Saturday, November 26, 2011

Video: New look at spectacular crash



>>> as you watch this, please remember while it is arresting to see, the pilot was okay. no one on the ground was hurt. the chopper was going to lower a christmas display on a public plaza on the water. pay close attention to a man working on the ground holding onto a cable leading to the chopper. he tries to flip it to a better position and it sounds like a riffle shot when the chopper goes down. at first you can see the pilot seemingly lifeless hand on the passenger seat but after he regains consciousness, he walks away with assistance. now after the trauma he said he has no memory of the incident. but he's okay.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45440592/

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Friday, November 25, 2011

John picks up a fight with a fan

Stars are used to dealing with fan nuisance but sometimes when things go too far, then they decide to take some action. Recently, John who is touring the country with his ?Desi Boyz? team Akshay Kumar, Deepika Padukone and Chitrangda Singh reached Pune for a promotional event, got into a tussle with a fan. An [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/newslatest/~3/08aOzWC-YUc/7665.html

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Chris Brown Buys Mansion Near Rihanna's Home

R&B star's new Hollywood bachelor pad is just miles away from his ex's house, which she recently put up for sale.
By Jason Kaufman


Chris Brown
Photo: Getty Images

After a successful year on the charts, Chris Brown has decided to make some more noise, this time on the real estate market. Radar Online is reporting that Brown has snatched up a mansion in the Hollywood Hills for a cool $1.5 million. The price tag on the home is not the only eye-opening detail: When Brown moves in, he'll be just miles away from his ex Rihanna.

According to listings site Zillow.com, Brown's new digs went on the market back in 2009 for $2.6 million but dropped by over $1 million by the time the singer snatched it up in October.

Brown's new home is eight miles from Rihanna's front door. But they won't be so close for long. She recently put her eight-bedroom Beverly Crest home on the market for $4.5 million, which, according to real estate site Blockshopper.com, is far above the average $1.35 million asking price for homes in her neighborhood.

Brown had been on the search for a new location since the spring, when, according to Radar, residents in his West Hollywood community complained about his loud lifestyle.

Those complaints might have been a blessing as they opened the door for Brown to score a major deal on the market with the mansion's reduced price tag. The three-bedroom, three-bathroom bachelor pad is listed at 2473 square feet and, according to The Daily Mail, includes an elevator to go along with its outdoor pool, sleek modern patio and living room with two stories of windows.

Chris Brown rocked the American Music Awards on Sunday night. Watch his performance!

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1674892/chris-brown-house-rihanna.jhtml

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GOP candidates and Obama: Standards for presidential leadership

As Americans watch the Republican candidates debate and President Obama govern, how can they judge leadership? This historian suggests voters look to Lincoln, Churchill, and Admiral Nelson for five standards by which to measure presidential leadership.

If what you are expecting to emerge from the welter of presidential wannabes now swimming across America's national screen is leadership, then you may be in for a winter of political discontent.

Skip to next paragraph

This is not because the country lacks candidates of talent, charm, or intelligence. Whatever we may think about the politics of a Newt Gingrich or a Mitt Romney or even a Barack Obama, these contenders would not be where they are without a tremendous fund of smarts and skill.

What America lacks, instead, is a workable standard of judging what singles out one individual from a pack of indisputably gifted pre-presidents and moves us to settle on the most qualified one.

We could, I suppose, turn to the ever-expanding bookshelf with titles on "leadership" to discover the qualities we should look for in a president. But the sheer number of such books is a sure sign that even the leadership gurus cannot make up their minds about where the best lessons are to be had.

I suspect it is not the consultants but the historians who have the most meaningful recommendations to make about spotting leadership in aspiring presidents. This is because so many of them spend significant portions of their lives in the mental company of people who really did turn out to possess the Midas touch of leadership. (Not too many historians enjoy writing about failures in history, except to point out how to avoid replicating those failures.)

And if there is anything that the history people can say about political leadership, it is this:

Look for those who understand the issues of government. No one ever led by ignorance. Ably pointing the way arises out of a passion for learning, a single-minded determination to understand what makes people and things tick.

In his compelling study of Horatio Nelson and the Battle of Trafalgar, Adam Nicolson noticed that in Admiral Nelson's Royal Navy, every senior officer had to begin as a lowly midshipman, learning every knot the same as any ordinary seaman. Nelson's French and Spanish adversaries, however, were aristocrats who acquired their rank through social standing and who couldn't have sailed a toy boat around a bathtub.

No wonder they were nearly annihilated.

Look for those who love the daily toil and mechanics of governing. Leadership means not only knowing, but loving the knowing. American essayist Logan Pearsall Smith once said, "The test of a vocation is the love of the drudgery it involves."

It's become fashionable to sniff at this as workaholism or wonkishness. But it's really describing someone who has found joy in the innumerable nuts and bolts of work. And that is precisely what the greatest leaders of free societies have possessed. Winston Churchill even arranged his sleeping hours into two parts so as to "press a day and a half's work into one." Oddly, it's been the hallmark of dictators to be careless and spendthrift of governing, preferring to franchise the real work to underlings who must then compete for the dictator's attention.

Look, also, for those who have mastered the organization. Governing is not for the faint-hearted or those who are condemned to spend the first six months of their presidency figuring out where the washroom is. A leader understands the pulse and flow of responsibility among segments of a government as instinctively as a hunter estimates the range and speed of his target.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/RKW6CQKdRCs/GOP-candidates-and-Obama-Standards-for-presidential-leadership

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Insight: "The Lady" media splash presents new face of Myanmar (Reuters)

YANGON (Reuters) ? As Myanmar loosens media controls, one woman's image is everywhere, from newspapers to magazines to television programs: pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi, or simply "The Lady" as she is known here.

"The Lady is good for business," said Ko Lynn, a senior editor at a Yangon weekly journal, one of many publications enjoying the slight relaxation in recent months of the government's strict regulation of the media.

"Before, we ran about 6,000 copies. Now, it's 10,000."

Suu Kyi's decision on Monday to contest upcoming by-elections has raised hopes democracy may take root in one of the world's most isolated and authoritarian states.

But the fact Myanmar's media is covering the story at all is a story in itself.

For a half-century, every song, book, cartoon, news story and planned piece of art required approval by teams of censors rooting out political messages and criticisms of Myanmar's authoritarian system.

Suu Kyi's name was seldom spoken in public, let alone her image emblazoned across newspaper front pages, since she began opposing Myanmar's rulers over two decades ago.

The Nobel laureate was freed last November after spending 15 of the last 21 years in detention although until recently newspapers dared not report on her.

But Myanmar, also known as Burma, appears to finally be changing under the most sweeping reforms in the former British colony since a 1962 military coup. Nearly half-century of direct military rule ended in March when a nominally civilian parliament opened seven months after elections.

Although the legislature is stacked with former generals, they can no longer count on the same strictly controlled media that was ranked 174th of 178 nations in a global press freedom index by Reporters Without Borders last year.

Bans on prominent news web sites were lifted in September, including Reuters.com, and some run by critics of the government. And the government is now drafting a new law that officials say would do away with direct political censorship.

Ko Ko Hlaing, chief political adviser to the president, said Myanmar would end political censorship.

"According to our constitution, freedom of expression is guaranteed for every citizen, so our new media law will reflect such a guaranteed freedom of expression, so no censorship," he told Reuters on Saturday on the sidelines of an international conference in Bali, Indonesia.

"There will be some monitoring systems and also legal process," he said.

"But censorship will only be cultural and religious. We are very sensitive on maintaining our traditions, cultures and religions," he added. "Other than that, they can express their opinion very freely.

SHIFT IN ATTITUDE

The shift in attitude flared during an unusually public debate over the government's plan to build a $3.6 billion, Chinese-funded dam in Myitsone in northern Myanmar.

The project would have flooded an area about the size of Singapore, threatening the Irrawaddy River, the aorta of the country. Ninety percent of its power would have gone to China, and construction jobs would mostly go to Chinese workers.

It struck a raw nerve of nationalism. Popular resentment against the project had seethed since it was agreed in 2006, but until this year, it was relegated to whispers and muffled coffee-shop chatter.

Draconian press rules enforced by the Orwellian-sounding Press Registration and Scrutiny Board rendered the dam, and scores of other juicy subjects including crime and politics, strictly off limits.

But as the national mood changed this year, one of the country's biggest media executives, Than Htut Aung, took a calculated risk by obliquely criticizing the dam in a speech and calling for outside experts to assess river conditions.

"I couldn't sleep that night," he told Reuters. "Last year I couldn't have openly criticized the project. I might have been thrown in prison."

An opinion piece opposing the dam made it past state censors and into his flagship publication, Eleven Weekly News. The floodgates were open.

Other private news journals and magazines quickly followed, running their own articles critical of the dam and soon, a grassroots social movement to end the project began to snowball into widespread public anger, prompting President Thein Sein to shelve the dam on Sept 30, "according to the desire of the people."

TESTING BOUNDARIES

The changes have gathered steam since early June when the Ministry of Information decided to allow about half of Myanmar's privately-run weekly journals and monthly magazines to publish without submitting page proofs to a censorship board in advance.

Tint Swe, a senior Ministry official, told reporters the remaining publications would be allowed to be publish without prior censorship "at an appropriate time" and the government would eventually allow private dailies to operate.

Papers have since been testing the boundaries, often putting Suu Kyi on their front pages. Editors say this was unthinkable before the middle of this year.

In one indicator of change, one-time political prisoner and respected senior journalist U Soe Thein won unprecedented government approval in August to organize National Press Awards in Myanmar for the first time.

Working with the government-backed press association, U Soe Thein organised a committee of more than 30 prominent reporters and editors that will select top contributions in five categories next year, awarding a cash prize to each winner.

"The reporting this year has been better than last year," he said, listing key stories -- from the Myitsone Dam, ethnic conflicts, and Suu Kyi's negotiations with the government.

"I don't think there will be any backtracking."

SELF CENSORSHIP?

But much has remained unchanged, underscoring the tentative and fragile nature of the reforms so far.

Currently, only the state can publish daily newspapers, which are filled with propaganda. However, they are no longer critical of Suu Kyi and in August dropped back-page banners attacking Western media for "killer broadcasts" and "sowing hatred."

The reforms have also been slow to trickle down to towns outside Yangon and to rural areas, and journalists say they are still subjected to hassles such as having cameras confiscated.

About 20 journalists are still held in prisons.

In much of the country, heavy censorship remains a fact of life. Publications that must still send their work to a censorship board must do so 10 days in advance of publishing.

On printouts of a recent edition of a top weekly journal seen by a Reuters journalist, large Xs had been made in red marker to indicate stories, phrases and cartoons that did not make the cut.

At another publication, a picture of Suu Kyi was rejected because, juxtaposed against the headline, censors felt it suggested that she represented the political future of Myanmar.

While the Myitsone hydro-dam story emboldened the media, some editors say the censors fear other controversial projects could upset the public. Some probing articles have been rejected, underscoring the limits to the new open-ness.

Although the information ministry has told editors a new press law next year would scrap the registration and scrutiny board, media will still be choosing their words carefully, likely adopting the kind of self-censorship now in place in other parts of Southeast Asia. In Singapore for instance, media is usually careful to avoid displeasing the government and not falling afoul of strict libel laws.

Thiha Saw, editor of Myanma Dana Business magazine, said he still expects the government to retain control over the media.

"There may be private daily newspapers, no pre-press censorship, but they will be watching and they will take action afterwards," he said.

Than Htut Aung of Eleven Media said Myanmar now had about 20 percent press freedom and he expects that to increase if the government allows private companies like his to open daily newspapers, which is something he has applied for.

"Some hardliners want to change the media to be like China, but that's rubbish," he said. "Within one year it will be like in Singapore and there will be self-censorship."

Still, he admits that anything is possible.

"We're worried about changes being rolled back. The chances are small, but every journalist must hope for the best."

(Editing by Martin Petty and Jason Szep)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/wl_nm/us_myanmar_media

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Bayern, Inter qualify in Champions

By STEVE DOUGLAS

updated 5:45 p.m. ET Nov. 22, 2011

LONDON - Bayern Munich, Inter Milan and Benfica sealed their places in the knockout phase of the Champions League on Tuesday as Manchester United's qualification hopes were left hanging in the balance.

Franck Ribery scored twice and Bayern Munich beat Villarreal 3-1 to guarantee the top spot in Group A with one round remaining.

Inter, the 2010 champion, qualified for the last 16 before a ball was kicked in its match at Trabzonspor, courtesy of Lille's 2-0 win CSKA Moscow in Group B. The Italian team ecured first place, however, by drawing 1-1 in Turkey.

Benfica ensured a top-two finish in Group C by drawing 2-2 at Manchester United, which now needs at least a point at Basel in its final game to advance.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Bayern, Inter qualify in Champions

Bayern Munich, Inter Milan and Benfica sealed their places in the knockout phase of the Champions League on Tuesday as Manchester United's qualification hopes were left hanging in the balance.

War, then soccer

For the first time in decades, football in Libya is just about, well, football.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45408211/ns/sports-soccer/

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Pakistani ambassador's departure leaves void

CAPTION CORRECTION, CORRECTS SPELLING OF HAQQANI'S FIRST NAME - In this picture taken on Aug. 19, 2010 shows Pakistan's Ambassador in Washington Husain Haqqani, left, talks with U.S. Sen. John Kerry as Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari walks on in Multan, Pakistan. Pakistan's envoy to the United States Haqqani says he has resigned over claims he wrote a memo to Washington asking for its help in reining in the country's powerful military. Pakistan's slain governor Salman Taseer seen second from right. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

CAPTION CORRECTION, CORRECTS SPELLING OF HAQQANI'S FIRST NAME - In this picture taken on Aug. 19, 2010 shows Pakistan's Ambassador in Washington Husain Haqqani, left, talks with U.S. Sen. John Kerry as Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari walks on in Multan, Pakistan. Pakistan's envoy to the United States Haqqani says he has resigned over claims he wrote a memo to Washington asking for its help in reining in the country's powerful military. Pakistan's slain governor Salman Taseer seen second from right. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)

(AP) ? The departure of Pakistan's man in Washington, Ambassador Husain Haqqani, leaves U.S.-Pakistani relations temporarily adrift, with few trusted go-betweens after months of bruising political sparring that followed the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden.

Haqqani resigned Tuesday over what has become known as "memo-gate" ? allegations that he sought U.S. help to head off a possible Pakistani military coup after the bin Laden operation.

Former information minister Sherry Rehman, an important player in President Asif Zardari's ruling political party, was appointed Wednesday to replace Haqqani. With elections in Pakistan slated for March, however, Rehman will be diplomatically toothless if Zardari's government falls.

Haqqani's departure robs the two sides of a man who simultaneously was one of the Pakistani military's biggest critics and a constant, needling thorn in Washington's side, refusing American requests to expand the CIA's drone campaign against militants or increase American intelligence personnel on the ground.

When relations went south between the two sides, as they did after the SEALs killed bin Laden inside Pakistan, Haqqani, a former journalist with a prodigious Rolodex, kept lines of communication open with the White House, the CIA and the media by text, email and multiple daily tweets.

His history as a critic of the Pakistani military and intelligence services allowed him to act as a somewhat neutral go-between. He could smoothly shift from sympathetic listener to hard bargainer, as much counselor as diplomat, convincing the Americans he understood their frustration and assuring his Pakistani masters back home that he was standing firm against U.S. pressure.

Yet despite the fallout here, his departure is more about Pakistani political squabbles than U.S. relations, with Washington serving as foil to help the Pakistani military get rid of a longtime enemy, said Tim Hoyt, counterterrorism scholar at the Naval War College in Newport, R.I.

Haqqani's detailed account of the relationship between the Pakistani military and Islamic radicals in his 2005 book "Pakistan: Between Mosque and Military" was seen "as a grievous betrayal," Hoyt said.

The book won him accolades in Pakistani civilian circles and helped secure academic positions as a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and an adjunct professor at Johns Hopkins University.

The ease with which Haqqani moved in such rarefied U.S. circles "helps explain why the military, the intelligence services and many elites in Pakistan view him as dangerously pro-American," Hoyt said.

But it also made him effective. When U.S. lawmakers threatened to withdraw aid to Pakistan, Haqqani was credited with changing their minds. When then-U.S. military chief Adm. Mike Mullen accused Pakistan of complicity with the Haqqani militant network in attacking the U.S. Embassy in Kabul over the summer, the envoy went into overdrive, working the phones and persuading U.S. officials to meet him at his office or at the Army Navy Club near the White House ? discreet conversations that helped keep some forms of military cooperation moving forward.

The former ambassador has no family connection to the Haqqani militant network.

"Removing him at this juncture in U.S.-Pakistan relations can only be viewed as a self-inflicted wound," Hoyt said.

The charges against Haqqani remain unproven. They rise from a leaked memo he says he did not write, delivered by a Pakistani American businessman, Mansoor Ijaz, who lives in London and has a history of making such claims with little follow-through. The Pakistani government says it will investigate.

The envoy and his supporters have claimed the memo was a hoax cooked up by the military establishment to get rid of Haqqani and weaken the Zardari government and democratic institutions ? explosive charges in a country that has seen at least three military coups.

Ijaz claimed he received the missive from Haqqani and, following his instructions, passed it to Mullen through an intermediary after the bin Laden raid. A spokesman said Mullen had received it but considered it unreliable and ignored it.

The memo accuses army chief Gen. Ashfaq Pervez Kayani of plotting to bring down the government in the political turmoil and finger-pointing after the raid. It asks Mullen for his "direct intervention" to prevent a coup.

In return, it promises help in installing a "new security team" in Islamabad that would be friendly to Washington.

Ijaz has led a high-profile media campaign attacking the ambassador. He claimed that Lt. Gen. Shuja Pasha, the head of Pakistan's main intelligence agency, flew to London to meet with him last month. Ijaz said he provided Pasha with computer records implicating Haqqani.

Ijaz has a history of making claims to be well connected with U.S. politicians. During the Clinton administration, he said U.S. officials told him Sudan was willing to turn over then-fugitive bin Laden ? claims the U.S. administration immediately denied.

Haqqani returned to Pakistan over the weekend to face questioning over the alleged memo by the army and the intelligence chiefs.

"I have resigned to bring closure to this meaningless controversy threatening our fledgling democracy," he said in a statement. "It was an artificial crisis over an insignificant memo written by a self-centered businessman."

"I have much to contribute to building a new Pakistan free of bigotry & intolerance," Haqqani tweeted after his resignation. "Will focus energies on that."

Christine Fair, a Pakistan scholar who teaches at Georgetown University, said she didn't expect Haqqani's departure to lead to a further downturn in U.S.-Pakistan ties, noting that both countries were continuing with cooperation on targeting al-Qaida and on drone strikes in the Afghan border area.

"So we're still getting from them what we need in terms of a bare minimum," said Fair. "It would be surprising if a new ambassador would try to sabotage that ... but you can't rule it out."

___

Associated Press writers Chris Brummitt and Sebastian Abbot in Islamabad and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.

Kimberly Dozier can be followed on Twitter (at)kimberlydozier.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-23-US-US-Pakistan-Envoy-Scandal/id-c984368185ea41b29cfd4e5cf092cfe6

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Biotech Investing Lessons: GILD Buys VRUS

Gilead Sciences (GILD - Analyst Report) and Pharmasset (VRUS - Snapshot Report) announced today that the companies have signed a definitive agreement under which Gilead will acquire Pharmasset for $137 per share in cash.

The deal, which values Pharmasset at approximately $11 billion, vaulted shares of the unprofitable maker of hepatitis C drugs over $60 from Friday's close near $73 to a high thus far today of $135 .

Pharmasset currently has three clinical-stage product candidates for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) advancing in trials in various populations. Gilead's research and development portfolio includes seven unique molecules in various stages of clinical development for the treatment of HCV.

"The acquisition of Pharmasset represents an important and exciting opportunity to accelerate Gilead's effort to change the treatment paradigm for HCV-infected patients by developing all-oral regimens for the treatment of the disease regardless of viral genotype," said John C. Martin, PhD, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Gilead.

Biotech Profit Rockets: How Do You Know?

If you had looked strictly at Pharmasset's earnings outlook, you may not have seen the opportunity here. With last year's loss around $1.25 and this year and next projected to be minus $1.56 and minus $1.80 respectively, the earnings momentum trend did not appear to be reversing its downward trajectory anytime soon.

But, this is the nature of biotech R&D. We never know who will make it through the years of cash-drain and the FDA gauntlet with the next successful drug.

Or, who will buy the next struggling drug maker with as yet unproven science. The past three years have seen record amounts of M&A, with $51.6 billion in the first half of 2011 already closing in fast on 2010's $67 billion. Today's deal and a couple of others now put this year ahead of last.

The lesson for investors is multi-fold:

1) At the minimum, maintain conservative exposure to the industry -- and thus to the future of medicine -- through a basket like the Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB). I have owned and traded the IBB since 2009 when I first bought it for $65. Earlier this year, it reached as high as $110 and now trades back in the mid-$90s.

2) Study the companies and their science. While it's true that trying to sift through the drug R&D reports without a life sciences education could be considered futile, you never know what you'll learn that could inspire you to find out more and even cause you to specialize in an area, like specific cancer treatments or hepatitis drugs for instance.

So understand that you risk your time as well as your money in biotech investing, and that even though a good degree of luck may be involved in finding winners, you can't go wrong if you enjoy the pursuit.

3) Try to put the odds in your favor with a combination of edges, both technical and fundamental. For Pharmasset, your fundamental analysis was based purely on the company's science and the chatter about it being a potential acquisition target. But the chart here was always in good shape, indicating that the stock was under steady accumulation.

4) Be willing to accept a low success rate. If you invest in biotech companies, you are likely to have a lot more InterMune (ITMN - Snapshot Report) and Dendreon (DNDN - Analyst Report) stories than Pharmasset ones.

Know this going in and also know how bad the blow-ups can be when an FDA trial is flunked and destroys the hopeful's dreams. Often, even a stop loss can't protect you from a 75% destruction in a biotech's stock price overnight.

Biotech Lottery Tickets: Discovering Science and Decent Odds

Here's an example of a small-cap biotech that I learned about and have traded a few times in the past three years, always waiting for it to be discovered and always being mildly disappointed, but never losing money.

Raptor Pharmaceutical (RPTP - Snapshot Report) is a $5 stock with a $235 million market-cap. The firm is engaged in preclinical programs for the development of bioengineered novel drug candidates and drug-targeting platforms derived from the human receptor-associated protein (RAP) and related proteins that are designed to target cancer, neurodegenerative disorders and infectious diseases.

The way I understand the science of their R&D goals is that RAP-based drugs and platforms will enhance how other drugs enter and leave cells through the bloodstream. This sounded like revolutionary science to me at the time three years ago when I first plunked down $1,500 for 500 shares.

On the earnings front, Raptor lost 85 cents per share last year and is projected to go from a loss of $1.15 this year, to a loss of only 45 cents next year. With eight analysts covering the company, I am seeing some stability in the estimates, with the high/low range for next year being minus $0.24 cents EPS to -$0.79.

I am not recommending Raptor today, although I do like the chart right here, especially with the recent string of up days on good volume, including today. I just wanted to use it as an example of how to play the biotech investing game with more reward than risk. Even if I had lost money on my trades, I would still feel like I gained something valuable from the simultaneous pursuit of knowledge and wealth.

Disclosure: I own RPTP

Kevin Cook is a Senior Stock Strategist with Zacks.com

Read the full analyst report on GILD

Read the full analyst report on RPTP

Read the full analyst report on ITMN

Read the full analyst report on DNDN

Read the full analyst report on IBB

Read the full analyst report on VRUS

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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Egypt's Entire Cabinet Has Resigned (The Atlantic Wire)

Updated 2:14 p.m.: ?After months of criticism for its perceived ineffectiveness and a weekend of lethal protests, Egypt's cabinet offered its resignation to the ruling army council yesterday, and the council has accepted it today, Al Jazeera reports.?The cabinet's decision comes after increasingly violent confrontations between protesters and police left over 30 people dead this weekend. The Associated Press report notes:

Prime Minister Essam Sharaf's government has come under consistent criticism from across the political spectrum since it came to office in March for its perceived inefficiency and its subordination to the military.

The protesters have taken to Tahrir Square, as they did to oust the former president Hosni Mubarak, to resist the army's attempt to retain power over the new government that will be chosen in elections scheduled for November 28. So make that two governments?that?the protesters in Tahrir have now taken out, though in this case the army is their real target and it remains in tact.?The country's culture minister had already resigned in protest over the cabinet's violent handling of the protests. Al Jazeera reports that while some observers said the resignation is just further proof of the cabinet's ineffectiveness, others see it as an opportunity for a unity government to step in and end the violence.?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/atlantic/20111121/wl_atlantic/egyptscabinetofferedresignation45259

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Carbon cycling was much smaller during last ice age than in today's climate

Monday, November 21, 2011

Atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) is one of the most important greenhouse gases and the increase of its abundance in the atmosphere by fossil fuel burning is the main cause of future global warming. In past times, during the transition between an ice age and a warm period, atmospheric CO2 concentrations changed by some 100 parts per million (ppm) ? from an ice age value of 180 ppm to about 280 ppm during warm periods.

Scientists can reconstruct these changes in the atmospheric carbon stock using direct measurements of atmospheric CO2 trapped in air bubbles in the depth of Antarctica's ice sheets. However explaining the cause of these 100ppm changes in atmospheric CO2 concentrations between glacial and interglacial climate states ? as well as estimating the carbon stored on land and in the ocean ? is far more difficult.

The researchers, led by Dr Philippe Ciais of the Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et l'Environnement near Paris, ingeniously combined measurements of isotopes of atmospheric oxygen (18O) and carbon (13C) in marine sediments and ice cores with results from dynamic global vegetation models, the latter being driven by estimates of glacial climate using climate models.

Dr Marko Scholze of the University of Bristol's School of Earth Sciences, co-author on the paper said: "The difference between glacial and pre-industrial carbon stored in the terrestrial biosphere is only about 330 petagrams of carbon, which is much smaller than previously thought. The uptake of carbon by vegetation and soil, that is the terrestrial productivity during the ice age, was only about 40 petagrams of carbon per year and thus much smaller: roughly one third of present-day terrestrial productivity and roughly half of pre-industrial productivity."

From these results, the authors conclude that the cycling of carbon in the terrestrial biosphere ? that is, the time between uptake by photosynthesis and release by decomposition of dead plant material ? must have been much smaller than in the current, warmer climate.

Furthermore there must have been a much larger size of non-decomposable carbon on land during the Last Glacial Maximum (the period in the Earth's history when ice sheets were at their maximum extension, between 26,500 and 19,000 years ago).

The authors suggest that this inert carbon should have been buried in the permanently frozen soils and large amounts of peat of the northern tundra regions.

###

University of Bristol: http://www.bristol.ac.uk

Thanks to University of Bristol for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115355/Carbon_cycling_was_much_smaller_during_last_ice_age_than_in_today_s_climate

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Poll: Romney leading Obama in Mich. (cbsnews)

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/164572663?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Captains of finance clueless about Occupy's anger

Jessica Rinaldi / Reuters

Street signs mark the intersection of Main Street and Wall Street in Windom, Texas. After two months of Occupy Wall Street protests, Wall Street and Main Street are still talking past each other.

By Reuters

It was a telling moment at the height of the Occupy Wall Street protests.

John Paulson, the hedge-fund trader who famously made billions betting on the collapse of the housing market, was threatened by the demonstrators with a march on his Upper East Side home in New York last month. Paulson responded by putting out a press release that described his $28 billion, 120-person fund as an exemplar of the American Dream: "Instead of vilifying our most successful businesses, we should be supporting them and encouraging them to remain in New York City."

Other captains of finance like to portray themselves as humble entrepreneurs. One owner of a multi-billion-dollar hedge fund grumbled in the midst of the financial crisis that he has to worry not only about making trading decisions but also about "all the hassles the come with running a small business."

With U.S. cities moving this week to crack down on Occupy Wall Street encampments - including the one in New York's Zuccotti Park - the staying power of the movement is in question. Whatever its future, it's clear that so far, the Occupiers haven't changed many minds on Wall Street over blame for the country's hard times. The cognitive disconnect between the protesters and the captains of finance is alive and well.
David Mooney, chief executive officer of Alliant Credit Union in Chicago, one of the nation's larger credit unions, used to work at a one of Wall Street's top banks, JPMorgan Chase. There's a vast cultural gap between Wall Street and his new world, he says.?Old friends from the Street,?now jokingly refer to him as a "socialist."

A credit union is supposed to be run in the interests of all members, he says, while commercial bankers tend to see consumers as customers who can be "exploited" by layering on more fees.

Says Mooney: "I don't say this lightly, but the consumer is simply an income stream and exploiting that is the purpose of the banking organization."

In conversations with nearly two dozen current and former bankers, finance professionals and money managers across the United States, the prevailing sentiment is that the anger at Wall Street's elite is misguided and misdirected. Blame the politicians and policymakers in Washington, many of them say, for encouraging people to buy homes they couldn't afford and doing nothing to stop or discourage U.S. consumers from piling on more than $10 trillion in household debt.

"I think everyone gets what the anger is about... But you just can't say, 'Well I want all debts forgiven.' That is not happening," says one West Coast trader, who like most still working in the financial services industry, declined to be identified by name in this article.

The disconnect, says Jason Ader, a former top Wall Street casino analyst turned hedge fund manager, is in part a simple product of Wall Street's isolation from the hardship out there. Ader says he spends a lot of his time in Las Vegas, one of America's hardest-hit housing markets, and thus wasn't too surprised by this fall's anti-Wall Street outburst.

"I see plenty of despair in places like Las Vegas, where in some neighborhoods every other house is vacant or foreclosed and lots are overgrown by weeds," says Ader, who sits on the boards of Las Vegas Sands Corp and a small Nevada community bank called Western Liberty Bancorp.

But the 43-year-old Ader, who manages $200 million in his hedge fund, says it's a different story for many of the wealthy who work in finance in New York City and don't spend a lot of time in states with high unemployment and high foreclosure rates. Living in Manhattan or the Hamptons or hedge fund havens like Greenwich, Connecticut, can lead to a bit of myopia, he says.

"At first I had friends who were scratching their heads at the protests," says Ader.

Blame game
To put it bluntly, many on Wall Street still see the events leading up to the financial crisis as a case of banks having legitimately sold something - whether it be mortgages or securities backed by those loans - that someone wanted to buy.

Thomas Atteberry, a partner and portfolio manager with Los Angeles-based First Pacific Advisors, a $16 billion money management firm, says his success "wasn't a gift" and he had to work hard to get where he is. Atteberry says he understands the frustration many feel about income inequality. But he said the problem isn't with those who are successful, but rather our "tax codes and regulations."

While some members of the financial elite say they are willing to pay higher taxes, they note the picture for Wall Street firms is not as sunny as some on Main Street might paint it. Wall Street banks already are beginning to shed jobs, and consulting firm Johnson Associates Inc. is predicting bonuses for those who remain will shrink by 20 percent to 30 percent.

Complaints over new financial regulations burdening Wall Street firms are a major reason blamed for the layoffs. Sit down with a hedge fund manager or a top trader and it won't take long before he or she grabs some spreadsheet that shows all the new rules and regulations coming out of the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill.

Many of America's well-to-do, not just Wall Streeters, say they don't feel particularly advantaged. A recent survey by marketing firm HNW Inc. found that half of the nation's richest 1 percent "don't see themselves as being part of that elite group." Also, 44 percent of those surveyed told HNW's pollsters they already pay too much in taxes.

Maybe it is just the ethos of Wall Street, where success is defined solely by who makes the most money, that makes it hard for financiers to feel they've wronged anyone. But in a time of 9 percent unemployment and 15 percent of U.S. citizens receiving food stamps, some Wall Street alums say the financial elite are doing themselves no favors by giving the appearance of shrugging off the current mood.

"I think Wall Street hasn't taken in how much anger there is out there and they haven't taken partial responsibility for the financial crisis," says Brookings Institution fellow Douglas Elliott, who was an investment banker for two decades before joining the liberal-oriented public policy group. "I think both sides - Wall Street and Main Street - misunderstand each other."

Some who get paid to advise the rich on how to deal with the media and the public are telling clients to pay attention.

Robert Dilenschneider, founder and principal of The Dilenschneider Group corporate consulting group, recently sent a report to his clients telling them that many of the protesters taking part in the Occupy movement are not a bunch of unemployed crazies and hippies.

"The CEOs in big board rooms in Paris, in Zurich and New York don't normally think about people who are demonstrating in parks," says Dilenschneider, whose firm advises some of the biggest companies in the world. "In the banking and financial area, we are telling our clients you have to explain more completely what makes up your business and why your profits are what they are."

Mom and pop funds
Some of the disconnect is simply a matter of lifestyle and the fact that the super wealthy really do live differently from everyone else. Hedge fund managers and bankers fly around on private jets, live in palatial penthouse apartments overlooking Central Park and have second homes in the country.

In New York City, the average pay for those working in finance is $361,183, more than five times the average salary of $66,106 for all workers in the city, according to the New York State Department of Labor.

This disparity in income and attitudes was evident in the response of hedge fund managers like Paulson who portrayed themselves as humble businessmen. Says Wall Street historian Charles Geisst, "Hedge funds may be small businesses in terms of labor intensity, but in terms of capital intensity they are just the opposite."

A spokesman for Paulson said he had nothing more to add on the subject.

Former Wall Street practitioners say the Street does not lend itself to a lot of introspection. "The world of investment bankers and especially the trading floor region is notoriously hermetically sealed,'" says Kenneth Froewiss, a retired JPMorgan Chase investment banker and former finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business. "The walls may be filled with screens beaming the latest news, but there is typically an obliviousness as to what is happening across the street."

There are exceptions, of course. Some are saying it may be time for the government which has bailed out the banking system to help millions of struggling homeowners.

One of those is former top Pacific Investment Management Co executive Paul McCulley, best known for his analysis on central banks and monetary policy when he worked at the world's biggest bond fund. McCulley, who retired a year ago from Newport Beach, California-based PIMCO to become a consultant with a public policy firm, enjoys the wealth he accumulated in his old role. He lives in a house by the water where he docks his two boats. But he says Wall Street went too far.

"Our society was ripe for a convulsion about social justice, and Occupy Wall Street was the catalyst for that," says McCulley. "New York can be very insular. It is not the real world and neither is Newport Beach."

Now that he's no longer working for PIMCO, McCulley is a bit more free to speak his mind. And he says the only way to jumpstart the U.S. economy is for the federal government to get behind a serious program to encourage consumer debt forgiveness and principal reductions on mortgages by banks.

McCulley noted that mortgage firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been propped up by about $169 billion in federal aid since they were rescued by the government in 2008, yet there's a "a moral overtone" to the argument against reducing mortgage debt burdens for individual borrowers.

"Wall Street capitalism has given us a foul stench in our society," says McCulley.

The disconnect continues.

Just this week, top executives at Fannie and Freddie found themselves drawing fire on Capitol Hill for trying to distribute nearly $13 million in bonuses to key employees.

And the October 31 collapse of MF Global Holdings is prompting some critics to say Wall Street hasn't learned any lessons from the financial crisis. The futures brokerage house filed for bankruptcy after investors and traders became fearful that MF Global had taken on too much exposure to European sovereign debt in a bid to juice revenues.

The risky trade was put on by former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine, a former Goldman Sachs Group chief executive. Last year, Corzine was saying Wall Street investment banks had taken on too much risk in the months leading up to the financial crisis. On the lecture circuit Corzine was calling for tighter regulation of Wall Street, even while his firm was borrowing more and more money to bet on some of the riskiest European debt. A Corzine representative declined to comment.

William Cohan, the author of several Wall Street-related books and a former Lazard investment banker, said MF Global was acting as if the 2007-2008 crisis never happened: "You would have to be living under a rock if you didn't get the message of the financial crisis."

Related stories:

Tea Partier to Occupier: 'Y'all ought to be joining us'

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/18/8877073-captains-of-finance-clueless-about-occupys-anger

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

FDA Revokes Approval of Avastin for Breast Cancer (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Nov. 18 (HealthDay News) -- Saying the risks outweigh the benefits in patients with advanced breast cancer, U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Margaret Hamburg said on Friday that the agency has rescinded its approval of the cancer drug Avastin for that use.

Avastin (bevacizumab), however, will remain available for treating some types of colon, lung, kidney and brain cancer.

"Today, I am revoking the FDA's approval of the breast cancer indication for Avastin after concluding that the drug has not been shown to be safe and effective for that use," Hamburg said during a late morning press conference.

"Sometimes, despite the hopes of investigators, patients, industry, and even the FDA, the results of rigorous testing can be disappointing," she said. "This is the case with Avastin when used for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer."

The risks of Avastin include severe high blood pressure, bleeding, heart attack or heart failure and the development of perforations in different parts of the body such as the nose, stomach and intestines.

"These are considerable risks from taking Avastin, and can be justified only if there is good evidence that the use of the drug will benefit the patient," Hamburg said. "In breast cancer, it was clear that there was no proof of benefits that would justify the risks."

The FDA's decision was based on an expert panel's unanimous recommendation in June that the drug was not safe or effective when used for women with metastatic breast cancer. The drug had been approved for use along with the cancer drug Taxol (paclitaxel) for an aggressive type of breast cancer called HER2-negative breast cancer.

In 2008, Avastin was approved to treat metastatic breast cancer under the FDA's accelerated approval program, Hamburg said. Under this program, a drug can gain approval before final data on its safety and effectiveness is complete if its use appears promising in treating serious and life-threatening conditions, she explained.

Avastin's approval was based on results from one study that suggested it extended the lives of certain breast cancer patients.

After its approval for this use, Avastin's maker Genentech completed two clinical trials that found only a small effect on tumor growth without evidence that patients lived any longer or had a better quality of life compared with standard chemotherapy alone.

Some said Friday that they thought the FDA's decision was a sound one.

In a statement, the National Breast Cancer Coalition said it "applauds the FDA and Commissioner Margaret Hamburg for the decision to revoke the approval of Avastin in the first-line treatment of metastatic breast cancer. We understand the devastation of metastatic breast cancer and the fact that we do not know how to prevent or cure it. We remain committed to and focused on finding those answers."

However, Genentech took issue with the agency's decision.

"We are disappointed with the outcome," Dr. Hal Barron, Genentech's chief medical officer, said in a statement. "Despite today's action, we will start a new phase III study of Avastin in combination with paclitaxel in previously untreated metastatic breast cancer, and will evaluate a potential biomarker that may help identify which people might derive a more substantial benefit from Avastin."

Several experts also questioned the FDA's decision.

"I can only say it's not good," said Dr. Stefan Gluck, an oncologist at the University of Miami's Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. "They have been agonizing over it, and they still made the wrong decision."

Avastin gives a subset of patients a large advantage over chemotherapy alone, Gluck said. "In metastatic breast cancer, we give therapy to improve symptoms and improve quality of life and occasionally to improve quantity of life," he explained.

Avastin should only be used in late-stage breast cancer where the disease has spread to other organs such as the lungs, liver, bone or kidneys, Gluck said.

"I would not use Avastin in an older woman with small tumors in the lung without symptoms," Gluck said. "But in a young woman with huge lung masticates, then I need a quick response and a long-lasting response, and this is only available if you add chemotherapy and Avastin together," he said.

In these cases, "the cancer is worse than the side effects," Gluck said. "I need to weigh what is worse at the moment, the side effects, which may not happen, or the cancer. Eventually, the cancer kills the patient, but until the cancer kills the patient I want to give her the best quality of life."

Gluck noted that doctors can still use Avastin for breast cancer patients on an off-label basis. However, the FDA decision may mean that the drug will no longer be covered by insurance companies for use in treating breast cancer.

Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society, said in a statement: "The full impact of this decision is difficult to determine at this time. This decision will obviously lead insurance companies to review their payment policies regarding Avastin in breast cancer. Other experts have made their opinions known that in their experience Avastin has proven beneficial for breast cancer patients. Whether those opinions will provide sufficient reason for insurers and government programs such as Medicare and Medicaid to pay for this treatment remains unknown."

"At the least, we would hope that insurers will continue to cover treatment with Avastin in those women with metastatic breast cancer who are currently on the drug and who are showing a benefit from its use," he added. "Ultimately, as noted by the Commissioner, this was a difficult decision to make, but one that had to be made based on the science."

Elizabeth Thompson, president of Susan G. Komen for the Cure, said in a statement that "as a patient advocacy organization, we want to ensure that women who are successfully using Avastin today continue to have access to the drug, and that their treatment be covered by third-party payers."

"This decision underscores the need for aggressive research to develop treatments that will allow women to live full, high-quality lives even with advanced and metastatic breast cancers. At the same time, we encourage continued research into biomarkers that will help identify which patients will or will not benefit from certain treatments," she said.

More information

For more information on breast cancer, visit the American Cancer Society.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111119/hl_hsn/fdarevokesapprovalofavastinforbreastcancer

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Saturday, November 19, 2011

Lern2Play


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Legal Sea Foods: Save the Salmon | Ads of the World?

The campaign is quite 'OK'. I think if the copy had spoken more about the food and appetizer then It would have dragged a lot more attention. However, it speaks that "someone should save it and then we will serve it." All and all - a good attempt. :)

Source: http://adsoftheworld.com/media/print/legal_sea_foods_save_the_salmon

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Friday, November 18, 2011

Walmart rolls out digital movie downloads with Vudu-to-Go (Digital Trends)

vudu-screen

Designed for the traveler, Vudu now allows users to download movies that have been purchased on the service. Previously, the service would only allow users to stream content over a PC or mobile device to watch a film or television show. This allows users to download an entire film similar to iTunes and watch at a later time. This also allows users with slower broadband connections to download an entire film instead of waiting for buffering while attempting to steam a 1080p version of a movie. However, downloads are only available for purchased movies rather than rentals. Avid movie watchers will have to stick with iTunes when renting a new movie to watch on an iPhone or iPad.

Vudu titlesBy adding the ability to download a standard definition quality version of the film, this puts Vudu in line with UltraViolet technology that?s being slowly launched by the movie studios.?UltraViolet allows a standard definition version of the movie to be downloaded to mobile devices after a physical copy is purchased. However, PlayStation 3 owners currently have the ability to download both Vudu rentals and purchases onto the hard drive included with the game console. Walmart is also attempting to introduce more people to the Vudu service by offering?$5 Vudu credit vouchers when customers purchase specific Blu-ray and DVD titles at a brick and mortar location. This promotion is continuing through the end of November and Black Friday shoppers will be able to take advantage when purchasing movies on sale that day.

A $5 voucher pays for the cost of a typical 720p HD rental of a new release on the Vudu service, but a 1080p version of the movie costs an extra dollar. Television episodes can also be rented starting at $1.99 an episode. Walmart has also struck a deal with HP that will include the Vudu application on the desktop when a new HP personal computer or laptop is purchased at Walmart.

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

More from Digital Trends

Change the channel: 5 Netflix and Qwikster alternatives

Apple retains dominance in movie VOD market

Viewers of online content are starting to prefer gaming consoles over computers

Vudu?s popularity increases while Microsoft and Sony lose market share

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111117/tc_digitaltrends/walmartrollsoutdigitalmoviedownloadswithvudutogo

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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Michael Jackson's bed removed from planned auction (omg!)

A photo made Monday, Nov. 7, 2011 shows the bedroom at the Carolwood Drive home where singer Michael Jackson passed away in 2009, in Beverly Hills, Calif. Julien's Auctions will sell various antique furnishings and paintings that surrounded the King of Pop at the home he rented as he prepared for a series of comeback concerts. The auction is set for Dec. 17. The bed has been removed from the list of items at the request of Michael Jackson's estate. (AP Photo/Dan Steinberg)

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The bed where Michael Jackson died is no longer for sale.

Julien's Auctions has removed the queen-sized headboard from its auction of items from 100 N. Carolwood Drive, Jackson's last residence.

Company president Darren Julien said Tuesday the mattress was never for sale, but he removed the carved headboard seen in evidence photos during the trial of Jackson's physician from the sale at the request of Jackson's estate.

The auction of art, furnishings and other items from the home where Jackson lived with his three children is set for Dec. 17.

___

Online:

www.juliensauctions.com

A photo made Monday, Nov. 7, 2011 shows the bedroom at the Carolwood Drive home where singer Michael Jackson passed away in 2009, in Beverly Hills, Calif. Julien's Auctions will sell various antique furnishings and paintings that surrounded the King of Pop at the home he rented as he prepared for a series of comeback concerts. The auction is set for Dec. 17. The bed has been removed from the list of items at the request of Michael Jackson's estate. (AP Photo/Dan Steinberg)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_michael_jacksons_bed_removed_planned_auction191230609/43610492/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/michael-jacksons-bed-removed-planned-auction-191230609.html

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Democrats see political minefield in Occupy Wall Street protests (Star Tribune)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/163115019?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Obama: Iran sanctions have 'enormous bite' (AP)

KAPOLEI, Hawaii ? Defending his efforts to halt the Iranian nuclear threat, President Barack Obama said Sunday that the economic sanctions against the country have had "enormous bite," and that he is united with Russian and Chinese leaders in ensuring Iran does not develop an atomic weapon and unleash an arms race across the Middle East.

The president, at a news conference that closed an Asia-Pacific economic summit, did not specifically say he would consider military action if Tehran were to persist in arming itself with a nuclear weapon. But he added: "We are not taking any options off the table. Iran with nuclear weapons would pose a threat not only to the region but also to the United States."

Obama's stand came laced with presidential politics. Republican presidential contenders, including former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, have assailed Obama for not doing more to keep Iran from getting nuclear weaponry. Said Obama: "Is this an easy issue? No. Anyone who claims it is is either politicking or doesn't know what they're talking about."

The sun setting over the ocean behind him in Hawaii, Obama fielded questions across domestic and foreign fronts. He prodded China on its economic policy, pledged to keep fighting Republicans over his largely stalled jobs bill, reflected on the hurt of the Penn State sex abuse scandal and challenged a key congressional debt panel without dropping any veto threats.

Obama is in the midst of a nine-day trip far from Washington, first to host the yearly Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, then on to Australia and Indonesia. Surrounded by tropical paradise, he said he and the leaders of 20 others nations spanning the Pacific Rim were "here for business. We're here to create jobs."

For the president, the news conference was his first opportunity to address a report Friday from the International Atomic Energy Agency that provided new evidence that Iran's nuclear program includes clandestine efforts to build a bomb.

The report alleges Iran has been working to acquire equipment and weapons design information, testing high explosives and detonators and developing compute models of a warhead's core. It is the most unequivocal evidence yet that the Iranian program ranges far beyond enriching uranium for use in energy and medical research, as Iran insists.

In meetings Saturday with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Chinese President Hu Jintao, Obama sought to rally support for putting new pressure on Iran's regime. But there was little public sign either country was ready to drop its opposition to additional sanctions through the United Nations.

Obama insisted the countries are working on the next steps.

"All three of us entirely agree on the objective which is making sure that Iran does not weaponize nuclear power and we do not trigger a nuclear arms race in the region," Obama said. "That's in the interest of all of us. We will be consulting with them carefully over the next several weeks to look at what other options we have available to us."

The U.S. has already slapped sanctions on dozens of Iranian government agencies, financial and shipping companies as well as officials over the nuclear program and could target additional institutions like Iran's Central Bank. And the U.N. has imposed four rounds of sanctions that have caused economic hardship in Iran.

"The sanctions have enormous bite and enormous scope," Obama said.

Pressed on criticisms from the Republican presidential candidates, Obama said he would hold his own fire until the opposition party settles on a person to challenge him.

But he rejected assertions from GOP candidates such as Herman Cain and Michele Bachmann that they would be willing to use the interrogation practice known as waterboarding, a simulated form of drowning, on suspected terrorists.

"Let me just say this: they're wrong," Obama said emphatically. "Waterboarding is torture, it's contrary to America's traditions, it's contrary to our ideals, that's not who we are, that's not how we operate. We don't need it ... and we did the right thing by ending that practice."

The president challenged China to let its currency appreciate more rapidly and to end measures that take unfair advantage of foreign intellectual property. He spoke of China as an ally whose growth is in the interest of the world, but also as a competitor that needs to assume more maturity on the world stage and play by fair rules.

"The United States and other countries feel that enough is enough," he said.

On the deficit talks in Congress, Obama urged lawmakers to reach consensus, complaining that they were continuing to stick with "rigid positions" rather than solving the problem.

A committee in charge of cutting the deficit has until Nov. 23 to agree on how to reduce it by at least $1.2 trillion in the next decade. Any amount less than that would be made up in automatic across-the-board cuts divided evenly between defense and domestic programs.

Obama refused to say whether he would veto any effort to bypass the deep cuts in defense and other spending that would take effect if there is no deal forthcoming from Congress.

He said he hopes lawmakers will "bite the bullet and do what needs to be done,' but voiced frustration with what he said was a desire by some members of Congress to "want to keep jiggering the math" to get a different outcome.

The president rejected a suggestion that he might end up with almost nothing to show from Congress on his jobs bill, saying he'd keep working to get it done even if it took past next year's election.

Obama sidestepped a question about his conversation more than a week ago with French President Nicolas Sarkozy at the G20 summit, in which reporters overheard Sarkozy calling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a "liar," and Obama replying "I have to work with him every day." Obama wouldn't comment on the language ? but did say he voiced "significant disappointment" to Sarkozy about France's vote to admit Palestine as a member of the U.N. cultural organization. After the vote, the U.S. cut its funding for UNESCO.

Obama said the sexual abuse scandal at Penn State has an important message for institutions far beyond college sports: that protecting children is more important than shielding institutions. He called the case, which ended the career of longtime head coach Joe Paterno, "heartbreaking."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111114/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama

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