Monday, October 31, 2011

Japan intervenes to tame yen ahead of G20 (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? Japan sold the yen for the second time in less than three months after it hit another record high against the dollar on Monday, saying it intervened to counter speculative moves that were hurting the economy.

Finance Minister Jun Azumi said Tokyo stepped into the market on its own at 10:25 a.m. local time (9:25 p.m. EDT) and would continue to intervene until it was satisfied with the results.

Tokyo's latest foray into currency markets followed weeks of warnings that its patience with the yen's strength was wearing thin, and came just days before the Group of 20 leaders' summit in Cannes, France.

The summit will focus on Europe's efforts to contain its sovereign debt crisis and avoid a repeat of the financial shock that roiled markets after the Lehman Brothers collapse in 2008.

But Tokyo is keen to win G20 understanding that a strong yen is one challenge too many for an economy grappling with a nuclear crisis, a $250 billion rebuilding effort from a March earthquake and tsunami and ballooning public debt.

Japan also argues that the yen is sought by investors worried by the euro zone debt crisis and stuttering U.S. growth and the demand has nothing to do with the fragile health of the Japanese economy.

The dollar vaulted more than 4 percent past 79 yen, from around 75.65 yen, after Tokyo began selling its currency. The dollar had touched a record low of 75.31 yen earlier on Monday.

"I have repeatedly said that we would take decisive steps against speculative moves in the market," Azumi told a news conference. "Unfortunately it (the market) has not reflected our economic fundamentals at all."

Azumi said that while Monday's intervention was a solo act he was in a continuous contact with his international counterparts.

"I have been frequently in contact (with other countries) ... I have always conveyed Japan's stance and interests at senior official levels," he said.

Several G20 nations, including South Korea and Indonesia, have been intervening regularly in currency markets, but Japan is under more scrutiny as an issuer of one of three global currencies and does not want to be deemed a currency manipulator.

Following a G20 finance leaders' meeting earlier this month Azumi said the group's statement highlighting adverse effects of excessive currency swings reflected Japan's concerns.

PERSISTENT INTERVENTION

He would not comment on the size of the intervention, but one trader said the authorities were intervening "quite persistently."

"My sense is that they might not quit very easily," a trader said.

The dollar remained nailed near 79.20 yen for more than an hour after the intervention due to a large bid at that level, prompting traders to speculate that Japan might want to set a Swiss-style floor for the dollar/yen.

However, Japanese officials said at the time of the Swiss Central Bank intervention in September to set a floor for the euro that the Japanese economy was too big for such a tactic, and dealers said Tokyo was unlikely to peg the yen to any particular level in the longer run.

If the dollar held around 79.20 -- its highest since August 5 -- it would be its biggest one-day percentage gain since October 2008, bigger than that following Tokyo's joint intervention with Group of Seven nations in the aftermath of the March 11 disaster.

This week's action follows a record 4.5 trillion yen ($59 billion) single-day selling intervention on August 4, which the Bank of Japan followed up with monetary policy easing.

Even though the yen's exchange rate when measured against a trade-weighted basket of currencies and adjusted for inflation is not far from its 30-year average, its rate against the dollar is much stronger than those assumed by Japanese exporters in their earnings projections.

That has led to a flurry of warnings from leading companies that they might have no choice but to move more production abroad to cope.

Chipmaker Elpida warned it might have to move production abroad and Honda's chief executive said earlier this month that the company would half exports from Japan over the next decade because of the strong yen.

Last Thursday, acting in part out of concern that such "hollowing out" of the industry could derail Japan's recovery, the Bank of Japan eased its monetary policy by boosting government bond purchases.

Japan's economy has been recovering from the March 11 disaster that pushed it into its second recession in three years, with companies swiftly restoring production and supply chains.

Policymakers have counted on reconstruction spending and robust demand from emerging markets to sustain the momentum, but the yen's pressure on exporters' earnings and slowing global growth spurred them to act.

Yunosuke Ikeda, senior FX strategist at Nomura Securities, said last week's central bank easing and Monday's intervention could be an effective combination.

"It was very good timing. The BOJ has prepared the ground by easing last week. Speculators' yen-buying position has piled up, and intervention is most effective in such cases," Ikeda said.

Strategists were split, however, on how long the effect of the intervention would last. While Ikeda thought Monday's action could keep the yen away from its peaks for quite some time, others were more skeptical.

"The effect of intervention is likely to be temporary but the authorities probably had to make a show of strength," said Takafumi Yamawaki, chief fixed income strategist at JPMorgan Securities in Tokyo.

"The dollar/yen exchange rate is politically significant so they had to make an impact on the pair in one form or another, although intervening won't have much effect on the real economy."

Since September 2010, Japan has now intervened three times on its own and once jointly with other G7 rich nations to weaken the yen. But the effects of past intervention have proved fleeting in the face of steady demand from nervous investors seeking highly liquid and relatively safe assets such as Japanese government bonds.

($1 = 75.760 Japanese Yen)

(Additional reporting by Kaori Kaneko and Hideyuki Sano; Writing by Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Neil Fullick and Alex Richardson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111031/bs_nm/us_japan_economy_yen

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Scooby-Doo arrives on the iPad in The Haunted Halloween [Kids Corner]

Scooby-Doo has eventually infiltrated the iPad and what better timing than just before Halloween. The new app titled ?The Haunted Halloween: A Scooby-Doo You Play Too Book is a mixture of interactive book and puzzle games all based around this spooky time of the year.
It?s Halloween
...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/9RTpp51vGyw/

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

APNewsBreak: US northern border checks scaled back

In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, Senior Border Patrol Agent Sheldon Cooper monitors the International Railroad Bridge in Buffalo, N.Y. In a move that is supposed ease an overburdened immigration system, U.S. Border Patrol field offices around the country have been told to stop the controversial practice of routinely searching buses, trains and airports for illegal immigrants at transportation hubs along the northern border. (AP Photo/David Duprey, File)

In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, Senior Border Patrol Agent Sheldon Cooper monitors the International Railroad Bridge in Buffalo, N.Y. In a move that is supposed ease an overburdened immigration system, U.S. Border Patrol field offices around the country have been told to stop the controversial practice of routinely searching buses, trains and airports for illegal immigrants at transportation hubs along the northern border. (AP Photo/David Duprey, File)

FILE- In this Oct. 6, 2011 photo, Border Patrol Agent Sandy Walters, Field Operations Supervisor, shows a check point station for boaters entering from Canada along the Erie Canal near Buffalo, N.Y. In a move that is supposed ease an overburdened immigration system, U.S. Border Patrol field offices around the country have been told to stop the controversial practice of routinely searching buses, trains and airports for illegal immigrants at transportation hubs along the northern border. (AP Photo/David Duprey)

In this Nov. 20, 2007 file photo, U.S. Department of Homeland Security Sector Enforcement Specialist John King monitors the border between the United States and Canada in the Border Patrol's communication center in Grand Island, N.Y. In a move that is supposed ease an overburdened immigration system, U.S. Border Patrol field offices around the country have been told to stop the controversial practice of routinely searching buses, trains and airports for illegal immigrants at transportation hubs along the northern border. (AP Photo/David Duprey, File)

(AP) ? The U.S. Border Patrol has quietly stopped its controversial practice of routinely searching buses, trains and airports for illegal immigrants at transportation hubs along the northern border and in the nation's interior, preventing agents from using what had long been an effective tool for tracking down people here illegally, The Associated Press has learned.

Current and former Border Patrol agents said field offices around the country began receiving the order last month ? soon after the Obama administration announced that to ease an overburdened immigration system, it would allow many illegal immigrants to remain in the country while it focuses on deporting those who have committed crimes.

The routine bus, train and airport checks typically involved agents milling about and questioning people who appeared suspicious, and had long been criticized by immigrant rights groups. Critics said the tactic amounted to racial profiling and violated travelers' civil liberties.

But agents said it was an effective way to catch unlawful immigrants, including smugglers and possible terrorists, who had evaded detection at the border, as well as people who had overstayed their visas. Often, those who evade initial detection head quickly for the nearest public transportation in hopes of reaching other parts of the country.

Halting the practice has baffled the agents, especially in some stations along the northern border ? from Bellingham, Wash., to Houlton, Maine ? where the so-called "transportation checks" have been the bulk of their everyday duties. The Border Patrol is authorized to check vehicles within 100 miles of the border.

The order has not been made public, but two agents described it to the AP on condition of anonymity because the government does not authorize them to speak to the media. The union that represents Border Patrol agents planned to issue a news release about the change Monday.

"Orders have been sent out from Border Patrol headquarters in Washington, D.C., to Border Patrol sectors nationwide that checks of transportation hubs and systems located away from the southwest border of the United States will only be conducted if there is intelligence indicating a threat," the release says.

Those who have received the orders said agents may still go to train and bus stations and airports if they have specific "actionable intelligence" that there is an illegal immigrant there who recently entered the country. An agent in Washington state said it's not clear how agents are supposed to glean such intelligence, and even if they did, under the new directive they still require clearance from Washington, D.C., headquarters before they can respond.

A U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman, Bill Brooks, repeatedly insisted that any shift in enforcement tactics does not amount to a change in policy as local commanders still have authority to aggressively pursue illegal immigrants near the border and at transportation hubs.

"It's up to the local commander to position his agents the way he wants to position them. What we've done is gone to a risk-based posture," he said.

In a separate statement, the agency said, "Conducting intelligence-based transportation checks allows the Border Patrol to use their technology and personnel resources more effectively, especially in areas with limited resources."

Shawn Moran, vice president of the union that represents agents, was outraged at the changes.

"Stated plainly, Border Patrol managers are increasing the layers of bureaucracy and making it as difficult as possible for Border Patrol agents to conduct their core duties," the National Border Patrol Council's statement said. "The only risks being managed by this move are too many apprehensions, negative media attention and complaints generated by immigrant rights groups."

The Border Patrol, which patrols outside the official ports of entry handled by customs officers, has dramatically beefed up its staffing since 9/11, doubling to more than 20,000 agents nationally. Along the northern border, the number has jumped from about 300 in the late 1990s to more than 2,200.

At the same time, the number of Border Patrol arrests nationwide has been falling ? from nearly 1.2 million in 2005 to 463,000 in 2010, and 97 percent of them at the southern border, according to the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Immigration Statistics. The office cited the recession as a likely factor in the drop.

Along the northern border last fiscal year, the agency made 7,431 arrests. It was not immediately clear how many stemmed from routine transportation checks. The public affairs office for the Border Patrol's Blaine sector said it doesn't break down the data that way.

But of 673 arrests in the sector, roughly 200 were from routine transportation checks, according to a Washington state-based Border Patrol agent who has been with the agency for more than 20 years and spoke to the AP.

Until receiving the new directive, the Bellingham office, about 25 miles from the Canadian border, kept agents at the bus and train station, and at the local airport 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Now, the agents have little work to do, the agent said.

The situation is similar in upstate New York, where an agent told the AP ? also on the condition of anonymity ? that a senior manager relayed the new directive during a morning roll call last month. Since then, instead of checking buses or trains, agents have spent shifts sitting in their vehicles gazing out at Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, where few illegal immigrants cross.

"They're already bored," the agent said. "You grab the paper every day and you go do the crossword."

In the Buffalo sector, where there were more than 2,400 arrests in fiscal 2010, as many as half were from routine transportation checks, the agent estimated.

The change was immediately obvious to Jack Barker, who manages the Greyhound and Trailways bus station in Rochester, N.Y. For the past six years, he said, Border Patrol agents boarded nearly every bus in and out of the station looking for illegal immigrants.

Last month ? one day after the 10th anniversary of 9/11 and all of the hype that surrounded it ? the agents stopped coming. They haven't been back since, Barker said.

"What's changed that they're no longer needed here?" Barker asked. "I haven't been able to get an answer from anybody."

Doug Honig, spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, welcomed the news.

"If the Border Patrol is indeed not boarding buses and trains and engaging in the random questioning of people, that's a step in the right direction," he said. "People shouldn't be questioned by government officials when there's no reason to believe they've done anything wrong."

Kent Lundgren, chairman of the National Association of Former Border Patrol Officers, said the transportation checks have been a staple of the agency for 60 years. His organization has heard from agents around the country complaining of the change, he said.

Gene Davis, a retired deputy chief in the Border Patrol's sector in Blaine, Wash., emphasized how effective the checks can be. He noted that a check of the Bellingham bus station in 1997 yielded an arrest of Palestinian Gazi Ibrahim Abu Mezer. Abu Mezer skipped out on a $5,000 bond ? only to turn up later in Brooklyn, where New York police shot him as he prepared to bomb the city's subway system. Davis also noted that would-be millennium bomb suspect Ahmed Ressam was arrested at the border in late 1999 when he left a ferry from British Columbia to Washington in a rented car full of explosives.

"We've had two terrorists who have come through the northern border here. To put these restraints on agents being able to talk to people is just ridiculous," Davis said. "Abu Mezer got out, but that just shows you the potential that's there with the transportation checks."

The Border Patrol informed officials at the Bellingham airport on Thursday that from now on they would only be allowed to come to the airport "if there's an action that needs their assistance," said airport manager Daniel Zenk.

"I'm shocked," Zenk said. "We welcome the security presence the Border Patrol provides."

___

Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Alicia Caldwell in Washington, D.C., Manuel Valdes in Seattle, Ben Dobbin in Rochester, N.Y., and Carolyn Thompson from Buffalo, N.Y.

___

Johnson can be reached at https://twitter.com/GeneAPseattle

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-28-Border-Transportation%20Checks/id-22ca7f419e0f46e585dd35e5d99f5fee

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Madoff: Has remorse, doesn't contemplate suicide

Disgraced financier Bernie Madoff has told an interviewer he has terrible remorse and horrible nightmares over his epic fraud, but also said he feels happier in prison than he's felt in 20 years.

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Barbara Walters told ABC's "Good Morning America" on Thursday that she interviewed Madoff for two hours at the prison in Butner, N.C., where he's serving a 150-year sentence. No cameras were allowed in the prison.

Walters said Madoff told her he thought about suicide before being sent to prison. But since he's been there, he no longer thinks about it.

His comments come ahead of his wife's appearance Sunday's episode of CBS' "60 Minutes." Ruth Madoff said in excerpts that they tried to kill themselves after he admitted stealing billions of dollars in the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

Walters quoted Madoff as saying: "I feel safer here (in prison) than outside. I have people to talk to, no decisions to make. I know I will die in prison. I lived the last 20 years of my life in fear. Now, I have no fear because I'm no longer in control."

She also said he told her he understands why his one-time clients hate him, and that the average person thinks he "robbed widows and orphans." But he also told her, "I made wealthy people wealthier."

Ruth Madoff's appearance on "60 Minutes" will be her first interview since her husband's December 2008 arrest. She says they had been receiving hate mail and "terrible phone calls" and were distraught.

"I don't know whose idea it was, but we decided to kill ourselves because it was so horrendous what was happening," she says in the interview, according to excerpts released by CBS.

She says it was Christmas Eve, which added to their depression, and she decided: "I just can't go on anymore."

She says the couple took "a bunch of pills" including the insomnia prescription medication Ambien, but they both woke up the next day. She says the decision was "very impulsive" and she's glad they didn't die.

The couple's son Andrew Madoff also will talk about his experience.

Another son, Mark Madoff, hanged himself by a dog leash last year on the anniversary of his father's arrest. Like his parents, he had swallowed a batch of sleeping pills in a failed suicide attempt 14 months earlier, according to his widow's new book, "The End of Normal: A Wife's Anguish, A Widow's New Life."

Bernie Madoff was arrested on Dec. 11, 2008, the morning after his sons notified authorities through an attorney that he had confessed to them that his investment business was a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme. He admitted cheating thousands of investors. He pleaded guilty to fraud charges.

Madoff, who's in his 70s, ran his scheme for at least two decades, using his investment advisory service to cheat individuals, charities, celebrities and institutional investors.

An investigation found Madoff never made any investments, instead using the money from new investors to pay returns to existing clients ? and to finance a lavish lifestyle for his family. Losses have been estimated at around $20 billion, making it the biggest investment fraud in U.S. history.

___

Online:

http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/60minutes/main3415.shtml

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

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45059692/ns/business-us_business/

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The Engadget Interview: Nokia's Peter Skillman talks design (video)

Peter Skillman knows a thing or two about making beautiful devices. He's Palm's former VP of design, and he's the man behind Nokia's glorious N9 -- its look, feel and user experience. We bumped into him at Nokia World here today and asked him what went into the N9's -- and by association the Lumia 800's -- design. He shared quite a few interesting details with us, including tidbits about the "curvature continuous" form of MeeGo's icons, Nokia's Pure font and the nuances of the N9's sinuous taper. We even discussed the Play 360 Bluetooth / NFC speaker, which follows the same basic aesthetic principles. Take a look at our exclusive video interview after the break.

Continue reading The Engadget Interview: Nokia's Peter Skillman talks design (video)

The Engadget Interview: Nokia's Peter Skillman talks design (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 13:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Rick Perry flat tax plan: Borrowing from Herman Cain?

Rick Perry's flat tax plan is simple, and borrows talking points from Herman Cain's 999 plan, notes DCDecoder.

Rick Perry unveiled a ?flat tax? plan Tuesday that would allow taxpayers to choose between their current income tax rate and a flat tax of 20 percent. He also proposed lowering the corporate tax rate to 20 percent, while eliminating corporate loopholes. He would keep popular mortgage and charitable deductions for families making less than $500,000 a year, and would eliminate taxes on Social Security benefits.

Skip to next paragraph

What strikes us, however, is how much Perry seems to be taking his talking points on taxes from Herman Cain. Perry?s plan is more nuanced than Cain?s 999 plan, but like Cain, Perry is proposing to dramatically overhaul the current tax code and replace it with something simple - something that voters seem especially hungry to do, as evidenced by Cain?s success.

Here?s what Perry said when introducing his plan in South Carolina (a key, early primary state):

"Central to my plan is giving every American the option of throwing out the three million words of the current tax code, and the costs of complying with that code, in order to pay a 20 percent flat tax on their income.

The size of the current code, which is more than 72,000 pages, is represented by this pallet and its many reams of paper.

The best representation of my plan is this post card, which taxpayers will be able to fill out to file their taxes."

Sound familiar? Here?s Herman Cain at the last GOP debate in Las Vegas:

The reason that my plan ? the reason that our plan is being attacked so much is because lobbyists, accountants, politicians, they don?t want to throw out the current tax code and put in something that?s simple and fair. They want to continue to be able to manipulate the American people with a 10-million-word mess. Let?s throw out the 10-million-word mess and put in our plan, which will liberate the American workers and liberate American businesses.

In fact, Herman Cain has been talking about ?throwing out? the tax code for many months now, and it?s consistently been one of his biggest applause lines. You can watch a video here of Cain on the stump - he gets a huge audience reaction when he talks about chucking the current tax code:

"We don?t need some mild fuel in this engine, we need some bold fuel.

And I call it my 999 plan. Why?

It starts with - watch this, y?all - throw out the current tax code! [THUNDEROUS APPLAUSE, CHEERING] Get rid of it!

Throw it out, because how many years, most of you all your life, have been complaining about the tax code. We know it?s messed up. But nobody has the guts to say we need to throw it out.

Now, once you throw it out, then we pass the 999 legislation?.

It?s simpler, it?s fairer. And it saves us $430 billion a year in filing and compliance costs."

Want more?

  • Read the full text of Perry?s remarks here.

Like your politics unscrambled? Check out DCDecoder.com

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/co55mXYLn_k/Rick-Perry-flat-tax-plan-Borrowing-from-Herman-Cain

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Bunmi Laditan: Open Letter to 'Occupiers' from Rational America (Huffington post)

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Reindeer stay cool in fur coats

Reindeer pant to lower their brain temperatures when running in fur coats, according to research.

Scientists in Norway trained reindeer to run on treadmills to study how they stayed cool under physical exertion.

The animals are heavily insulated against the cold of Arctic winters, leaving few methods of losing heat.

Results showed the reindeer inhaling large quantities of cold air and transferring heat by panting.

Continue reading the main story

?Start Quote

This high-arctic [animal] which tolerates cold very well also has an immense capacity to tolerate heat stress ?

End Quote Professor Lars Folkow University of Tromso, Norway

Professors Arnoldus Blix and Lars Folkow from the University of Tromso worked with Lars Walloe from the University of Oslo on the study.

Their findings are published in the Journal of Experimental Biology.

"Reindeer are the best animals to work with; once they trust the trainer they will do anything for you," Prof Blix told the journal.

After training the reindeer to run on the treadmill, the scientists measured their physiological responses to exercise in a cold environments.

In the early stages of running, the reindeer's breathing changed from seven breaths per minute to 250.

Blood flow to the face also increased and as the inhaled air passed over blood vessels inside the reindeer's noses, the temperature of this blood dropped.

This cooler blood then circulated around the body to cool the hard-working, heat-stressed muscles.

Continue reading the main story

REINDEER FACTS

  • Reindeer have a double layer of fur: a dense undercoat and longer, air-filled guard hairs to insulate against the cold
  • Reindeer are the only deer where both males and females have antlers
  • North American herds migrate up to 5000km to the Arctic annually in one of the largest migrations of any land mammal

Subsequent panting then exposed the reindeer's large wet tongues to the cool air.

"They do not have sweat glands like us humans which would ruin the insulative properties of their fur, but make use of the same principle - heat dissipation through evaporation of water - when they pant," Prof Folklow told BBC Nature.

Finally, when their brain temperature reached a critically hot 39C, the reindeer switched to another strategy.

The team found that through "selective brain cooling", the reindeer diverted the cooled blood from their noses into their heads, where it reduced the temperature of blood circulating to the brain, protecting it from overheating.

"This high-arctic [animal] which tolerates cold very well, also has an immense capacity to tolerate heat stress due to the high efficiency of the panting mechanism and the habit of resorting to brain cooling when the heat load gets really high," said Prof Folklow.

Previous studies have highlighted this ability in sheep, leading scientists to question whether all species of hoofed mammal can selectively cool their brains.

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Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/15446089

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NCAA poised to make sweeping changes

NCAA President Mark Emmert, right, talks with Northwestern University President Emeritus Henry Bienen, left, and Knight Commission Co-Chairman Brit Kirwan, chancellor of the University of Maryland System, during the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics meeting in Washington, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

NCAA President Mark Emmert, right, talks with Northwestern University President Emeritus Henry Bienen, left, and Knight Commission Co-Chairman Brit Kirwan, chancellor of the University of Maryland System, during the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics meeting in Washington, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

NCAA President Mark Emmert speaks about policy changes being considered by the NCAA during the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics meeting in Washington, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

NCAA President Mark Emmert speaks about policy changes being considered by the NCAA during the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics meeting in Washington, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

(AP) ? The NCAA is putting reform on the fast track.

Money to address complaints that scholarships don't cover the full cost of attendance? Check. Multi-year scholarships? Check. Changes in summer basketball recruiting and postseason bans for poor classroom performance? Check.

All four issues are on the agenda of the NCAA's Division I board of directors, which is meeting Thursday and is expected to act quickly.

"I fully expect that when you're making as big of changes as we are, that you'll need some fine-tuning and adjustments," NCAA President Mark Emmert told The Associated Press. "But in the past, not getting the fine-tuning right has slowed down the process, and I and the board are committed to moving things along aggressively."

Why not?

Since taking office a little more than a year ago, Emmert has presided over one of the most tumultuous years in NCAA history.

Scandals have rocked programs from Boise State to Miami. The reigning national champions in football (Auburn) and men's basketball (Connecticut) were both investigated by the NCAA, and there have been questions about agents, parents, academic misconduct, improper benefits and even prostitution. The revolving door of conference realignment is still spinning wildly, and the Justice Department is even asking about scholarship rules.

School presidents have had enough, and there is momentum to take drastic action now.

"I think the presidents have reached a point where they're saying too many things are not working well, and the board needs to take stronger actions from the top down rather than from the bottom up," Penn State's Graham Spanier said at an August retreat. "We've reached a point where we must pay more attention to these academic issues, these integrity issues. Some of these things our coaches and our boosters might not like, but I think we need to do what you're going to see us do in the next year."

Within 24 hours of those comments, the train started rolling.

The board toughened the Academic Progress Rate by raising the cutline from 900 to 930, and passed a measure to ban teams from postseason tournaments every time they miss the cutline. Emmert also wants to put that measuring stick in bowl licensing agreements, thereby making it effective for football, too.

The second part of that equation, how and when to impose the new rule, will be determined Thursday.

"What we are proposing would not go into effect until the following year (2012-13)," said Walt Harrison, the University of Hartford president and chairman of the committee on academic performance. "We are trying to change behavior, so we have to give people time to adjust."

That is only a part of this week's busy agenda.

Changes to the long-held scholarship rules have generated the biggest buzz.

Emmert said he supports adding $2,000 per year in scholarship money to cover the full cost of attendance -- money that covers more than tuition, room and board, books and fees. Many outsiders consider that a major change to the governing body's long-held policy on amateurism, a policy Emmert has repeatedly said he will uphold. Until 1972, athletes were receiving $15 per month in "laundry" money.

If the proposal is approved, each conference would decide whether to offer the additional $2,000 to players on full scholarship. The money would have to come out of school budgets, with an equal amount of additional money going to female athletes because of Title IX rules. It's believed the six BCS conferences will adopt the new rules.

What's not clear is whether higher costs would push more schools toward the long-feared megaconferences.

"I don't think so at all," Emmert said. "It (realignment) is much, much larger in its magnitude and implications than this. So there's no reason to believe it will start another round of conference realignment at all."

In addition, the board will consider giving schools the option to award multi-year scholarships. Currently, scholarships are provided on a year-by-year basis, which prompted last spring's Justice Department inquiry. If the proposal passes, schools could grant scholarships for the maximum time of eligibility -- four years for incoming freshmen, less for transfer students.

Tougher academic standards are also up for a vote.

Two days after seeing record numbers on the NCAA's annual Graduation Success Rate, the board will consider a measure that requires high school seniors to maintain a 2.3 GPA and junior college transfers a 2.5 GPA to become eligible immediately. Currently, both groups need to maintain a 2.0 GPA.

Prep players also would have to take 10 of their 16 mandated core courses before their senior year, and juco transfers would be limited in how many physical education credits could count toward eligibility.

Those who qualify under the current standards, but fail to meet the new ones, would be granted an "academic redshirt" year in which they could keep the scholarship and practice with their teammates. But they could not participate in games.

Emmert expects the entire package to pass.

Not enough?

Summer basketball is back on the agenda.

The new proposal would give coaches a limited recruiting period in April, still allow some contact with recruits in July, provide coaches with some access to their own players during the summer and lift the text messaging ban. Emmert expects that to pass, too.

The board also will hear from two key working groups -- one that is looking at a new penalty structure, the other trying to edit the NCAA's massive rulebook.

"They want to focus on the big, broad integrity questions rather than those that are unenforceable or those things that don't work," Emmert said of the rulebook committee. "They basically are looking at three things: Is it enforceable, is it consistent with our values and is it material to the overall impact of college sports. What the working group is going to do is ask the board to support that approach, and then we'll come back and talk about that over the next couple of meetings."

No changes are expected before the board's next meeting in January and more likely until April.

But clearly, this is a path Emmert and school presidents want to take, and they're not about to let a few details slow them down.

"The presidents have been unequivocal in trying to do this as quickly as we can," Emmert said at the retreat. "The board has full authority to take such actions. They are all issues that various commissions and committees have been working on for months and in some cases years. I wouldn't describe it as emergency, but there is clearly a strong sense of urgency."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-10-26-NCAA-Changes%20On%20Tap/id-f321d82ec3534921bbd9eff3edfddb30

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

A shot to prevent measles outbreak (hamptonroads)

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Will and Kate to visit UNICEF center in Denmark (AP)

LONDON ? Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge plan to travel to Denmark next week to visit a United Nations center that distributes emergency supplies to East Africa.

St. James's Palace officials said Wednesday the brief trip is designed to draw attention to the worsening East Africa food shortage crisis, which is affecting an estimated 13 million people.

The Nov. 2 visit will mark the royal couple's first overseas trip since a lengthy sojourn to Canada and the United States during the summer. The British and Danish palaces said Wednesday that the couple will be accompanied by Crown Prince Frederik and Crown Princess Mary of Denmark.

The UNICEF facility coordinates the distribution of emergency food and medical supplies worldwide, including nutritional treatments for some 320,000 severely malnourished children in East Africa.

The royals are expected to be briefed about the crisis in East Africa before touring the facility and helping to pack supply boxes during their visit.

Africa has been of special interest to William, who has traveled there many times. He proposed to Kate Middleton while on vacation in Kenya in 2010.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_royals

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German parliament set to back Merkel on euro fund

A European flag flies near the glass dome of the Reichtag building, which host the German parliament Bundestag in Berlin on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011. German Chancellor Angela Merkel will face a voting about the European Financial Stability Fund on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

A European flag flies near the glass dome of the Reichtag building, which host the German parliament Bundestag in Berlin on Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2011. German Chancellor Angela Merkel will face a voting about the European Financial Stability Fund on Wednesday. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

(AP) ? Chancellor Angela Merkel looks set to receive wide German parliamentary backing for plans to increase the eurozone rescue fund's firepower before she heads to a high-stakes European summit on Wednesday.

Following a speech by the chancellor, parliament's lower house is to vote on a resolution thrashed out by Merkel's governing coalition and the main opposition parties.

The EU summit will consider plans to boost the euro440 billion ($600 billion) bailout fund by offering government bond buyers insurance against possible losses and attracting capital from private investors and sovereign wealth funds.

Government and opposition leaders have stressed that Germany's liability will remain unchanged, with Berlin still guaranteeing loans to the tune of up to euro211 billion and no more.

However, the parliamentary resolution says that the fund, the so-called European Financial Stability Facility, "should be used as efficiently as possible to support the stability of the eurozone."

It states that lawmakers are aware that "the risk of losses can change" as a result of leveraging the EFSF to increase its firepower.

The resolution also underlines the German parliament's expectations that, once the changes are implemented, the European Central Bank will no longer need to buy government bonds, as it has since last year. It calls on the government to preserve the ECB's independence.

With the 17-nation eurozone's politicians struggling to agree on ways to calm the debt crisis, the ECB has been taking on the role of firefighter by buying the bonds of financially weakened governments on the open market.

That keeps the bond prices up and the interest rates down, allowing the countries to borrow on financial markets at lower rates than they otherwise could.

The German resolution also urges the government to ensure that there is a quick decision on European proposals to introduce a tax on financial transactions.

Merkel's party decided Monday to hold a full parliamentary vote on the eurozone fund changes, although it would have been enough for parliament's budget committee to approve them. The resolution was drawn up by Merkel's center-right coalition and two of the three opposition parties.

Parliament speaker Norbert Lammert said "the significance can't be overstated" of sending Merkel to Brussels with wide support.

Germany's highest court ruled last month that parliament must vet future rescue efforts, and lawmakers from both government and opposition also were keen to secure a greater say ? a potentially cumbersome demand in this fast-moving crisis.

"So far, there has not been a single decision that has been delayed by parliament," Lammert insisted on ARD television.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2011-10-26-EU-Germany-Financial-Crisis/id-e94fea073db94699af90f60d8e0eab59

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Bombings in Thai south kill 2, wound dozens (AP)

PATTANI, Thailand ? Thailand's military said a dozen coordinated bomb attacks in the country's insurgency-plagued south Tuesday killed at least three people and injured dozens.

The military's Internal Security Operations Command said suspected Muslim insurgents detonated bombs at 12 spots across the southern town of Yala, including a school, shops and hotels, and that bombs had been defused by authorities at three other spots. The explosions caused power outages.

The attacks occurred on the anniversary of the 2004 suppression of an anti-government protest in Tak Bai in neighboring Narathiwat province. Seven demonstrators were fatally shot and 78 others died of asphyxiation after being piled on top of one another on military trucks to be taken to a detention center.

More than 4,700 people have been killed in Thailand's southernmost Muslim-dominated provinces since an Islamic insurgency flared in 2004.

Internal Security Operations Command deputy director Akra Tiproj said one of the fatalities was believed to be a bomber because his body was found on a motorcycle that exploded. Planting bombs on motorcycles is a common tactic of the insurgents.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_as/as_thailand_southern_violence

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Divide over when to use in-depth cholesterol tests (AP)

WASHINGTON ? For heart health, you're supposed to know your numbers: Total cholesterol, the bad LDL kind and the good HDL kind. But your next checkup might add a new number to the mix.

More doctors are going beyond standard cholesterol counts, using another test to take a closer look at the bad fats ? a count of particles that carry LDL through the blood.

Cardiologists are divided over the usefulness of that approach. Proponents contend it might help them spot at-risk patients that regular checks might miss, or get more information about how aggressively to treat them.

But so far, guidelines from major heart organizations don't recommend these extra tests. They're pricier than regular cholesterol exams, although Medicare and many other insurers pay for them. And it's not always clear what the results mean.

"I see a lot of people being confused," says Dr. Nieca Goldberg of New York University Langone Medical Center and the American Heart Association. Especially when they're used on lower-risk people, "you don't know how to make sense of the information."

Yet up to half of patients diagnosed with heart disease apparently had normal levels of LDL cholesterol, and some doctors say particle testing might help find some of them sooner.

"For most people, the standard lipid profile is fine," says Dr. Michael Davidson of the University of Chicago. But "I get referred people who said, `My cholesterol was fine, why do I have heart disease?' We're showing them, well, because your particle number's sky high and they were not aware that was a problem."

Davidson chaired a committee of the National Lipid Association which this month called the extra tests reasonable to assess which at-risk patients might need to start or intensify cholesterol treatment. That committee's meeting was paid for by a grant from eight pharmaceutical companies, including some makers of particle tests.

Cholesterol isn't the only factor behind heart disease. High blood pressure, smoking, obesity, diabetes or a strong family history of the disease can put someone in the high-risk category even if their cholesterol isn't a red flag. Some doctors also are testing for inflammation in arteries that may play a role, too.

On the cholesterol front, doctors have long focused on three key numbers:

_Total cholesterol should be below 200.

_An LDL or "bad" cholesterol level below 130 is good for healthy people, but someone with heart disease or diabetes should aim for under 100.

_For HDL, the "good" cholesterol that helps control the bad kind, higher numbers are better ? 60 is protective while below 40 is a risk.

Where do particles come in? Scientists have long known that small, dense LDL particles sneak into the artery wall to build up and narrow blood vessels more easily than larger, fluffier particles. While overall LDL levels usually correlate with the amount of particles in blood, they don't always, just as a beach bucket of sand may weigh the same as a bucket of pebbles but contain more particles.

Only in recent years have commercial tests made particle checks more feasible ? although there's no standard method, and different tests measure in different ways. The tests add another $100 to $150 to regular cholesterol checks.

But is knowing about your particles really useful, and if so when? That's where doctors are split.

A study published last spring used one particle test, from Raleigh, N.C.-based LipoScience, to analyze a database of more than 5,000 middle-aged people whose heart health was tracked for five years. Most people's overall LDL and particle counts correlated pretty well. But people had a higher risk of heart disease when their particle count was much higher than their LDL predicted ? and, conversely, a lower risk if their particle count was lower than expected, says lead researcher Dr. David Goff Jr. of Wake Forest University.

"We could be treating some people who don't need to be treated ... and we may be missing some people who should be treated," Goff says. "But I'd also say that we haven't done all the research that needs to be done to prove that this will lead to better patient outcomes."

Many of those higher-risk patients could be caught by a closer look at standard tests "for no additional charge," says Dr. Roger Blumenthal of Johns Hopkins University and the American College of Cardiology.

Triglycerides, another harmful fat, are a good indicator, Blumenthal says. You're at risk despite a low LDL if your triglycerides are over 130, not to mention a low HDL, he said. People who are obese, diabetic of borderline diabetic also are at greater risk, because they often have higher LDL particle counts.

Another way to measure without an added test: Just subtract HDL from your total cholesterol number. The resulting bad-fat total should be no higher than 30 points above your recommended LDL level ? and if they are, it's time for serious diet and exercise, adds Dr. Allen Taylor of Washington Hospital Center.

Still, even some doctors who don't think particle testing is for the masses say they use it sometimes to tip the scales on a borderline patient.

Others use it to guide therapy. Consider Denny Fongheiser of Santa Monica, Calif. At 52, his usual 3-mile-a-day walk suddenly left him panting, but his insurer wouldn't pay for a stress test because his cholesterol was normal.

A month later, chest pain sent Fongheiser to the hospital where he needed a stent to unclog an artery. It turned out he had high particle levels, which his cardiologist now aims to get below the LipoScience-recommended level of 1,000 with cholesterol-lowering drugs.

"I was basically a time bomb," Fongheiser says. He welcomes "being able to test this and know what's going on."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_he_me/us_med_healthbeat_beyond_ldl

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Libya leader orders investigation of Gadhafi death

Libyan Transitional National Council chairman Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, right, and Ali Tarhouni, Libyan National Transitional Council's minister for Oil and Finance, second left, greet Libyan veterans during a press conference in Benghazi, Libya, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Libyan Transitional National Council chairman Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, right, and Ali Tarhouni, Libyan National Transitional Council's minister for Oil and Finance, second left, greet Libyan veterans during a press conference in Benghazi, Libya, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Libyan Transitional National Council chairman Mustafa Abdul-Jalil ponders a question during a press conference for Libyan veterans in Benghazi, Libya, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

Libyan Transitional National Council chairman Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, right, and Ali Tarhouni, Libyan National Transitional Council's minister for Oil and Finance, left, greets Libyan veterans prior to a press conference in Benghazi, Libya, Monday Oct. 24, 2011. (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

In this Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011 photo, an elderly Libyan woman gestures during the celebration of Libya's liberation at Martyrs Square in Tripoli, Libya, Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011. Libya's transitional leader declared his country's liberation Sunday after an 8-month civil war and set out plans for the future with an Islamist tone. The announcement was clouded, however, by international pressure to explain how ousted dictator Moammar Gadhafi had been captured alive days earlier, then ended up dead from a gunshot to his head shortly afterward. (AP Photo/Abdel Magid al-Fergany)

In this Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011 photo, Libyans gesture during the celebration of Libya's liberation at Martyrs Square in Tripoli, Libya, Sunday, Oct. 23, 2011. Libya's transitional leader declared his country's liberation Sunday after an 8-month civil war and set out plans for the future with an Islamist tone. The announcement was clouded, however, by international pressure to explain how ousted dictator Moammar Gadhafi had been captured alive days earlier, then ended up dead from a gunshot to his head shortly afterward. (AP Photo/Abdel Magid al-Fergany)

(AP) ? Libya's interim leader said Monday he has ordered an investigation into Moammar Gadhafi's death in response to strong international pressure to determine how the ousted leader was killed by a bullet to the head shortly after he was captured alive.

Mustafa Abdul-Jalil told a news conference in the eastern city of Benghazi that the National Transitional Council has formed a committee to investigate Thursday's killing amid conflicting reports of how the dictator who ruled Libya for 42 years died. Government officials have said initial findings suggest Gadhafi was killed in the crossfire as his supporters clashed with revolutionary forces seizing control of his hometown of Sirte.

But Abdul-Jalil raised a new possibility on Monday, suggesting that Gadhafi could have been killed by his own supporters to prevent him from implicating them in past misdeeds under his regime.

"Let us question who has the interest in the fact that Gadhafi will not be tried. Libyans want to try him for what he did to them, with executions, imprisonment and corruption," he said. "Free Libyans wanted to keep Gadhafi in prison and humiliate him as long as possible. Those who wanted him killed were those who were loyal to him or had played a role under him, his death was in their benefit."

The U.S., Britain and international rights groups have called for an investigation into whether Libya's former rebels killed a wounded Gadhafi after pulling him out of a drainage pipe in his hometown of Sirte, the last city to fall to revolutionary forces after an 8-month civil war.

Critics also have said the gruesome spectacle of his blood-streaked body laid out as a trophy for a fourth day of public viewing in a commercial freezer raises questions about the new leadership's commitment to the rule of law.

Abdul-Jalil said the transitional government has established a committee to determine what ultimately to do with Gadhafi's body and the decisions will be governed by a fatwa, or religious edict, by the head of the Islamic Fatwa society.

Libya's revolt erupted in February as part of anti-government protests spreading across the Middle East. But Libya's struggle has been the bloodiest so far in the region. Mass protests turned into a civil war that killed thousands and paralyzed the country. Gadhafi loyalists held out for two more months after the fall of the capital of Tripoli in late August.

Abdul-Jalil declared the country liberated on Sunday, launching the oil-rich nation on what is meant to be a two-year transition to democracy. But he also laid out plans with an Islamist tone that could rattle their Western backers. He said Islamic Sharia law would be the "basic source" of legislation, and that existing laws that contradict the teachings of Islam would be nullified.

Using Sharia as the main source of legislation is stipulated in the constitution of neighboring Egypt. Still, Egyptian laws remain largely secular as Egypt's interpretation of Sharia does not cover all aspects of modern life, while Saudi Arabia and Iran apply much more strict interpretations.

Abdul-Jalil also outlined several changes to align with Islamic law such as banning banks from paying interest and lifting restrictions on the number of wives Libyan men can take. The Muslim holy book, the Quran, allows men up to four wives.

Mindful of the concern, Abdul-Jalil said Monday he was referring to a temporary constitution and said he wanted to "assure the international community that we as Libyans are moderate Muslims."

He also said there will be a referendum on a new constitution after it is drawn up.

Islamist groups stand to gain ground in neighboring Tunisia and Egypt as well, after they shook off longtime dictators.

Libyan leaders have said they will form a new interim government within a month of liberation and hold elections for a constitutional assembly within eight months after that.

Concern about human rights violations clouded the declaration of liberation by Libya's new leaders on Sunday.

The New York-based Human Rights Watch warned Monday of a "trend of killings, looting and other abuses" by those who fought Gadhafi after finding 53 decomposing bodies, apparently of Gadhafi loyalists, some of whom it said may have been executed by revolutionary forces.

The bodies were found on the lawn of the abandoned Mahari hotel in Sirte, and some had their hands bound. HRW researcher Peter Bouckaert said the hotel had come under the control of fighters from Misrata before the killings took place.

The condition of the bodies suggested the men were killed between Oct. 15-19, the group said. Bloodstains on the grass and spent cartridges indicated some were shot and killed at the spot they were discovered.

"This latest massacre seems part of a trend of killings, looting, and other abuses committed by armed anti-Gadhafi fighters who consider themselves above the law," Bouckaert said in a statement. "It is imperative that the transitional authorities take action to rein in these groups."

The group called on Libyan authorities to conduct an immediate investigation.

Rebel fighters in Misrata ? a city which had been besieged by Gadhafi loyalists for weeks in the spring, coming under heavy shelling at the time ? had no immediate comment.

Gadhafi's death paved the way for the liberation declaration, but it remains unclear what happened in his final moments.

Jibril Othman, a Libyan fighter involved in the capture, said late Sunday that when he and others placed Gadhafi in an ambulance, the former dictator had not yet suffered what Libya's chief pathologist said was a fatal gunshot to the head.

Omar al-Shibani, a commander at the scene, told a news conference that Gadhafi had been bleeding from the head and the abdomen when he was pulled out of the pipe, but that it was unclear whether the head wound was from a gunshot.

One Gadhafi son, Muatassim, also was killed, but the former leader's one-time heir apparent, Seif al-Islam, apparently escaped with some of his supporters.

___

Associated Press writer Karin Laub in Tripoli and Rami al-Shaheibi in Misrata contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-10-24-ML-Libya/id-ad87526d31314fa58cb2e533d92c6120

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Ratings: Kelsey Grammer's "Boss" comes up short (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Kelsey Grammer's new Starz series "Boss" premiered over the weekend to unremarkable numbers, Starz announced Monday.

The series, which stars Grammer as an iron-fisted Chicago mayor who's diagnosed with a degenerative neurological disorder, accumulated 1.72 million total viewers over multiple airings over the weekend, 659,000 of them during its initial airing Friday at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

A not entirely discouraging start, but "Boss's" premiere numbers fall short compared to other recent Starz premieres.

Both "Torchwood: Miracle Day" and "Camelot," which both premiered in April, posted higher numbers, each racking up 2 million overall viewers over multiple airings on their premiere weekends. "Camelot" was canceled in June.

Perhaps Grammer shouldn't worry too much, however; Starz has displayed a substantial amount of devotion to the series, renewing it for a second season weeks before this weekend's premiere.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/tv_nm/us_kelseygrammer

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