big trend and the big story of 2012," said Ken Goldstein, president of Campaign Media Analysis Group, which tracks spending on political ads.

Super PACs have been showing their strength in marquis Senate races. The Supreme Court, in a trio of decisions capped by the landmark Citizens United case in 2010, eased restrictions on the use of corporate money in political campaigns and paved the way for such spending. Massachusetts is front and center, with the conservative Crossroads GPS spending $1.1 million on one spot casting Warren as aligned with radical elements of the Occupy Wall Street movement and another that has her siding with Wall Street bankers.

Crossroads GPS is an affiliate of American Crossroads, a group with ties to Karl Rove, a top political adviser to President George W. Bush. The groups spent more than $38 million to defeat Democrats in the 2010 midterms, raising money from large donors, including many whose identities remain unknown.

Crossroads GPS was by far the largest and most influential super PAC in that campaign year.

Last month, one Crossroads ad used spliced images of Warren with rowdy Occupy Wall Street protesters to claim that she "sides with extreme left" protesters who "attack police, do drugs and trash public parks."

Warren at one point said her philosophies provided the intellectual underpinnings for the Occupy movement, but she has backed off a bit, saying she supports the movement but that the protesters must follow the law.

A second Crossroads ad then painted Warren as being too cozy with Wall Street when she headed a congressional panel that oversaw the Treasury's handling of the $700 billion financial industry bailout, a charge Warren has dismissed as ridiculous given her background as a consumer advocate and leading critic of many Wall Street's practices.

The attacks prompted Warren to spend about $1 million on her first TV campaign ad, in which she says: "Before you hear a bunch of ridiculous attack ads, I want to tell you who I am."

Warren is an especially inviting target for Republicans because many voters don't know much about her, which Anthony Corrado, a campaign finance expert at Colby College in Maine, said explains why these groups have become active at such an early stage of the campaign.

"The first information can often have a powerful influence," he said.

Outside groups have also gone after Brown.

The League of Conservation Voters and the League of Women Voters have spent nearly $3 million on separate ad campaigns accusing Brown of casting anti-environmental votes. Both groups have also run ads against Democrats in other states.

The League of Women Voters' ad rapped Brown for voting with other Senate Republicans to ban the Environmental Protection Agency from controlling gases blamed for global warming. It showed a child breathing through an oxygen mask and urged Brown to "protect the people and not the polluters." Brown complained that the ad was "political demagoguery."

One spot by the League of Conservation Voters slammed Brown for siding with "big oil" and voting "repeatedly against protecting our environment and public health." He has denounced that ad as a distortion.

The League of Conservation Voters said Brown scored a zero on the group's national environmental report card.

The early wave of attack ads has hurt both candidates, a recent University of Massachusetts-Lowell/Boston Herald poll found. The percentage of voters who said they had an unfavorable view of Brown rose from 29 percent to 35 percent between late September and early December. Those viewing Warren unfavorably increased from 18 percent to 27 percent.

Brown wants third-party groups to pull their negative commercials. Warren draws the line at unfair attack ads but defends the rights of political action committees and other independent groups to run ads.

Such talk won't stop outside groups from swarming the airwaves with negative ads, however.

"This is just a harbinger of things to come," said Corrado.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_el_se/us_massachusetts_senate_attack_ads

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Monday, December 26, 2011

New Details On TNA?s New Company In India & It?s First Show

Source: Pwinsider

Here is the latest from TNA?s new Ring Ka King promotion in India:

* Pictured above is the entrance set the company is using.

* The Indian talents involved are signed to multi-year contracts.

* The American talents who worked the tapings are not signed to contracts for the Ring Ka King project.

* Matt Morgan won the promotion?s main championship.

* Harry Smith and Chavo Guerrero won the tag team titles

* The crowd heat for the tapings was reportedly great, and wrestlers like Scott Steiner were said to get ?old school, white hot heat.?




Source: http://www.24wrestling.com/new-details-on-tnas-new-company-in-india-its-first-show/

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Another face of the U.S. recession: homeless children (Reuters)

MIAMI (Reuters) ? As her mother sat in a homeless shelter in downtown Miami, talking about her economic struggles and loss of faith in the U.S. political system, 3-year-old Aeisha Touray blurted out what sounded like a new slogan for the Occupy Wall Street protest movement.

"How dare you!" the girl said abruptly as she nudged a toy car across a conference room table at the Chapman Partnership shelter in Miami's tough and predominantly black Overtown neighborhood.

There was no telling what Aeisha was thinking as her 32-year-old mother, Nairkahe Touray, spoke of how she burned through her savings and wound up living in a car with five of her eight children earlier this year.

But how dare you indeed? How does anyone explain to kids like Aeisha and countless others how they wound up homeless in the world's richest nation?

In a report issued earlier this month, the National Center on Family Homelessness, based in Needham, Massachusetts, said 1.6 million children were living on the streets of the United States last year or in shelters, motels and doubled-up with other families.

That marked a 38 percent jump in child homelessness since 2007 and Ellen Bassuk, the center's president, attributes the increase to fallout from the U.S. recession and a surge in the number of extremely poor households headed by women.

Recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau provided a sobering backdrop. Based on new or experimental methodology aimed at providing a fuller picture of poverty, the data showed that about 48 percent of Americans are living in poverty or on low incomes.

Under the bureau's so-called Supplemental Poverty Measure for 2010, issued last month, the poverty level for a family of four was set at income anywhere below $24,343 per year.

"I see it every day," said Alfredo Brown, 73, a retired army officer and deputy director of the non-profit Chapman Partnership, when asked about child homelessness.

The organization, funded largely by a 1 percent food and beverage tax on larger restaurants to bankroll homeless programs, operates two sprawling homeless shelters in Miami-Dade County.

"I see so many children and mothers that are homeless and sleeping in their car or an abandoned building, an old bus. It's a sad situation that we live in a country that has so much and many people have so little," Brown said.

Child homelessness is a relatively new social problem in the United States, where being on the street and the stigma attached to it has long been associated with adults with alcohol or drug dependency issues.

IMPOVERISHED MOTHERS

Families accounted for less than 1 percent of the U.S. homeless population in the mid-1980s, according to Bassuk, but they now comprise about a third of the homeless population. A lot of children are dependent on poverty-stricken single moms.

"There's sort of a Third World emerging right in our backyard. You know, we talk about developing countries but look at what's going on here," Bassuk said.

To put a face to the breadth and depth of the homeless problem, a team of Reuters journalists fanned out across the country in the past week, for interviews with parents and children who are down on their luck.

From Skid Row in Los Angeles to the South Bronx in New York, a common thread of economic devastation from the recession ran throughout many of the stories these people told.

But there also was a common thread of hope running through their compressed life stories.

Little Aeisha in Miami got visibly upset as her mother spoke tearfully about the wear and tear on her children amid her struggles with a bad economy, severe depression, diabetes and chronic foot problems stemming from torn ligaments.

Touray sounded like an Occupy Wall Street protester herself, as she complained about bailout money for banks but not people. "You get treated like an animal because you're homeless," said Touray, who said she lives on just $583 a month in child support after going through a divorce last year. Her parents, who live separately in Atlanta and Chicago, are also homeless.

"Just because I'm homeless it doesn't mean that I was like nothing yesterday," said Touray, who said four small businesses she owned in Atlanta only went bust due to the recession.

She also complained about the tone-deafness of many politicians, saying they were doing nothing to ease the unemployment and inequality that have come to dominate the national conversation.

"I'm living the real deal," Touray said. "I don't need for somebody to come up here and tell me what the economy's doing. They (the politicians) need to get out here and see these children, see these parents."

RIDING THE RAILS

Across the country in Los Angeles, Reuters came across Luis Martinez, 34. A single parent, he lives with his three children at the Union Rescue Mission on a trash-strewn city block where homeless men and women stand vigil over plastic shopping carts.

But the shelter is an improvement over the time when Martinez passed nights on the L.A. subway with his children, riding the rails to nowhere.

A junior high school dropout who became unemployed after he injured his back on construction site job about six years ago, Martinez spoke proudly about how well he said his kids were doing in school.

They have a laptop computer, which they use to help do homework through free wireless connections at McDonalds and Starbucks. They also have an Xbox video game system and Martinez, who wears a necklace that says "My Kids First," has a cell phone to stay in touch with family and potential employers.

"I mean, I'm homeless but not hopeless," Martinez said.

"(It) gets easier as you go," said Jesse, Martinez's 8-year-old son.

Highlighting the shrinking middle class in America, a reporter found Tracy and Elizabeth Burger and their 8-year-old son, Dylan. The Burgers said they once earned nearly $100,000 a year combined but saw their middle-class lifestyle evaporate when Tracy lost his job in audiovisual system sales.

Unable to pay rent, they were evicted from their apartment in early 2009 and had to move into a motel. In March they moved into a cramped converted garage at Elizabeth's mother's house in Los Angeles.

Elizabeth, a former medical assistant, said she has less than six weeks left on her unemployment insurance and was anxiously watching this week's standoff in Congress over extending those payments, along with the payroll tax cut for 160 million Americans.

The congressional debate highlighted the partisan bickering that has made this a tumultuous year in U.S. politics, while throwing Washington's ability to make sound economic policy into doubt.

In central Florida, Justin Santiago, 15, said he was not surprised when he, his parents and three younger siblings landed in a downtown Orlando shelter last September.

Since the national economic collapse in 2008, his out-of-work family bounced from one relative's home to another, and left California in search of employment and stability.

"I wasn't shocked. When the economy's going down and it just drops, it's out of control," Justin said.

EYES ON THE PRIZE

In 16 years of marriage, his parents, Theresa and Timothy Santiago, managed to provide for their family by working multiple jobs, earning about $20,000 in their best year. But work dried up and the family set out for Florida last spring in search of cheaper living expenses.

After a run of more bad luck, they found their way to the Coalition for the Homeless of Central Florida shelter. But Justin is taking eighth grade honors classes now and says his family's recent experience will not keep him from pursuing his dream career in video game production and becoming an Internet success story.

"It will get better for me and my family," he said. "I'll be making billions, I know that."

Antonio Dixon, 26, knows all about things getting better. His mother, Corenthia, said he bounced between at least a dozen homeless shelters growing up in Miami and Atlanta.

He eventually won a football scholarship at the University of Miami and fought dyslexia to become the first person in his family to graduate college.

"They had me study hard every hour," Dixon told Reuters.

He has since gone on to play defensive tackle for the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles, making good on his boyhood dream.

Dixon has been sidelined by a torn tricep since early October. But he seems confident about overcoming adversity yet again and plans on being in the starting lineup next season.

His advice to homeless kids is to stay in school and get focused on whatever it is they really want to do in life.

"Just keep on doing something you like and don't give up," Dixon said. I had to work myself up from the bottom to the top. I did that. Don't let nobody stand in your way. You just got to go and get it. You can't be afraid to take a chance on life."

Bassuk, a psychiatrist and Harvard Medical School professor, said medical problems and under-achievement in school were among the things that often go hand in hand with childhood homelessness.

"These are kids who don't have any opportunities," she said. "If you look at some of the educational variables, they're doing really poorly. And they're kids who can do OK. They just don't have appropriate support.

"It just seems that on every front this is a very vulnerable group of kids," she said.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis, Tim Gaynor, James Kelleher, David Bailey, Michelle Nichols, Kelli Dugan and Barbara Liston; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111223/us_nm/us_usa_homeless

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

The Week's Best Animal Photos

The holidays aren't just for humans. Animals around the world have been getting into the holiday spirit this year.

If you've never seen dogs sing Christmas carols, this video will be sure to put you in the holiday spirit. Not to be outdone, the "Jingle Cats" also know how to spread holiday cheer.

Family pets may be an important part of holiday celebrations for some people, but some experts recommend you avoid gifting pets during the holidays.

If you know someone who's a big pet advocate, check out Petside.com's list of the top 10 pet people of 2011 and see how they compare.

If cute animals are more your thing, this orphaned polar bear cub will warm even the coldest grinch's heart.

Be sure to check out which rare and exotic wild animals were most searched for on Google this year.

Here are some of the best, cutest and wildest animal photos from the past week:

?? BACK TO ARTICLE

From Getty: A nine day old mona monkey is bottle-fed by its keeper on December 19, 2011 at the zoo in Magdeburg, eastern Germany. In the wild, the guenons live mainly in western African forests. AFP PHOTO / JENS WOLF

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Mitt Romney Would Be One of America's Wealthiest Presidents (ContributorNetwork)

If Mitt Romney is elected president in 2012, one thing that will be discussed is his net worth. The Los Angeles Times reports Dec. 22 that Romney hasn't divulged his income tax returns and doesn't plan on doing so while he is running for president. The New York Times reported Dec. 11 that Romney has been criticized for offering a $10,000 bet on his position regarding health care. That amount of money struck a nerve with voters who feel Romney is out of touch with Americans who are suffering because of the economic recession.

Here's a look at how Romney's finances and wealth stack up to presidents of the past.

Romney's Income

Romney started his path to riches when he became vice president of Bain & Co. in 1978. CNN reported he earned and MBA at Harvard and then latched on with Boston Consulting Group before going up the corporate ladder.

Six years after learning the ins and outs of the investment industry, Romney started his own company in 1984 called Bain Capital. The company is a private equity company spun off from the Bain Company. Romney spent 15 years at Bain Capital. When he had political ambitions in Massachusetts, Romney quit his job but was able to put a lot of his wealth into investments as he retired from a private sector job.

His net worth in in 2007 was calculated at $202 million. He makes cash when he sells stock. The Boston Globe reported in August that the presidential candidate was going to bulldoze his $12 million beachfront mansion in La Jolla, Calif., and replace it with an 11,000 square-foot home that is nearly quadruple in size from the older one.

Past Presidents

In terms of past presidents who have actually held office, Romney's wealth pales in comparison to some famous names. The Atlantic Monthly reported on the wealth of presidents in May 2010. Romney's wealth nearly exceeds all of the previous nine presidents combined, including Barack Obama. John F. Kennedy's family estate was valued at $1 billion in today's dollars, the last president to be worth more than Romney's $202 million figure.

George Washington, based upon his family's land ownership and wealth accumulation, was worth around $525 million. Thomas Jefferson, despite his opulent mansion at Monticello, was worth around only $212 million. Abraham Lincoln owned less than $1 million in assets with his home in Illinois.

Should Romney be elected president, his personal assets will be on the side of one of the wealthiest presidents to hold office in United States history.

William Browning is a research librarian specializing in U.S. politics. Born in St. Louis, Browning is active in local politics and served as a campaign volunteer for President Barack Obama and Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111223/pl_ac/10738759_mitt_romney_would_be_one_of_americas_wealthiest_presidents

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Nicol Turner-Lee: Mayor Emanuel Must Shed Old Paradigms for True Transparency Reform

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is under fire for his office's denial of Freedom of Information Act requests, with critics in the local and national press and blogs taking the mayor to task for shielding public records from public view. Underscoring this lapse in transparency is Emanuel's vow to foster "the most open, accountable and transparent government that the City of Chicago has ever seen." Cities like Boston, Phoenix, and Seattle all routinely release such information, according to reporting by the Chicago Tribune's David Kidwell, implying that they do transparency better.

This is not to suggest there has been no progress on transparency under Mayor Emanuel. Indeed, he has backed the release of large amounts of government data, including the June release of salary information for all city employees. The city's September release of city-wide crime statistics for the past decade not only helps crime-fighting agencies, but also journalists, advocates and businesses create more targeted programs to address local concerns.

Chicago, like its big city peers, just needs to decide if government transparency is a core attribute of its government. For the Emanuel Administration, releasing some data and not others does little to shed the old paradigms of closed door politics where waste, government fraud and abuse were the norm.

State and local governments lag severely behind federal government due to fragmented policies and technical systems. Consequently, citizens are deprived of opportunities to participate in the processes and deliberations of local government. This is ironic since our democracy has always been grounded in localism.

Releasing government data is only one way of ensuring effective open government. The White House and federal agencies regularly solicit citizen feedback on pending policy matters and use the Internet to embrace the public's expertise by encouraging citizens to turn government data into useful online tools and applications. The Recovery.gov website allows residents to track Recovery Act spending and report abuse or fraud. The Data.gov website is regularly updated with data sets provided by federal agencies and showcases citizen-developed apps by winners of contests and other challenges.

As the former architect of President Obama's open government plans, Mayor Emanuel can go even further by consulting the following recommendations on how to put government content to creative use, as other American cities are doing.

Create opportunities for developing public good applications. New York is a prime example of a city developing public good applications. Mayor Bloomberg recently announced New York's third application development competition, NYC BigApps 3.0, with over 750 datasets for developers to create web or mobile applications using official city data. The NYC Open Data site includes datasets as varied as maps of city parks and parking facilities, restaurant inspection reports and school attendance and enrollment statistics by district. Public-private-citizen partnerships can generate ideas for meaningful public purpose apps that can improve the quality of life within communities, but that can't happen if cities don't open up information to the public in the first place and make data available in standardized formats.

Establish flexible procurement procedures that allow for more off-the-shelf purchasing and easier contracting and promote innovative application solutions. Easing the burden of excessive paperwork and lengthy bureaucratic approvals associated with the purchase of information technology and data management software can strengthen innovation in local governments interested in improving their transparency. In Washington, D.C., the Apps for Democracy program funded the development of apps outside of normal procurement process. Structured as a contest, the innovative program was aimed at developers where mash-up data and software existed alongside traditional procurement processes.

By following just these two recommendations, government services and operations can become more efficient. For example, the city could lower transaction costs for procedures such as business license renewals and property tax payments by using updated, open data tools. Innovative applications geared toward the transit, health care and employment sectors can also minimize harms produced by over-congested roadways, busy emergency waiting rooms and busy job centers.

Tackling open government also helps cities address a more critical issue impacting local economies and quality of life- low broadband adoption rates among our nation's citizens. Nationwide, two-thirds of households currently subscribe to broadband service. However, only about half of minority and low-income households have adopted this increasingly vital technology. Many non-adopters do not see the Internet's value. Increasing the availability of resident-focused government content and services at the local level could offer non-users a clear, tangible value proposition for adopting broadband.

Having run for and won office as a reformer, Mayor Emanuel has a broad mandate for making Chicago's government more transparent and accountable by making a commitment to digital openness that furthers the interests of this great city. Making civic and social data available in standardized formats that lead to the productive public use of public information is something that everyone can agree is a public benefit.

If Mayor Emanuel wishes to foster a more transparent Chicago, he must not only continue the release of city data, but ensure that it is put to creative uses that serve the public.

?

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nicol-turnerlee/mayor-must-shed-old-parad_b_1166347.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Callista Gingrich steps up presence on the trail (The Arizona Republic)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178273518?client_source=feed&format=rss

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How pregnancy changes a woman's brain

ScienceDaily (Dec. 21, 2011) ? We know a lot about the links between a pregnant mother's health, behavior, and moods and her baby's cognitive and psychological development once it is born. But how does pregnancy change a mother's brain? "Pregnancy is a critical period for central nervous system development in mothers," says psychologist Laura M. Glynn of Chapman University. "Yet we know virtually nothing about it."

Glynn and her colleague Curt A. Sandman, of University of the California Irvine, are doing something about that. Their review of the literature in Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal published by the Association for Psychological Science, discusses the theories and findings that are starting to fill what Glynn calls "a significant gap in our understanding of this critical stage of most women's lives."

At no other time in a woman's life does she experience such massive hormonal fluctuations as during pregnancy. Research suggests that the reproductive hormones may ready a woman's brain for the demands of motherhood -- helping her becomes less rattled by stress and more attuned to her baby's needs. Although the hypothesis remains untested, Glynn surmises this might be why moms wake up when the baby stirs while dads snore on. Other studies confirm the truth in a common complaint of pregnant women: "Mommy Brain," or impaired memory before and after birth. "There may be a cost" of these reproduction-related cognitive and emotional changes, says Glynn, "but the benefit is a more sensitive, effective mother."

The article reviews research that refines earlier findings on the effects of the prenatal environment on the baby. For instance, evidence is accumulating to show that it's not prenatal adversity on its own -- say, maternal malnourishment or depression -- that presents risks for a baby. Congruity between life in utero and life on the outside may matter more. A fetus whose mother is malnourished adapts to scarcity and will cope better with a dearth of food once it's born -- but could become obese if it eats normally. Timing is critical too: maternal anxiety early in gestation takes a toll on the baby's cognitive development; the same high levels of stress hormones late in pregnancy enhance it.

Just as Mom permanently affects her fetus, new science suggests that the fetus does the same for Mom. Fetal movement, even when the mother is unaware of it, raises her heart rate and her skin conductivity, signals of emotion -- and perhaps of pre-natal preparation for mother-child bonding. Fetal cells pass through the placenta into the mother's bloodstream. "It's exciting to think about whether those cells are attracted to certain regions in the brain" that may be involved in optimizing maternal behavior, says Glynn.

Glynn cautions that most research on the maternal brain has been conducted with rodents, whose pregnancies differ enormously from women's; more research on human mothers is needed. But she is optimistic that a more comprehensive picture of the persisting brain changes wrought by pregnancy will yield interventions to help at-risk mothers do better by their babies and themselves.

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Journal Reference:

  1. L. M. Glynn, C. A. Sandman. Prenatal Origins of Neurological Development: A Critical Period for Fetus and Mother. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2011; 20 (6): 384 DOI: 10.1177/0963721411422056

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/zHjYh338pFE/111221140633.htm

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Friday, December 23, 2011

OHK replied to A.C.'s discussion 'Integrity in College' in the group College Gentlemen

Going back to school in a month, guess I can pipe in.

You can hook up, you can party, you can do whatever, your integrity tells you how to act throughout.

We all had one night stands, we got stupid drunk at times, we got in fights, we had the time of our lives.? But we were all men of integrity.? We didn't rape, we didn't lie to those girls, we didn't break laws, we did what we had to do, and we all graduated after having lived some.

Remember, integrity is what you do when no one else is watching.? Integrity isn't remaining celibate, integrity isn't remaining sober, it is just remaining who you are in those situations.? You can take home a tipsy girl, but when she is fall down drunk, you take her home and you take a cold shower.? You can throw down some booze with friends, you make sure you have a driver.

Source: http://community.artofmanliness.com/xn/detail/2357106%3AComment%3A1099564?xg_source=activity

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From emerging markets to Europe: Van Eck plans euro ETF (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Van Eck Global, a fund manager with wide experience in emerging markets, is preparing to debut in another risky sector it bets will offer competitive returns in 2012 -- Europe's high-yield corporate debt market.

Van Eck plans to launch in mid-January an exchange-traded fund that will invest in high-yield corporate bonds issued in euros or British pounds -- the first ETF of that type to be listed in the United States.

It is a risky bet -- Fitch Ratings forecasts defaults among European high-yield issuers will rise in 2012 as a stagnating economy reduces corporate revenues. Banks are also poised to cut credit lines to companies, forcing them to pay higher yields to refinance in tighter capital markets.

But demand for the new ETF should come both from investors with a positive longer-term view on the market and from those interested in selling those bonds short, Van Eck director Edward Lopez told Reuters in an interview.

He said spreads between European high-yield bonds and benchmark government rates serve as a gauge for measuring performance of the bonds.

"Historically, when spreads exceeded 1,000 basis points, in the years following the returns for those bonds have been positive," said Lopez, pointing to a graph that shows spreads recently crossed the 1,000 basis point threshold again.

In 2010, about one year after spreads widened to more than 2,000 basis points following the global financial crisis, returns on European high-yield corporate bonds jumped to over 100 percent in a 12-month rolling period basis, according to an index calculated by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

The index -- known as European Currency High Yield Constrained -- will be the benchmark for Van Eck's new ETF. It currently includes only bonds issued by companies from investment-grade countries, but Lopez believes that rule "is going away in the new year."

Returns are expected to be attractive in 2012 as long as Europe does not slip back into recession, said Lopez.

"If the economy just muddles along, with growth at single digit and equities not doing anything, I think high-yield debt will look interesting," he said.

But even if a possible recession sends bond prices down, the ETF could still prove to be a useful tool for investors trying to hedge their positions, according to Lopez.

He recalled the strong investor appetite for Van Eck's Egypt ETF (EGPT.P) right after the country's stock market reopened following a month-long halt triggered by the popular uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak.

Even as stocks fell, assets in the Egypt ETF managed by Van Eck jumped to $12 million from $7 million in a few days "because people were willing to trade that event," said Lopez.

"We would suspect there would be appetite for trading the European events as well."

(Reporting By Walter Brandimarte; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111220/bs_nm/us_vaneck_etf_europe

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Gold to drop in Q1, far from retesting record high: Reuters poll (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Gold prices will fall below $1,500 an ounce over the next three months and are unlikely to retest September's all-time highs until later 2012 at the earliest, according to a Reuters poll of 20 hedge fund managers, economists and traders.

The bleak forecast, coming after gold has lost 11 percent of its value so far this month, is likely to fuel fears that bullion is close to ending its more than decade long bull run and entering a bear market.

Almost half of respondents predicted bullion will fall to 1,450 an ounce in the first quarter next year, with three seeing prices as low as $1,400 an ounce.

The forecasts come after a dismal performance last week when prices hit a 2 1/2 month low of $1,560 and gold lost its safe haven status.

Selling was fuelled by a scramble by hedge funds for cash to meet client redemptions at the end of a difficult year and a run for cash by European banks seeking to raise capital.

"What is surprising is that in an environment where headline risk news is bigger than ever, gold has actually fallen from its highs," said Christoph Eibl, CEO and founding partner of the Swiss commodity hedge fund Tiberius.

"We believe that, in 2012, of all metals gold will be the worst performing," Eibl said.

The market eked out small gains Friday to trade just under $1,600, but showed little sign of strength even after a small bout of short covering took other financial markets higher.

The precious metal is now heading for its first quarterly loss for the fourth quarter after its second-worst rout since September 2008 when the global credit crunch was at its height.

In another immediately bearish sign, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) figures released Friday showed that managed money in gold futures and options cut bullish bets for the second consecutive week.

DOWNBEAT OUTLOOK

The long-term outlook is no more upbeat either, with more than half of respondents predicting that gold is unlikely to stage another run to new all-time highs until at least the second half of 2012.

Four said they don't expect a new record until at least 2014.

A lack of immediate monetary easing or stimulus programs by central banks has prompted money managers to turn bearish on gold even though the precious metal is traditionally considered a safe haven in times of uncertainty.

"To me, gold is not attractive right now because we don't see any inflation threats," said Jeffrey Sherman, commodities portfolio manager of DoubleLine Capital, a Los Angeles-based investment manager with $21 billion in assets.

BREAK OUT

Gold has increasingly moved in tandem with risky assets such as equities and industrial commodities. But gold broke ranks last week with a 7 percent decline, which dwarfed a 3 percent drop of the S&P 500.

Bullion's plunge below its 200-day moving average, which it had held for nearly three years, prompted a prominent market watcher to call an end to gold's decade-long bull cycle.

"We have the beginnings of a real bear market, and the death of a bull," said veteran trader Dennis Gartman, a long-time gold bull who completely exited his bullion investments last week.

Since September, gold has underperformed commodities measured by the RJ/CRB index and the euro, while U.S. equities measured by the S&P 500 eked out a slight gain.

(Additional reporting by Claire Milhench, Harpreet Bhal in London and Rujun Shen in Singapore; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter; Josephine Mason and Andrea Evans)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111218/bs_nm/us_gold_poll

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Goodbye, Heather

heatherHeather Harde, the business brains behind TechCrunch, will be stepping down at the end of the year as general manager of AOL?s technology properties (including TechCrunch, Engadget, Joystiq, and TUAW). AOL GM Jay Kirsch, who oversees Autos, Finance, and Industry on the business side, will be adding Tech to his responsibilities. Editorially, TechCrunch will remain independent under me. (Editorial and business groups are separate at AOL). Heather became TechCrunch?s CEO almost five years ago, working out of a spare bedroom in founder Michael Arrington?s house, and built it into the profitable media and conference business we have today with a staff of more than 50 people. AOL Tech is one of the fastest growing businesses inside AOL.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QV1cm8E3tc8/

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Impact Investing in Social Enterprises - Hub LA

On Tuesday December 7th, Hub LA Founding Members, foundation leaders, and private investors gathered at the California Endowment in Downtown Los Angeles at the invitation of Academies for Social Enterprise?and?Hub Los Angeles?for a seminar on Impact Investing.?A generally accepted definition of Impact Investing is when ?investments create positive social or environmental impact beyond financial return,? according to JP Morgan and the Rockefeller Foundation.

Betsy Densmore of Academies for Social Entrepreneurship?introduced? the seminar, presenting an overview of social enterprise, ?impact investing, and introducing the seminars?panelists?- you can take a look at her presentation by clicking HERE.?The seminar ?revolved around presentations by three Angelinos who are leaders in the field, shaping the development of impact investing in Los Angeles and around the world.

Fran Seegull followed Betsy with a thirty minute comprehensive overview of the impact investment continuum, detailing characteristics and sharing examples of each.?Fran is the Managing Director of Investments at ImpactAssets?a non-profit investment company that provides an impact investment asset management platform for investors and donor advisors seeking a blend of positive social and environmental outcomes, financial return, and risk management. ?She is also a?Senior Fellow at?USC?s Society & Business Lab at the?Marshall School of Business.

A key take away from Fran?s presentation is that right now experts in the field are trying to define Impact Investing by creating a distinct asset class while others use the term as a lens to describe a continuum of investments.?The continuum ranges from philanthropic grants on one end to market rate equity investments on the other.?There is still a lot of room for growth in this field and scaling investments across the spectrum is needed.

?

Lisa?Richter?followed Fran, presenting the specifics of what a deal looks like. We learned about how and why foundations use?Program Related Investments (PRIs) and other impact investing tools. Lisa?s presentation also included great?examples?of foundations making impact investments, which for many in the room helped to add a level of detail helping to make this complicated subject far?more understandable. ?To review Lisa?s presentation click HERE.?Lisa Richter is an independent consultant with GPS?Capital Partners. She previously led fund management of the National Community Investment Fund, a national Community Development Financial Institution initially capitalized by Bank of America that placed over $20 million of equity and debt investments in development banking institutions.

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Tina Castro wrapped up the presentations speaking on behalf of?The California Endowment, where she serves as the Director of Impact Investments. Tina focused her presentation on her experience leading the Endowment?s effort to develop the CA FreshWorks Fund ? ?A $264 million public-private partnership loan fund to finance grocery stores and other forms of fresh food retail and distribution in under-served communities throughout CA.? ?To view a trimmed version of Tina?s presentation CLICK HERE.

There are a couple of big ideas to note from Tina?s presentation:?first, the capital structure of the FreshWorks program. Tina and her team found a way for major banks to invest?their?obligated ?Community?Redevelopment? dollars as senior?debt in a fund with a cushion of enhancements. ?In years to come, it is possible to project that this will be the safest and most?efficient?way for major financial?institutions?to move large sums of money into community-based projects. Also noteworthy in the structure is how New Market Tax Credits (NMTC) are integrated into the fund. No other fund is acting as a one-stop shop to bring the three key NMTC players together?under one?roof ? no doubt this too is the wave of the future. ?The second big idea is related to the program?structure. How is the Endowment going to spend?$264 million dollars on low-margin grocery stores in under resourced communities? As you will see in the linked version of Tina?s presentation, the Food Access?Organization plays a?critical?role in finding and vetting the local grocery owners?who are ready for investment. It is exciting to see?Emerging Markets Inc, stepping into that role for the state-wide FreshWorks program. ?We have no doubt that in the future we will be seeing more programmatic structures that ?include a savvy integrator role used to bridge grass-top and grass-root activities.

The seminar concluded with a robust?discussion?over lunch where partipants had the?opportunity?to share with the presenters what they are already doing and what stops them from doing more. As the seminar?concluded, it became clear that there is a great deal of interest in impact investing, evidenced by one participant?s comment, ?I run a?100 million dollar?foundation and I have never heard about impact investing. ?I learned a lot today and am looking forward to?learning?more.? Stay tuned. There is more to come on this subject in the new year.

Source: http://thehubla.com/2011/high-impact-angelenos/impact-investing-in-social-enterprises/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Euro zone decline eases, recession still looks certain: PMI (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? The decline in the euro zone's private sector eased a little this month, but a recession still looks inevitable with the region's periphery struggling badly, a key business survey showed on Thursday.

Markit's Eurozone Composite Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), which measures the activity of thousands of euro zone companies, rose for a second month in December to 47.9 from 47.0, confounding expectations for a fall to 46.5.

But the preliminary reading lingered well below the 50 mark that divides growth and contraction for a fourth month.

Survey compiler Markit said France and Germany were responsible for the improved headline figure, while debt-laden peripheral countries remained firmly in contraction territory.

"It's an encouraging sign that (the index) didn't fall any further. Quite what will happen henceforth remains highly uncertain," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.

But overall the data point to a deep contraction.

"The euro zone suffered its worst quarter for two and a half years in the final three months of 2011, with the PMI data suggesting that the region's economy is likely to have contracted by 0.6 percent."

That forecast is worse than the median consensus of 0.3 percent in a Reuters poll of economists on Wednesday.

Williamson pointed to steep falls in incoming new orders and very low levels of confidence about the year ahead in the services industry as reasons to expect more decline.

"Whether the rates of decline continue to moderate or accelerate is largely in the hands of the political leaders, and financial markets in their reaction to any changes in the sovereign debt situation," said Williamson.

EU leaders last Friday took a historic step towards fiscal union at a summit last week, but economists have warned this will do little to repair a debt crisis that is choking off market funding for Spain and Italy.

Williamson warned that further weakness in these peripheral economies could yet knock the stronger core economies of France and Germany off track.

Taking a step back, he said the surveys could be viewed as a sign that the euro zone economy is beginning to restructure itself although improvements in output so far haven't been forthcoming.

Perhaps the notable bright spot in the composite PMI was the jobs index, which rose to 50.9 from 50.1 in November. Williamson said this was encouraging, but he noted that this also was largely due to Franco-German strength, with dole queues lengthening in the periphery.

The services PMI, which accounts for the bulk of the euro zone economy, rose to 48.3 in December from 47.5. But the survey's business expectations index stayed at 53.5, low by historical standards.

The manufacturing index also rose modestly, to 46.9 from 46.4, but still its fifth month below the breakeven 50 point.

Its output component, which feeds directly into the composite PMI, showed a bigger rise -- to 47.1 from 45.7.

Factory order books continued to shrink sharply, however, albeit at a slightly reduced pace, with that sub-index rising to 43.3 from 42.4 in November, which was its lowest since May 2009.

Overall, Williamson cautioned against reading the improvement in the headline figures as a meaningful step towards growth.

"It's really too early to say whether this represents a proper turning point and that the situation won't deteriorate in the coming months," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111215/bs_nm/us_eurozone_pmi

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Jurors deadlock in $1B lawsuit against Microsoft

FILE - In this Nov. 21, 2011 photo, Bill Gates arrives to testify at the Frank E. Moss federal courthouse in Salt Lake City. Closing arguments are set Tuesday Dec. 13,2011 in a $1 billion federal antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft Corp. Novell Inc. claims the software giant duped it into working on a new version of the WordPerfect writing program only to withdraw support months before Microsoft's Windows 95 was released. Novell claims it was later forced to sell WordPerfect for a $1 billion loss. (AP Photo/Jim Urquhart,File)

FILE - In this Nov. 21, 2011 photo, Bill Gates arrives to testify at the Frank E. Moss federal courthouse in Salt Lake City. Closing arguments are set Tuesday Dec. 13,2011 in a $1 billion federal antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft Corp. Novell Inc. claims the software giant duped it into working on a new version of the WordPerfect writing program only to withdraw support months before Microsoft's Windows 95 was released. Novell claims it was later forced to sell WordPerfect for a $1 billion loss. (AP Photo/Jim Urquhart,File)

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) ? A federal jury on Friday failed to reach a verdict in a Utah company's $1 billion antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft Corp. in a case so important to the computer giant that it put Bill Gates on the stand for two days last month.

Novell Inc. sued the software giant in 2004, claiming Microsoft duped it into developing the once-popular WordPerfect writing program for Windows 95 only to pull the plug so Microsoft could gain market share with its own product.

Novell says it was later forced to sell WordPerfect for a $1.2 billion loss.

The trial began two months ago with jurors getting the case on Wednesday. After much confusion, and some perplexing questions from the panel, they told U.S. District Judge J. Frederick Motz they were deadlocked by early Friday evening.

He repeatedly asked them if they could keep trying.

"This has been a very long and expensive case," Motz told the panel.

Novell attorneys pleaded with Motz to give the panel just one more day. In the end, however, the 12 jurors told the judge they were "hopelessly" deadlocked, and they later told lawyers a single holdout refused to vote in Novell's favor.

"He had strongly held views about the technical evidence and refused to budge," Novell attorney Jeffrey Johnson said. Jurors offered no comment after the trial.

Novell was left with little to show for a decade of effort, but the company said it will seek to retry the case with a new jury.

"Although it's a technically complicated case, we're hoping to convince another jury that our claims have merit," Novell's corporate counsel Jim Lundberg said.

Microsoft said it would file a motion asking the judge to dismiss Novell's complaint for good and avoid a second trial.

"We remain confident that Novell's claims don't have any merit and look forward to the next steps in the process," said Steven Aeschbacher, Microsoft's associate general counsel.

Novell waited until 10 years after Microsoft left WordPerfect behind to file the lawsuit. The company said it was waiting for the U.S. government's antitrust enforcement against Microsoft to wrap up. At first Novell's case was dismissed, but it was later reinstated on appeal.

Microsoft lawyers have argued that Novell's loss of market share was its own doing because the company didn't develop a compatible WordPerfect program until long after the rollout of Windows 95. WordPerfect once had nearly 50 percent of the market for word processing, but its share quickly plummeted to less than 10 percent as Microsoft's own Office programs took hold.

Gates testified last month that he had no idea his decision to drop a tool for outside developers would sidetrack Novell. Gates said he was acting to protect Windows 95 and future versions from crashing.

He said that the company's preferred Word software was superior to WordPerfect, which was a "bulky, slow, buggy product" that did not integrate well with Windows 95.

Novell could have worked around the problem but failed to react quickly, he said.

Novell has argued that Gates ordered Microsoft engineers to reject WordPerfect as a Windows 95 word processing application because he feared it was too good.

Novell's lawsuit is the last major private antitrust case to follow the settlement of a federal antitrust enforcement action against Microsoft more than eight years ago.

Novell is now a wholly owned subsidiary of The Attachmate Group, the result of a merger that was completed earlier this year.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-12-16-Antitrust%20Lawsuit-Microsoft/id-3bb04d03ea3c4a228f9c8cc893ea31da

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