Saturday, December 31, 2011

NYE at Texas Station -- 12/31/11 at Texas Station Gambling Hall & Hotel

Jerry Tiffe kicks off the celebrations early at South Padre, by bringing back the days of swing. Doors open at 1:30 p.m. and the cover is $10 at the door. True-2-Crue will continue the party at South Padre starting at 8 p.m. and tickets are $15. Entry includes a champagne toast at midnight. Over at A-Bar, Darrin Michaels performs jazz from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Guests can enjoy the sounds of Betsy Holm from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Garage Bar and Sideshow performs classics and the latest hits inside Martini Lounge from 9 p.m. to 12:30 p.m.

When: Saturday, Dec. 31, 1:30 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.

Where: Texas Station Gambling Hall & Hotel, 2101 Texas Star Lane, North Las Vegas

Cost: Not available

Age limit: 21+

Categories: Concert, Activities-New Year's Eve, North Las Vegas

Tools:

Event posted Dec. 26, 2011
Last updated Dec. 26, 2011

Source: http://www.lasvegassun.com/events/2011/dec/31/22788/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

[share_ebook] The Study of Religion and the Training of Muslim Clergy in Europe: Academic and Religious Freedom in the 21st Century (Amsterdam University Press - Leiden University Press Academic) - Willem B. Drees, Pieter Sjoerd Koningsveld


Author: Willem B. Drees, Pieter Sjoerd Koningsveld

Date: June, 2008

Pages: 503

Publisher: Amsterdam University Press

Category: Cultures


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The Study of Religion and the Training of Muslim Clergy in Europe: Academic and Religious Freedom in the 21st Century (Amsterdam University Press - Leiden University Press Academic)


The Study of Religion and the Training of Muslim Clergy in Europe: Academic and Religious Freedom in the 21st Century (Amsterdam University Press - Leiden University Press Academic)
Willem B. Drees, Pieter Sjoerd Koningsveld | Amsterdam University Press | June, 2008 | 503 pages | English | pdf

Religious scholarship can be offensive to believers, as conflicts from the time of Galileo and Spinoza to the recent critique of Danish religious scholars in the wake of the infamous Muhammad cartoons have shown. Studies of this type of scholarship have been appropriated by believers as a means of reinventing their own identitiesas the training of twentieth-century Muslim clergy demonstrates. This volume offers a unique collection of training materials from European Muslim clergy since the 1940sincluding Third Reich debriefing reports on their imam training program, surveillance files on Muslim activists, and information on Bosnian clergy and their training centersas well as an exploration of religion and academic freedom in general, accompanied by appendices in both Arabic and English. ?


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    Thursday, December 29, 2011

    White House to seek increase in borrowing limit (AP)

    WASHINGTON ? The Obama administration says the federal government has nearly reached its borrowing limit ? again.

    Treasury officials said Tuesday that the White House plans to request another $1.2 trillion in borrowing authority Friday. The increase is necessary, they say, because the government will be within $100 billion of its current limit by then.

    In the past, such a request would be routine. But this one follows a summer of intense partisan debate over the nation's record debt, which has yet to end despite a last-minute deal reached in August that averted a potential default.

    The increase would boost the debt limit to $16.4 trillion. Congress and the Obama administration agreed to raise it to that level in three steps as part of the August deal. Officials say that should be enough to allow the government to keep borrowing until the end of 2012, or just after the presidential election.

    Congress can reject the request, although Obama can veto their objection. If Congress doesn't act by Jan. 14, the increase will take place automatically.

    The debt limit is the amount the government can borrow to finance its operations. It has soared because the government has run record deficits over the past decade. The borrowed money has helped pay for two wars, stimulate the nation's economy after the worst recession since the Great Depression and finance broad tax cuts initiated during the Bush administration.

    The enormity of the debt has also stoked a debate in Congress over spending and taxes. Polls show growing voter anger with the inability of both parties to reach solutions to the country's budget problems.

    In August, Congress and the administration agreed to raise the borrowing limit by $2.1 trillion in three steps. The deal was reached hours before a potential default on the nation's debt and only after the parties also agreed to cut more than $2 trillion from the deficit over the next 10 years.

    Three days after the agreement was signed into law, credit rating agency Standard & Poor's downgraded long-term U.S. debt. The difficulty Congress and the White House had in reaching agreement was a key reason for the downgrade, S&P said.

    The parties remain at odds over how to reduce the deficit. In November, a bipartisan panel failed to meet a deadline to agree on $1.2 trillion of the cuts. That means automatic cuts of that amount will begin in January 2013 ? a condition included in last summer's deal.

    Republicans want to modify the timetable for the automatic cuts, largely because it includes steep cuts to the nation's defense budget.

    Congress agreed to raise the debt limit by $400 billion in August and by another $500 billion in September.

    House Republicans voted against the second increase. But they failed to block it because the Senate approved it. The increases are scheduled to take effect unless both chambers vote against them.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_bi_ge/us_borrowing_limit

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    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    PhilGonzalez: So You Got an iPad 2? Try These 10 Hip #Accessories http://t.co/ZclxR6bd via @mashable

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    So You Got an iPad 2? Try These 10 Hip #Accessories mashable.com/2011/12/25/ipa? via @mashable PhilGonzalez

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    Light dusting of snow for Mount Washington

    ?

    Mount Washington received a sprinkle of snow over the holiday weekend.

    Last week, resort staff expected heavy accumulation leading up to and over the weekend.

    Seventeen centimetres of the white stuff fell over the last 48 hours, and while not too heavy, did make some fresh powder for slope riders.

    Going back to last year's Christmas holiday, Mount Washington received a whopping 1.5 metres of snow on Christmas Eve.

    Mount Washington opened ahead of schedule this year, Dec. 2, because the snow was falling like crazy and temperatures were below normal.

    However, December came and the mountain has experienced sunny and dry conditions.

    Periods of light to moderate snowfall are expected over the next few days, according to the resort's website.

    ?

    ?

    '; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } google_ad_client = 'pub-9774721429222771'; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_ad_channel ='3389691084'; google_max_num_ads = '4'; google_feedback = 'on'; google_ad_type = 'text'; google_adtest = 'on'; google_image_size = '300x250'; google_skip = '3'; // -->

    Source: http://www.comoxvalleyrecord.com/news/136279408.html

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    Tuesday, December 27, 2011

    Growing poverty looms for next Mexican president (Reuters)

    MEXICO CITY (Reuters) ? When President Felipe Calderon came to power five years ago, he pledged to cut rampant poverty in Mexico. Instead, millions more have joined the ranks of the poor.

    A battle over how to tackle poverty, which is blamed for stunting Mexico's economic development and fueling the rise of violent drug gangs, is already raging between candidates competing to succeed Calderon in a July presidential election.

    From left to right, they have vowed to find a way of addressing chronically weak tax revenues, a failing education system, and the vast concentration of wealth in few hands.

    But with more than a quarter of the economy off the books, the task facing the next president is huge.

    Mexico is home to world's richest man, Carlos Slim. At the end of last year, he was worth around $74 billion, according to Forbes magazine. That's equivalent to roughly 6.6 percent of Mexico's annual economic output.

    Just a few blocks from the Mexican stock exchange that Slim's companies dominate, Marcial Maya earns about 80 pesos ($5.80) a day selling nuts, gum and cigarettes at traffic lights. At that rate he would have to work for 35 million years, 365 days a year to match the tycoon's fortune - provided he spent no money.

    "I have six children, and I want them to study but I am at the point of asking them to leave school," the 37-year-old Maya said. "I just can't afford it any more."

    About half of Mexico's population lives below the poverty line and it has failed to match its big Latin American rival, Brazil, in making significant inroads against the problem.

    LOST YEARS

    A weak global environment has been part of the problem, with Mexico battered during the financial crisis, in large part because it is so dependent on U.S. demand for its exports.

    But Calderon's government has drawn criticism for failing to strengthen the domestic economy. Mexico has had an average annual growth of 2.2 percent since 2003 -- about half the rate for Latin America and the Caribbean.

    Between 2006 and last year, the number of Mexicans living on 2,100 pesos ($150) a month or less jumped from 45.5 million to almost 58 million, according to Coneval, the government body in charge of measuring poverty.

    In 2008, the government's formal definition of poverty changed, stripping out millions from the official tally. But even using the new measure, the number of poor rose by more than 3 million to 52 million between 2008 and 2010.

    Mexico's wealthiest 10 percent earn 27 times what the bottom tenth makes on average, according to figures from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

    By contrast, in the United States, the top 10 percent are only 14 times better off than the bottom bracket.

    Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, a poverty expert and director of the Center for U.S.-Mexican studies at the University of California, San Diego, said Calderon's approach to eliminating poverty had not been thought out properly.

    "He never had a really cohesive or comprehensive strategy," he said. "We lost, in a way, six years."

    After Mexico's 1994-95 economic crash, the government slowly managed to bring back poverty levels back to pre-crisis levels by the time Calderon took office. Then, that momentum ended.

    Calderon's failure to stem the tide has eroded support for his conservative National Action Party (PAN) and has prompted presidential hopefuls to call for a broader welfare net and more investment in education - just as Calderon did himself.

    OUT OF TOUCH

    Known as Oportunidades, Mexico's chief anti-poverty scheme covers 5.8 million families living in mostly rural areas.

    The program's funding has more than doubled since 2003, and coverage has expanded by more than 1 million people, providing healthcare and education to many of Mexico's neediest.

    But Mexico still devotes far less to social spending than Latin America's biggest economy, Brazil.

    In 2009, Mexico spent about 11.2 percent of its gross domestic product on social programs compared to 27 percent in Brazil, according to Cepal, the United Nations economic commission for Latin American and Caribbean.

    While Mexico's government was struggling to contain the spread of deprivation, Brazil lifted some 40 million people out of poverty under former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

    The favorite to succeed Calderon, Enrique Pena Nieto of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), says Mexico is not creating enough good jobs and he has proposed universal healthcare, social security and unemployment benefits for all.

    However, Pena Nieto's proposals will be expensive and he may fail to find a majority in Congress.

    "It costs a lot of money: four or five, maybe six percent of gross domestic product, and the only way you can finance it is with a major tax overhaul," said Jorge Castaneda, foreign minister under former president Vicente Fox, also of the PAN.

    With the notable exception of leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who ran for office on a "poor first" mantra in 2006 and is competing again in 2012, Mexican politicians have frequently appeared out of touch with the needs of the poor.

    Pena Nieto slipped up this month when he was unable to say how much corn tortillas -- a staple of the Mexican diet - cost or what Mexico's minimum wage is: about 60 pesos a day. In February, one of his PAN presidential rivals, Ernesto Cordero, took a beating in the media when he said a monthly income of 6,000 pesos ($430) could cover a family home, a car and private education in Mexico.

    Whoever wins will seek to reduce the size of the informal economy, a fertile recruiting ground for drug gangs.

    Seeking an alternative to low paid work, thousands of Mexicans have drifted into organized crime - often ending up as just another statistic in Calderon's war on the cartels, which has claimed 45,000 lives in the past five years.

    Beneath gleaming skyscrapers in Mexico City's business district, Cristian Ortiz, 30, said he made more money washing car windows than he could with many regular jobs. And he had little faith that things would change with a new government.

    "Politicians have said they're going to fix poverty for hundreds of years, they always say the same thing," he said.

    (Additional reporting by Noe Torres; Editing by Dave Graham and Kieran Murray)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111227/wl_nm/us_mexico_poverty

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    HTC Radar 4G appears on Microsoft's website looking like a Maitre d'

    The HTC Radar 4G is available from T-Mobile. Unlike most smartphones that are released these days, the device was originally launched in white, looking like it was dropped in some snow. That is what makes the picture of the phone found on Microsoft's website so interesting. The variant shown in the image on the Microsoft site has the same white border but the outer part of the device is black. The two-tone look gives the phone the appearance of a Maitre d' wearing a tuxedo.

    We are not sure if HTC plans on issuing a version of the handset looking like this, or if it was just done for the website. We must admit to digging the look, even if it seems formal. In fact, this might be the first Windows Phone handset that gets invited to a Black Tie affair.

    By the way, while the Microsoft website is offering the HTC Radar 4G free with a $50 mail-in rebate, a $100 trade-in value on your old handset, and a signed two-year contract, T-Mobile's site is offering the device for free with the two year lock up.

    source: Microsoft via WMPoweruser


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/phonearena/ySoL/~3/abuOIoXouvw/HTC-Radar-4G-appears-on-Microsofts-website-looking-like-a-Maitre-d_id25089

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    Monday, December 26, 2011

    SonyStore: Did you hear? Sony Store Launches e-Gift Cards with Special $20 Bonus Card: http://t.co/nWUNHBYW

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    Engadget Podcast 269 - 12.23.2011

    It may be Christmas Eve Eve and the fourth day of Hannukah, but so far, this has felt like just another week in the consumer electronics biz. Another loco crazy, pre-CES, sink-or-swim, walk-a-dozen-miles-to-charge-your-cell kind of week. But that doesn't mean we don't have a couple of nice presents for you...including, of course, your very own Engadget Podcast.

    Host: Brian Heater, Tim Stevens
    Producer: Trent Wolbe
    Music: Just a Dream

    01:37 - Engadget Distro now available on Android Market and iOS Newsstand!
    04:46 - AT&T abandons T-Mobile merger plans (updated)
    11:02 - Sony PlayStation Vita review (Japanese edition)
    24:38 - Microsoft's CES 2012 keynote won't deliver 'significant news,' more of 'a wrap-up'
    32:09 - SOPA hearing delayed until the new year as petition signatures top 25k
    35:47 - T-Mobile, Motorola respond to Senator Franken's Carrier IQ questions
    37:20 - Two days in the desert with Apple's lost founder, Ron Wayne
    41:55 - Fusion Garage's website goes dark -- has it bitten the dust? (update: it's back?)
    45:00 - The Engadget Interview: Fusion Garage's Chandra Rathakrishnan... post-fallout
    50:02 - Indian villagers walk a dozen miles to charge cellphones
    53:14 - Listener questions












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    Send your questions to @tim_stevens.
    Leave us a voicemail: (423) 438-3005 (GADGET-3005)
    E-mail us: podcast at engadget dot com
    Twitter: @bheater, @timstevens

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    Engadget Podcast 269 - 12.23.2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Dec 2011 11:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/23/engadget-podcast-269-12-23-2011/

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    Sunday, December 25, 2011

    New Zealand athletes and teams receive funding investments ahead of London 2012...

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

    Source: http://www.facebook.com/insidethegames/posts/10150460603214232

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    Investing in Your Writing Business ? Get Paid to Write Online

    Investing in Your Writing BusinessI suppose it?s natural given the name of this site, but every so often I get a question from a reader about whether it?s really possible to get paid to write and what it takes to do so. Here?s the latest example:

    I really need some reliable words of wisdom regarding the ?real? potential to earn money at this kind of writing and the administrative work that goes into it. I know the energy input of the writing, but I?m hoping your site will have guidance on the return on investment and the amount of investment. ? D

    I was glad to see that D realized that you have to make an effort to succeed at getting paid to write online, but her questions about the investment required and the administrative work needed were also thought-provoking. First let?s look at the investment.

    Investing in Writing Hardware

    Any business needs an investment, and a writing business is no exception. When I started freelancing, I already had a computer and printer, which are the basics you need to get started. What kind of computer you get is up to you. I started out with a desktop, moved to a laptop so I could write from anywhere and moved back to a desktop once I had a fixed abode. I also have a laptop for going on the road and doing client presentations.

    Fixed or Mobile Writing

    My advice: if you want to be mobile, then get a laptop with the biggest screen and fastest processor but lightest weight you can achieve. If mobility is not necessary (say, for example, if you have to be around so kids can stay in school), then a desktop machine offers more hard disk storage, more processing power and the option of a bigger screen. A middle ground, which I have also used, is to have a laptop, but work on my desk with an external screen, keyboard and mouse.

    Do You Need a Printer?

    Unless you are working for local clients who need to see pieces of paper, you can probably manage without a printer and scanner at first. To replace those, you will need to have the ability to save documents as PDFs. I currently use two tools for this: the Microsoft Word 2007 add-on that lets me save documents as PDFs and doPDF which mimics a printer to let me create PDFs. We have a scanner in the house and once every six weeks or so I use it to scan in a signed contract to return to a client. Many now accept email signatures, so it?s getting rarer. As for printing, I have an HP LaserJet and my first toner lasted 2 years ? that?s how little I print. There are other things you can get to trick out your office of course, like a headset, speakers and the usual assortment of software, but the entry cost isn?t very high. Next, let?s look at administering the writing business.

    Writing Business Administration

    Administering your writing business is where things get tricky. Unfortunately, it?s not enough to set out your shingle as a freelance writer and wait for the work to come in. As I pointed out in Getting Paid to Write ? It?s More Than Just Writing on Growmap, there?s a whole lot of work to do in getting your name out there. There are tens of thousands of writers out there, all going after the same jobs. However, don?t be discouraged, because there is also plenty of writing work out there.? In Key Aspects of Your Business Website for Writers (and Small Businesses and Others), I mention another investment you need to make ? getting your own website as a platform for self-promotion.

    The best way to illustrate what it takes to administer a writing business is to give you a snapshot of some of?the tasks I undertake.

    Key Writing Business Tasks

    1. Every year, I set up my client tracking spreadsheet, which includes income comparison figures for the last four years, a forecast of expected earnings for the coming year, and a sheet where I track income received, income on the way and client leads. I?ll be setting that up before the end of the year.

    2. I have subscribed to several job leads emails, which I skim and send bids/queries for the things that interest me. This is a daily task, or at least 3 times a week if I?m busy.

    3. I set out a calendar, including both personal and work obligations and all deadlines so I can have an at-a-glance picture of where I stand. I make sure this appears on my iGoogle page and also send reminders if necessary.

    4. I have a schedule for writing. I check email first thing in the morning, which is already lunchtime for my UK/European clients. I spend 3-4 hours writing in the morning, and another 2-3 in the afternoon. I also do a last email check at night. This schedule varies according to other commitments such as client meetings and volunteering.

    5. I hang out online on Twitter, Google+ and Facebook as well as a couple of writer forums.

    6. I manage income received by entering it in my spreadsheet and managing transfers between Paypal and my bank account. This usually involves checking exchange rates as my clients pay in three currencies.

    7. At the end of every month, I tally the income, update my forecast and assess how much more marketing I need to do in the coming month.

    There are probably other things I do automatically that I haven?t listed here, but these are some of the main ones ? and they take time.

    What about the ROI?

    How you assess the return on investment for your writing business is about whether it meets your personal, professional and income goals. For myself, I can say that since I started freelancing, I have earned a steady income that covers my bills and allows for extras. So yes, you can earn money if you have the skill and put in the effort.

    I?ve also?made connections with great writers and bloggers, some of whom have become friends. I have met clients and others who trust my professional opinion, consider me their go-to person for writing and recommend me to everyone. I think that?s a pretty good return on the time and effort I have spent on developing my writing business.

    So that?s my take on it, but I?d love to hear what the other experienced writers who read this blog have to say. Over to you ?

    (Image: MyTudut)

    Source: http://www.getpaidtowriteonline.com/investing-in-your-writing-business/

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    Saturday, December 24, 2011

    GovPeterShumlin: Help Vermont small businesses! Like Governor Shumlin's Facebook page and automatically enter a chance to win a... http://t.co/9KdEMwQ8

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    App Store making big big inroads in China

    Market research firm Distimo has issued a new report detailing the huge gains the App Store has made in China.
    When comparing the two countries, the Chinese App Store for iPhone devices was just 18 percent of download volume vs the U.S. at the beginning of 2011. By
    ...


    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/xmJu3kpZkcU/story01.htm

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    Friday, December 23, 2011

    2012 Watch: One-year countdown begins

    INAH

    The Maya Long Count calendar and its connection to 2012 have long been topics of controversy.

    By Alan Boyle

    What is it about doomsday that draws a crowd?

    Time after time, doomsayers have predicted the breakdown of society on a date certain, stirring up a buzz that builds to a crescendo and ends in a crash when doomsday doesn't come. 1844 brought the Great Disappointment, 1999 brought the Y2K alarm, 2011 brought the Rapture ruckus, and exactly a year from today, we're due for the Maya apocalypse.

    If the past is any indicator, we'll be intently blogging, tweeting and indulging in black humor as the clock ticks?down to Dec. 21, 2012. Then, on Dec. 22,?we'll look?around?for the next doomsday.

    It's just human nature, says Oregon State University sociologist?Richard Mitchell, author of a book about survivalist?trends titled "Dancing at Armageddon."?Telling stories and trading tips?for making it through the catastrophe that's ahead of us are pursuits that go back to ancient times.


    "The attraction of all of these 'final crisis' tales is in the re-narration, the puzzling out of the details, the putting of fragmented facts into a coherent narrative," Mitchell said.

    There are plenty of fragmented facts to choose from for 2012's "end of the world" narrative, including?the?Maya Long Count calendar, which supposedly winds down to the end of a 5,126-year-long cycle next Dec. 21. Today the?city?of Tapachula in southern?Mexico is?turning on a digital clock for the yearlong countdown, and Mayan priests?are performing a ceremony at a nearby archaeological site.

    They're dramatizing the doomsday date?largely to drum up tourism. "If people are interested, we have to take advantage of this," Manolo Alfonso Pino, the regional tourism director for?Mexico's Chiapas state, told The Associated Press.

    Other angles include the recent string of natural disasters?and extreme weather events,?the upswing in solar activity, and even the ramp-up of the Large Hadron Collider. The narrative gets embellished with additional twists from seemingly ancient lore, such as the?feared approach of a mysterious unseen planet, or a prediction that "30?hours of blindness" will beset us.

    Some of the?concerns should be taken seriously ? for example, heightened solar storms really can have a negative effect on power grids and communication satellites, and the link between global warming and?wild weather is truly a valid topic of scientific debate. But there's no need to worry about Planet X or the LHC, and even the real concerns?aren't any cause for catastrophic talk. Don Yeomans, who heads the Near Earth Object Program at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, addresses the 2012 hype in this video:

    Mitchell doesn't expect the hard-core prophets of doom to accept the assurances of NASA ... or, for that matter, Cosmic Log. "They don't trust the media or academia, because we do in fact pose a real threat ??not to their physical well-being, but to their storytelling," he said.

    Any potential for panic?
    Is there a danger in doomsday stories? Based on his studies of survivalists, Mitchell doubts that 2012 worries will touch off?mass panic. He told me that folks who are worried about the collapse of society usually shy away from group activities. "There aren't any 'groups,' though one will pop up every once in a while, just to see and be seen," he said. "It's just a myth to suggest that groups exist, other than online mailing lists that nudge electrons back and forth. Largely, it's individual activity, if there's any activity at all."

    But Rosanna Guadagno, a social psychologist at the University of Alabama, worries that websites and apocalyptic chatter on the Internet could create a "tipping point" for 2012 hysteria. "I think it's going to ramp up as we get closer to next December," she told me.

    Live Poll

    What will happen in 2012?

    • 171415

      Nothing out of the ordinary.

      63%

    • 171416

      The doomsday hype will cause a disturbance.

      16%

    • 171417

      I honestly think something weird will happen.

      21%

    VoteTotal Votes: 1666

    Guadagno's research focuses on the effect that computer-mediated communication has on social interaction and?influence.

    "The one thing that we have going against us is the way that information spreads online," she told me on Tuesday. "For example, yesterday half the world thought Jon Bon Jovi was dead, just because one person set up a website."

    What if?someone decided to go viral with the apocalypse?

    "It won't take that many?people to take advantage of the Internet, to basically spread a lot of misinformation and cause panic among greater numbers," Guadagno said. "Hopefully the general public will be forewarned that this is all?bunk."

    That's what we're here for. And we'll be here?whenever the bunk hits the fan during 2012. So whatever you do, DON'T PANIC!

    Update for 5 p.m. ET: The doomsday predictions have centered on Dec. 21 as the fateful date, but that's not the unanimous opinion of experts on Maya glyphs. Penn Museum's Simon Martin, for example, is among those who say that Dec. 23 rather than Dec. 21? marks the end of the Maya calendar's millennia-long baktun cycle. Actually, the discrepancy may turn out to be?more than just a couple of days: Gerardo Aldana, a professor at the University of California at Santa Barbara, says conversions of the Maya calendar to the modern calendar could be off by as much as 50 to 100 years.

    An exhibit at the Penn Museum, titled "Maya 2012: Lords of Time," will focus on the ancient Maya people's conceptions of?the universe, including?their ideas about time and the calendar. The?Philadelphia show opens on May 5 and?will end on ... Jan. 13, 2013.?

    Extra credit: After 2012, what's the next doomsday to watch for? Here are a few dates that are popping up:

    • 2014, when the LHC is due to reach full power. Some folks believe the second decade of any century is a rough time, just because it historically has been. Nicholas Boyle, a professor specializing in German literature and history at Cambridge University (and no close relative of mine), has already written a book?on that theme?titled "2014: How to Survive the Next World Crisis." Not sure what that has to do with German, but OK.?
    • 2029, when futurist Ray Kurzweil expects machine intelligence to equal human intelligence.
    • 2045, when Kurzweil foresees a global transformation?dramatic enough to be classified as a "singularity."
    • 2060, the?"no-earlier-than" date for Isaac Newton's predicted doomsday.

    It's interesting that these dates?are?all about 15 years apart. Is there a 15-year doomsday activity cycle, analogous to the 11-year solar activity cycle??That's one more thing to mull over in the comment section below.

    More from '2012 Watch':


    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    Source: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/20/9592763-2012-watch-the-countdown-begins

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    Video: Little dresses bring big hopes to Malawi

    We'll focus on?efforts to help veterans find?jobs and deal with health and family problems. "One of the great blessings in my life has been the exposure I've received to the military?active duty, in the field and veterans,"?says Brian Williams. "They are America?s genuine heroes, and it's a privilege to use our platforms at NBC News to honor all that they have done."

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40153870/vp/45744302#45744302

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    Sunday, December 18, 2011

    Identity, not policy, driving the new Egypt

    Amr Nabil / AP

    Egyptian representatives of candidates and army soldiers guard ballot boxes on a vehicle as anti-riot policemen line up in front of supporters outside a counting center in Giza, Egypt on Thursday.

    By Ayman Mohyeldin , NBC News correspondent

    DOKKI, EGYPT ? Mona Al Shabrawy came into her daughter?s room and eagerly woke her up Wednesday morning. The gynecologist was getting ready to go vote in the second round of Egypt?s parliamentary elections, but there was one problem: She didn?t know who to vote for; her instinct was to turn to her daughter, Aisha, for advice.

    Aisha Al Shabrawy had been closely following the evolving political landscape in post-revolution Egypt. Party pamphlets and candidate manifestos litter the family home. Aisha took to the streets during Egypt?s revolution in February of year, and since then, she been to many other protests in Tahrir Square.


    She has her finger on the pulse on the debate raging across Egypt over the role of religion in politics, which grew more intense after the first round of elections that saw Islamist parties decimate their liberal counterparts and win close to 60 percent of the seats. Aisha didn?t hold back when suggesting to her mother how she should make her choice.

    ?I told her to vote for the Kotla,? Aisha said. ?Kotla? is the Arabic word for ?Bloc? ? it is short form among Egyptians these days referring to the liberal leaning bloc of political parties running together.

    A few hours later, Aisha cast her own ballot at a polling station in Agouza, a town just outside Cairo, for the first time in her life. The second round of parliamentary elections were held Wednesday and Thursday in nine out of Egypt?s 27 provinces.? She voted for the liberals at a women-only polling station.

    It was the culmination of a personal journey for this 31-year-old aspiring jewelry designer that highlights how identity is shaping Egypt?s new political landscape more so than policy. And at a time when results from Egypt?s first round of elections suggest the country as a whole is shifting toward conservative Islamist parties, Aisha is moving in the opposite direction.

    Story of an ex-Islamist
    At the age of 18, Aisha noticed she was increasingly at odds with what she considered to be the materialistic and superficial society around her. Aisha began to find comfort and solace among her more religious friends and ultimately was drawn to the appeal of Islamic preachers like Amr Khaled, who like many other Muslim preachers has amassed a huge online and public following.

    Amr Nabil / AP

    Egyptian women read a candidates list at a polling center in Giza, Egypt on Thursday.

    She began attending religious lessons and meetings that were geared toward the young. ?They knew about the young generation, they were very practical and pragmatic in appealing to the youth,? she said.

    By the age of 21, Aisha had embraced the ultra-conservative teachings of the Salafi movement. Many Salafis say their ?interpretation of Islam is the correct interpretation.? They believe in ?the righteous ancestors? of Islam, or as known in Arabic, the ?Salaf el Salah.?

    For the next two years, she was a self-described Salafist, a pious individual who loved wearing the Niqab ? or full-face veil. She appreciated the sense of community enjoyed by Salafists and their straightforwardness about their beliefs and viewpoints.

    But Aisha also began to see rigidity in how Salafis practiced their religion. She felt the Salafis were putting too much of an emphasis on the external image and behavior that should be projected by its followers, rather than on the spiritual journey inside. They would use guilt and fear to persuade or dissuade their followers from certain actions. It was all beginning to take its toll on how Aisha viewed herself.

    Nearly five years after beginning to embrace Salafist ideology and practices, she began to withdraw from the movement and its associations, opting instead to focus on her own spiritual journey. In 2003, she stopped wearing the niqab and today considers herself liberal.

    Related link: Accusations fly in second round of Egypt vote

    Explosion of political parties
    With the fall of the Mubarak regime and the explosion of political parties, Aisha is figuring out where she fits into the political scene. Many Egyptians expected the emergence of Islamist parties after Mubarak?s ouster. In this conservative society that is often considered the birthplace of political Islamist movements in other parts of the world, Egyptians had grown accustomed to the presence of socio-religious political organizations.

    One movement for close to 80 years has dominated political Islam in Egypt: the Muslim Brotherhood. And after the first round of parliamentary voting two weeks ago, its political wing, known as the Freedom and Justice Party, ascended to the top of the political ladder.

    But the election result that surprised many Egyptians was the strong performance of the even-more-conservative parties known as Salafists. These parties managed to garner close to a quarter of the seats in the first round, which took place in the country?s more urban areas, like Cairo.

    Now, as the voting moves into more rural areas with lower incomes, Salafist (and other Islamist) parties are expected to do just as well, if not better. In poor areas across Egypt, the state for years has failed to provide adequate social services like hospitals, clinics, schools and jobs. These shortcomings were often filled by socio-religious organizations through charitable work.

    These very same charitable organizations are now part of larger political movements and are reaping the political benefits of years of service to the previously neglected masses.

    Identity politics
    At a polling station in Giza, one woman gave her take on Egypt?s elections. ?We are not voting based on policies and solutions to our problems. I don?t think any of these candidates actually have solutions to our daily problems. I don?t know who any of them are, to be honest, but I know what they represent.?

    In that sense, many believe Egypt?s elections are as much about identity as they are about politics.

    ?This vote should not be called elections, these elections should be called a census,? said Mohsen, a 42-year-old computer engineer, walking out of a polling station after voting in Dokki,? a town in Giza governorate just outside of Cairo. ?Based on the results we will know the religious and political orientation of our society, not the policies we need,? he added.

    The notion that many Egyptians are voting based on their identity in elections, which so far have been considered mostly free and fair, after decades of rigged elections and politics dominated by single party rule, may not be a surprise to many Egyptians. But some voters are concerned about what effect identity politics could have on future policies.

    Omar Hikal, a businessman also voting in Dokki, was a first-timer at the polls. ?I don?t believe religion should be the basis for political decisions.?

    And that?s what has many liberals concerned about the first round of voting. ?Egypt is not an Islamic country, it should be a Muslim country,? Hikal said. Liberals like Hikal don?t want Egypt?s largely Muslim identity to become the basis for an Islamic state.

    The country?s military rulers have already suggested that the body drafting the constitution has to reflect Egyptian diversity, something that angered Islamist parties and raised worries about a looming political confrontation between an Islamist-dominated parliament and the generals.

    While the Freedom and Justice Party has tried to allay fears by assuring the public that social restrictions do not top the party?s legislative agenda, not everyone is convinced.

    Aisha, the one-time Salafist turned liberal, said, ?the Muslim Brotherhood may not be lying, but they don?t always say the whole truth.?

    To some, like Aisha and Hikal, both liberal voters, at least the Salafists are ?straight shooters.?
    ?If they want women to stay at home and wear veils, they will tell everyone that?s what we want to do,? said Hikal.
    Others don?t see it that way.

    ?We had the liberals like Mubarak and his children for 30 years and look what he did to the country,? said Mohammed, a 47-year-old barber who voted for the Salafist Nour Party.

    Associating liberals with the era of Mubarak?s rule is a common sentiment among many conservatives who believe the pro-American and pro-Israeli leader was emblematic of liberal ideology of trying to keep religion and religious parties marginalized from politics by force.

    Extremist or an inspiration?
    For Aisha, the sudden emergence of Salafist parties is not a surprise. But their transformation into a political movement is new and will be tested in an expanding political environment.?

    Today, Aisha believes Salafis and other parties have a place in the new Egypt, so long as they don?t force their ideology onto others, something she warns Salafists do subtly well.

    Since leaving behind Salafist ideology, Aisha has been contemplating turning her personal diary into a book.

    A few weeks before the elections, she posted on her Facebook page what she thought would be a fitting title for her story, ?Diaries of an Ex-extremist.? A few hours later, one of her Salafi friends replied? ?You were never an extremist, you were an inspiration.?

    Source: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/15/9475410-identity-not-policy-driving-the-new-egypt

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    Consumer inflation unchanged in November

    By Reuters

    U.S. consumer prices were flat in November as Americans paid less for cars and gasoline, while the 12-month inflation reading fell for the second straight month, which could give the Federal Reserve more room to help a still-weak economy.

    The Labor Department said on Friday the Consumer Price Index was unchanged last month. Economists had expected an increase of 0.1 percent after a drop of 0.1 percent in October.

    Prices rose 3.4 percent in the 12 months through November.

    That is off from the 3-year high of 3.9 percent clocked in September, and Friday's report backs the view that the spike in inflation is subsiding.

    Economists and investors see inflation cooling over the coming months, which could help convince the Federal Reserve to do more to bring down the country's 8.6 percent unemployment rate.

    Earlier in the week, the Fed warned that turmoil in Europe presents a big risk to the U.S. economy, and policymakers left the door open to possible further steps to boost growth.

    Fed officials are divided among those who think high unemployment and sluggish growth require more action and those who view the central bank's already-aggressive efforts as bordering dangerously on an invitation to inflation.

    Most economists have said the Fed's next meeting on Jan. 24-25 would be the more likely occasion for any new moves to add to the U.S. central bank's already extraordinary push to bring down borrowing costs and help growth.

    Food prices rose 0.1 percent, while gasoline fell 2.4 percent.

    Outside food and energy, prices climbed 0.2 percent in November.

    In a sign that could give pause to policymakers still concerned about inflation, core prices rose 2.2 percent in the 12 months through November, up from 2.1 percent in October.

    The U.S. central bank has held overnight interest rates near zero since December 2008 and has bought $2.3 trillion in government and mortgage-related bonds in a further attempt to stimulate a robust recovery.??

    Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/16/9492693-consumer-inflation-unchanged-in-november

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    Saturday, December 17, 2011

    Teacher writes 'stupid' on student's forehead

    By msnbc.com staff

    LIVINGSTON, Tenn. -- A first-year teacher from Overton County may lose his job after writing the word "stupid" across a student?s forehead?with permanent marker, a district official told WSMV-TV in Nashville.

    The math teacher has been suspended indefinitely, Matt Eldridge, director of the Overton County Schools, told the NBC?television station.

    "We're here to help the children and not to hurt them," Eldridge said, adding "One word can break a child. I mean, I've got three children. I wouldn't want it done to mine."

    Read complete coverage from WSMV.com

    The incident happened last week at Allons Elementary, where a student asked a question and the teacher responded by writing on the child?s forehead in front of his classmates, Eldridge told the TV station. The teacher also wrote the word "stupid" backward on the student's forehead, so he'd be able to read it when he saw himself in the mirror, he said.

    "The teacher said, 'I was trying to joke with him,' and of course, I said, 'That?s not the way you joke with anyone,'" Eldridge said.

    Allons Elementary is a K-8 school with a few hundred students just outside Livingston.

    "It's kind of one of those mistakes that's hard to correct," Eldridge said.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/16/9501014-teacher-disciplined-after-writing-stupid-on-students-forehead

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    Democrats weigh dropping millionaire tax proposal (Reuters)

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? President Barack Obama and fellow Democrats are considering dropping a surtax on millionaires to pay for a payroll tax cut for U.S. workers, a move that would remove a major stumbling block to a compromise deal with Republicans.

    Obama discussed the possibility of abandoning the millionaire tax, which Republicans strongly oppose, at a White House meeting with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and fellow Democrats, a Senate Democratic leadership aide told Reuters.

    If Democrats drop the plan to impose a 1.9 percent surtax on income above $1 million a year, it would clear the way for negotiations with Republicans on a deal before the payroll tax cut, which affects 160 million Americans, expires on December 31.

    The tax proposal was seen by some congressional aides as the Democrats' main bargaining chip, one they might be willing to give up if Republicans abandoned an effort to speed up a decision by Obama on the Keystone XL oil pipeline project between the United States and Canada.

    Without an extension, the payroll tax would revert to 6.2 percent from the current 4.2 percent, resulting in an average increase of $1,000 per family. Independent economists have warned that could hurt the country's fragile economic recovery.

    Any setback for the economy would hurt Obama's re-election chances at a time when he is already struggling in the polls because of voter frustration with high unemployment.

    "It remains to be seen if we will drop it," a senior Democratic aide said. "But we want to strike a deal and get this done."

    There was no immediate response from the Republican congressional leadership.

    The Republican-controlled House passed its version of a payroll tax cut bill on Tuesday. It included a provision on the Keystone pipeline. Senate Democrats said they would kill the bill when it came up for a vote.

    (Additional reporting by Matt Spetalnick, Rachelle Younglai and Caren Bohan; Writing by Ross Colvin)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111214/ts_nm/us_usa_taxes

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    Friday, December 16, 2011

    Magic: Howard saga could go 'to end of the season' (AP)

    ORLANDO, Fla. ? Magic general manager Otis Smith says the team's goal remains to keep Dwight Howard in a Magic uniform as long as they possibly can and that the trade talks "could go to the end of the season."

    Smith would not say Wednesday whether trade talks for the center are off, but did say there was no deal in place. Smith says "right now we still have him in a Magic uniform, and that's where we expect him to be until that changes."

    Howard confirmed over the weekend that he had requested a trade to New Jersey, Dallas or the Los Angeles Lakers. The 26-year-old center has publicly softened his stance, saying he would be amenable to remaining in Orlando.

    Howard says the process has been a "roller coaster."

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111214/ap_on_sp_bk_ne/bkn_magic_howard_limbo

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    Obama would veto Republican House tax bill: White House (Reuters)

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The White House said on Tuesday that President Barack Obama would veto a bill proposed by Republicans in the House of Representatives if it were approved by Congress and sent to his desk.

    "This debate should not be about scoring political points. This debate should be about cutting taxes for the middle class," the White House said in a statement, referring to the Middle Class Tax Act of 2011 being proposed by House Republicans. "If the President were presented with (it) he would veto the bill."

    (Reporting by Alister Bull and Caren Bohan; editing by Jackie Frank)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111213/pl_nm/us_usa_taxes_whitehouse

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    Wednesday, December 7, 2011

    Amazon.com executive dies in plane crash

    By KING5.com

    ST. IGNACE, Mich. - An executive with Amazon.com died Sunday in a small-plane crash on the shore of Lake Huron.

    Tom Phillips, 52, of Kirkland, was a general manager with Amazon Web Services, the Seattle Times reports. He was flying to a home he owned on Mackinac Island when the crash occurred.

    Phillips was on the board of several area organizations, including Sacred Heart School in Clyde Hill.

    "Tom's a family man, puts his family first, and he's very involved and committed to our community here at our school and at our parish, and he's one of the first people, if anything ever is needed they call Tom,? said friend Julie Prince.

    Search and rescue controllers at Coast Guard Sector Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., were contacted by a Michigan State Police 911 dispatcher at 10:07 p.m. Saturday, after the dispatcher was called by a concerned family member reporting Phillips and 29-year-old Joe Pann overdue, the Coast Guard said.

    KING5.com's original report and more stories

    The men had departed St. Ignace en route to Mackinaw Island in a Piper Saratoga and were expected to arrive at about 8 p.m. The flight is only about 4.5 miles and should have taken only about six minutes.

    Shortly before noon Sunday, a Coast Guard aircrew involved in the search effort received a signal from a 121.5 MHz emergency locator transmitter. When they investigated the transmitted signal, they found the plane wreckage about 100 yards from the shore and about three miles north of St. Ignace, Mich.

    Federal Aviation Administration records show the plane was owned by the charter company Great Lakes Air Inc.

    Federal investigators are expected to arrive Monday.

    Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/04/9207897-amazoncom-executive-dies-in-lake-huron-plane-crash

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    Tuesday, December 6, 2011

    A Missouri five-and-dime holds its own with novelties

    One of the last five-and-dime stores in the United States can be found in Branson, Mo., where variety and novelty keep customers coming back.

    ? A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.?

    Skip to next paragraph

    Sitting on Branson?s historic square, a store harks back to an era when families loaded the station wagon and drove to town on Saturday. The store sells ?dry goods? from decades past such as ?sewing notions,? 1940s starlet paper dolls, dainty handkerchiefs, wax lips, and lye soap.

    This year, Dick?s celebrates its 50th anniversary. It?s one of the last five-and-dime stores in the United States.?

    Started in 1961 by Dick and June Hartley, the store is now run by their son, Steve, who continues his late father?s dream of offering a shopping experience as entertainment. Dick?s woos customers with more than 180,000 different items and novelty d?cor, such as an extensive framed arrowhead collection and more than 100 World War II-era signed aviation prints hanging from the ceiling.

    ?You have to have heart and a passion to set yourself apart from those box stores because you can?t compete with their prices,? says Mr. Hartley, who left corporate life in 1993 to join the family business.

    Computers don?t track inventory. Instead, clerks working the floor closely watch what sells and what doesn?t. They ask customers what they like. The store is chaotic and lively.

    A grandfather shows his grandson a bag of American-made glass marbles, a potato gun, and a yo-yo. Down another narrow aisle, a tourist fills up a vintage wood, cloth, and metal shopping bag with holiday bubble lights. Still another customer peruses the store?s 250 board games and 30 feet of jigsaw puzzles.

    Dick?s prides itself on obscure items. Hartley scours trade shows for hot sellers such as the 1950s perfume ?Blue Waltz,? cinnamon toothpicks, cap guns, and 20 styles of hair nets in 1960s packaging that sell for 89 cents.

    ?We will keep that dime-store image, fully assorted and fully stocked,? Hartley says.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/Co7r7r1ps4Y/A-Missouri-five-and-dime-holds-its-own-with-novelties

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