Saturday, December 31, 2011

HollandSentinel: Peter Bunn, Hope College men's basketball tops No. 20 Marietta (Ohio) in DeVette Classic semifinals http://t.co/kv5qcQW7

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Peter Bunn, Hope College men's basketball tops No. 20 Marietta (Ohio) in DeVette Classic semifinals zo.pe/r6a HollandSentinel

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Source: http://twitter.com/HollandSentinel/statuses/152583706840793089

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Friday, December 30, 2011

Navalny, Russia's protest hero, fights oil company (AP)

MOSCOW ? An anti-corruption lawyer who has been a key force behind popular protests against Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin demanded Thursday that the country's largest oil company release more information about its investments, saying the firm spends money in "strange and non-transparent ways."

Alexei Navalny's efforts to expose corruption in Russia have gained renewed attention in the wake of the fraud-tainted Dec. 4 parliamentary election that has angered Russians already sick of bribe-demanding public officials and led to the massive protests.

Navalny is a minority shareholder in the state-controlled Rosneft oil company, and has used that position to try to convince courts to help him gain more information from the firm. Navalny, who reaches tens of thousands through his blog and has more than 167,000 followers on Twitter, alleges that the oil giant's investment projects serve as a cover for kickbacks.

On Thursday, he attended a session of Moscow's Arbitration Court to continue pressing for minutes of Rosneft's board of directors meetings in 2009. The court adjourned proceedings until next month for technical reasons. Afterward, Navalny lambasted Rosneft's failure to cooperate with his requests.

"They are reluctant to release the information in order to cover up corruption," he said. "They spend money in a strange and non-transparent ways, throwing them on the Olympic Games, giant construction projects, obscure investment plans."

Rosneft has rejected Navalny's allegations.

Navalny was one of the key speakers at last weekend's protest in Moscow against election fraud, which drew up to 100,000 people in the largest outpouring of public anger since massive protests that swept away the Soviet Union 20 years ago.

Navalny has pledged to take up to 1 million protesters to the streets in the run-up to the March election in which Putin, currently prime minister, intends to reclaim the presidency. Navalny insists the vote is illegitimate because Putin has kept potential challengers away through tight controls over the political scene.

Using his rights as a minority shareholder, Navalny has gathered evidence of corruption at state-controlled oil and gas companies and banks. His cases against some top names in Russian business have made little progress in court but helped attract public attention to some seemingly outrageous practices.

About a year ago, he set up a website where he posts government documents announcing tenders for various goods and services. He has his team of lawyers study the documents, and also offers the public a chance to review them online.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_russia_protest_leader

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Mass anti-Assad protest in Homs as monitors visit (Reuters)

BEIRUT (Reuters) ? Tens of thousands of Syrians in Homs rallied on Tuesday against President Bashar al-Assad, emboldened by Arab peace monitors' first tour of the flashpoint city, after the army withdrew some tanks following days of unrest.

Some 70,000 protesters marched towards the city centre where security forces fired at them and lobbed teargas, activists said.

The observers want to determine if Assad is keeping his promise to implement a peace plan to end his uncompromising military crackdown on nine months of popular revolt that has generated an armed uprising, edging Syria towards civil war.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said security forces killed 15 people across the country on Tuesday, six of them in Homs. An activist network said 34 had been killed on Monday.

Some protesters shouted "we want international protection" in a video posted on YouTube apparently showing a street encounter with the Arab League observers, in which some residents argued and pleaded with them to venture further into the Baba Amr quarter, where clashes have been especially fierce.

There was the sound of gunfire after a resident yelled at one monitor to repeat what he had just told his headquarters.

"You were telling the head of the mission that you cannot cross to the second street because of the gunfire. Why don't you say it to us?" the man shouted, grabbing the unidentified monitor by his jacket.

Gunshots crackled nearby as two monitors and two men wearing orange vests stood amid a crowd of residents, one begging the team to "come and see; they are slaughtering us, I swear."

Damascus has barred most foreign journalists from the country, making it hard to check events on the ground.

The head of mission said the first visit was "very good."

"I am returning to Damascus for meetings and I will return tomorrow to Homs," Sudanese General Mustafa Dabi said. "The team is staying in Homs. Today was very good and all sides were responsive."

Activist reports just before the monitors arrived said up to a dozen tanks were seen leaving Baba Amr but others were being hidden to fashion a false impression of relative normality in the city while observers were around.

"My house is on the eastern entrance of Baba Amr. I saw at least six tanks leave the neighborhood at around 8 in the morning (0600 GMT)," Mohamed Saleh told Reuters by telephone. "I do not know if more remain in the area."

Al Jazeera television showed an estimated 20,000 Syrians in a square in Khalidiya, one of four districts where there has been bloodshed as rebels fight security forces using tanks.

They were whistling and shouting and waving flags, playing music over loudspeakers and clapping. Women were advised to leave because of the risk of bloodshed. But a speaker urged the men to "come down, brothers."

The protesters shouted "We have no one but God" and "Down with the regime." An activist named Tamir told Reuters they planned to hold a sit-in in the square.

"We tried to start a march down to the main market but the organizers told us to stop, it's too dangerous. No one dares go down to the main streets. So we will stay in Khalidiya and we will stay here in the square and we will not leave from here."

ASSAD ISOLATED

The autocratic Assad is internationally isolated. Western powers and his neighbors Turkey and Jordan have called on him to step down, which would end a 41-year-old family dynasty.

He says he is fighting Islamist terrorism steered from abroad and has defied calls to make way for a reformist succession as has transpired in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia after popular uprisings toppled dictators this year.

Armed insurgency is eclipsing civilian protest in Syria. Many fear a slide to sectarian war between the Sunni Muslim majority, the driving force of the protest movement, and minorities that have mostly stayed loyal to the government, particularly the Alawite sect to which Assad belongs.

Analysts say the Arab League is anxious to avoid civil war. Western powers have shown no desire to intervene militarily in a volatile region of Middle East conflict. The U.N. Security Council is split, with Russia - a major arms supplier to Assad - and China opposed to any hint of military intervention.

Assad's opponents appear divided on aims and tactics. He retains strong support in important areas - including Damascus and the second city Aleppo - of the country, and maintains a critical anti-Israel alliance with Iran.

WAIT AND SEE

Homs protesters appeared to take heart from the monitors' sudden presence. They want to impress on the Arab League mission that it must not let its teams be hoodwinked by the state and be shown places where life looks relatively normal.

As the monitors arrived, tanks were seen leaving the Baba Amr district which activists say was pounded for the past four days. Hundreds have been killed in Homs in the revolt - among the 5,000 the United Nations says have died as a result of violence nationwide since protests began in March.

In Baba Amr on Monday, activist video showed bodies crushed and buildings smashed as if by high explosive weapons. The images were impossible to verify.

"We do not want to jump to conclusions and say that this delegation is not objective or did not look for the truth," said Moulhem Droubi, top ranking Muslim Brotherhood member on the Syrian National Council, the opposition umbrella group in exile.

"It is not fair yet to judge. Let's wait and see what it will do," he told Reuters by phone from somewhere outside Syria.

"I expect it will be able to write a report with many facts because the facts are so clear. If they go to Baba Amr they will see that there is destruction."

Syria stalled the Arab League for months before accepting the monitoring mission, the first significant international intervention on the ground since the start of the popular revolt inspired by Arab pro-democracy uprisings this year.

The Arab delegation started with 50 monitors who arrived on Monday. About 100 more are to follow soon.

On the border with Turkey, Syrian forces killed "several" men from an "armed terrorist group" trying to cross into Syria, the state news agency SANA said on Tuesday.

The northern border has become the route of choice for infiltration by army defectors fighting to topple Assad since Turkey's government, once a close ally, parted ways with him over the bloody repression of protesters.

SANA also reported that "an armed terrorist group targeted and sabotaged a gas pipeline near Rastan in Homs province" on Tuesday. The pipeline has been attacked several times in recent months and returned to operation each time.

(Additional reporting by Ayman Samir. Editing by Douglas Hamilton and Mark Heinrich)

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

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Austrian wins WCup GS; Lindsey Vonn finishes 5th

Austria's Anna Fenninger watches the scoreboard in the finish area after winning an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Lienz, Austria, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. Fenninger won a women's World Cup giant slalom Wednesday for her first career victory. Fenninger, who won the world super-combined discipline title in February, finished with a combined time of 2 minutes, 16.08 seconds to beat Federica Brignone of Italy by 0.20. (AP Photo/Armando Trovati)

Austria's Anna Fenninger watches the scoreboard in the finish area after winning an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Lienz, Austria, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. Fenninger won a women's World Cup giant slalom Wednesday for her first career victory. Fenninger, who won the world super-combined discipline title in February, finished with a combined time of 2 minutes, 16.08 seconds to beat Federica Brignone of Italy by 0.20. (AP Photo/Armando Trovati)

Austria's Anna Fenninger celebrates in the finish area after winning an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Lienz, Austria, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. Anna Fenninger won a women's World Cup giant slalom Wednesday for her first career victory. Fenninger, who won the world super-combined discipline title in February, finished with a combined time of 2 minutes, 16.08 seconds to beat Federica Brignone of Italy by 0.20. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)

Austria's Anna Fenninger, center, winner of an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, celebrates on the podium with second placed Federica Brignone, of Italy, left, and thrid placed France's Tessa Worley, in Lienz, Austria, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)

Lindsey Vonn, of the United States, passes a gate during the first run of an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Lienz, Austria, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)

Julia Mancuso, of the United States, passes a gate during the first run of an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Lienz, Austria, Wednesday, Dec. 28, 2011. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)

(AP) ? Anna Fenninger of Austria skied a nearly flawless second run Wednesday to capture a giant slalom for her first World Cup victory, while Lindsey Vonn extended her lead in the overall standings.

The 22-year-old Fenninger was 0.23 seconds off the lead in sixth place after the opening leg. She used a superb second run to finish in a combined time of 2 minutes, 16.08 seconds.

Federica Brignone of Italy was 0.20 seconds behind, and Tessa Worley of France was third. Viktoria Rebensburg of Germany, who led after the first run, finished fourth and Vonn was fifth.

"I can't believe it myself," Fenninger said. "It's my first win ever. I always used to be good at speed events and now I win in GS. I hoped to compete for the top five and never thought of winning."

Fenninger, who won the super-combined title at the world championships in February, was helped by a massive error by Rebensburg. The Olympic giant slalom champion from Germany misjudged a turn shortly before the finish of the second run.

"I made a mistake in the middle part and again near the finish," Rebensburg said. "But I must say, Anna raced really great."

Vonn, who won the season-opening GS in October, boosted her overall World Cup lead. She has 599 points, 231 more than Fenninger, who moved into second place.

Defending overall champion Maria Hoefl-Riesch of Germany, who finished 10th for her best GS result of the season, is sixth with 297 points.

Vonn, who traveled to New York for an appearance on David Letterman's TV show last week, was the first skier down the course for the first time in her World Cup career.

"I was a bit nervous because it was the first time ever I started No. 1," Vonn said. "Especially in GS, it's only the third race that I am in the top seven, so it's pretty exciting."

For Fenninger, winning her first World Cup race was as unexpected as her world title last winter.

"Actually, I feel the strongest in super-G at the moment," she said. "I would have settled for any podium finish today. To be on the podium in front of a cheering home crowd, that's the best feeling you can get as an athlete."

Fenninger hopes her first win will take the pressure off.

"Many people expected me to win a World Cup race, so maybe I pushed too hard for a some time," she said. "Now I feel I have found the right balance ... I made some minor mistakes today, but I did not let them put me off."

Julia Mancuso, who skipped last week's slalom in nearby Flachau to spend time with family in California, had a slow second run and dropped from fifth to 17th.

Both runs took place under a clear blue sky and sunshine. Despite the relative warm weather, the artificial snow held up well.

"The course is awesome, the snow is perfect, they've done a really good job," Vonn said. "It's not easy. You see there is no snow in the area, but they made the race hill perfect."

The slalom is Thursday on the Hochstein course.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-28-SKI-Women's-World-Cup/id-ee779d05282047dd86350f453cd47880

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Heavy D's Cause of Death Determined

After collapsing and dying suddenly on Nov. 8, those close to rapper Heavy D wanted answers about his death. They've now got them with the revelation that he suffered a pulmonary embolism, a blood clot in his lungs, according to a Los Angeles coroner's report released on Tuesday.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/heavy-ds-cause-death-blood-clot-lung/1-a-413924?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aheavy-ds-cause-death-blood-clot-lung-413924

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

JewishJournal: Israel?s Mr. Basketball is also Mr. Goodwill http://t.co/rkPpHM1W

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Israel?s Mr. Basketball is also Mr. Goodwill dlvr.it/12FyD9 JewishJournal

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Hef & Crystal Harris Snarl Over Doggy Custody

As if the thought of their relationship isn?t enough to make you sick to your stomach, now we are hearing about a little squabble these two are having over a dog they shared time with together. The dog in question is named Charlie, and is apparently very dear to both of their hearts. In fact, we?re about to find out if Crystal Harris is more concerned over the fate of the dog than she is of the colossal diamond Hef gave her while they were still together. Hefner apparently offered to let her keep her prized Bentley and the epic ring so long as she returns the dog. Hey, some things really are worth more than money. Here?s how he put it to PEOPLE Magazine: ?We both love the puppy?I told her if she wants to keep the ring and the Bentley, then maybe I can keep the puppy. I hope we will work it out.” Sounds like deal right? He also said that the dog has a preference as well: ?Crystal brought Charlie back because she thinks he’s happier here & I appreciate it, because I really missed him?? What dog wouldn?t be happier at the mansion? Have you [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/tq9_hOPwX58/

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

John Legend engaged to model Chrissy Teigen (AP)

NEW YORK ? John Legend will no longer be a bachelor: He's engaged.

The singer's publicist said Tuesday that Legend proposed to his girlfriend, model Chrissy Teigen, recently in the Maldives.

No more details are being provided.

Legend has won nine Grammys and released four albums. Teigen was named "rookie of the year" in the Sports Illustrated's annual swimsuit issue last year. She also has a food blog.

Legend turns 33 Wednesday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/music/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_en_mu/us_people_john_legend

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South Florida family finds Burmese Python in backyard pool

A South Florida family got a big surprise on Christmas Day, but it couldn?t exactly be called a present.

Miami-Dade Fire Rescue's Venom Unit was called in to capture a 13-foot Burmese Python that had made its way into a backyard pool at Southwest 97th Avenue and 183rd Street on Sunday., according to TV reports from WSVN and NBC Miami.

The incident occurred just as a proposal to ban the import and interstate sale of Burmese pythons and eight other large exotic snakes has stalled, swallowed up in White House bureaucracy for nearly a year, as reported by The Miami Herald this week.

Burmese pythons are a problem in South Florida.

In the Everglades, and its surrounding farm and wild lands, a population estimated in the thousands has eaten everything from alligators to endangered wood rats. Two months ago, in the latest gruesome find, South Florida Water Management District workers captured a 16-footer swollen with a 76-pound deer inside.

Florida wildlife managers have moved swiftly on the snake threat, last year effectively banning personal ownership of Burmese pythons and seven other constrictors as pets. Snakes whose owners had obtained $100 annual licenses and implanted them with microchips before July 2010 were grandfathered in. Reptile breeders, dealers, researchers and exhibitors also can continue operating under a separate permit program, as long as they agree to strict storage and transport rules.

But it?s proven far more difficult to secure sweeping nationwide curbs on the pet trade, which many scientists blame for first unleashing pythons into the Everglades.

Read the full Herald story on the stalled efforts to restrict the Burmese Pythons trade.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/26/2562058/palmetto-bay-family-finds-burmese.html

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Monday, December 26, 2011

Stressed Chinese fight back with pillows

SHANGHAI - A whirlwind of pillows bearing the names of bosses and teachers filled the air as hundreds of Chinese gathered to blow off stress in Shanghai, staging a massive pillow battle.

The annual event marked its fifth year with such a surge in interest from stressed young office workers and students that organizers held two nights of pillow fighting before Christmas Day and plan another for Dec 30.

"Nowadays there are many white collar workers and students that are facing huge pressures at work and at school, so we hope to give them an outlet to release their stress before the end of the year," said Eleven Wang, the founder and mastermind behind the epic pillow fights.

"Sometimes we have pressure on us by our bosses, teachers and exams, so today we can go crazy. Everyone will get to write onto the pillows the names of their bosses, teachers and exam subjects, and enjoy and vent to the maximum," he added.

"After releasing the stress, we can once again face our daily life with joy."

Pillows were handed out at the door as participants entered, then emotion stoked by a rock concert, with many on the floor of the huge event space rocking and waving their pillows in time to the music.

Then came the fighting.

Pillows filled the air, with many combatants opting for throwing rather than using them to whack opponents. A few hapless participants shielded their heads with as many pillows as they could hold, but most ventured eagerly in to the fray.

"I really enjoyed the fight, but my friend was useless. He joined in for two ticks and could not go on, he was afraid of getting beaten by other people," said 24-year-old Chen Yi.

"I thought it was pretty meaningful. I've just been working so much (at the office) and never get to break out in a sweat, so it felt really good."

Others gamely said they enjoyed the experience even though they ended up as attackees rather than attackers.

"I don't know who pushed me, but all of a sudden I was in the pile of pillows, where I became the target of many people, and was beaten by all sorts of people," said university student Zhu Shishan. "Very meaningful."

? Copyright (c) Postmedia News

Source: http://feeds.canada.com/~r/canwest/F7791/~3/5giQvB2pIKk/story.html

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David Stark: NRDC Gala: What Are You a Part of?

2011-12-24-whatareyoupartof.jpg

A couple of weeks ago we had the pleasure of re-inventing the NRDC's annual Forces For Nature Gala at the Museum of Natural History, and it could not have been a more fitting location to raise awareness and funds for the incredible work that this organization does FOR ALL OF US. What does the NRDC do? They revive the world's oceans, defend endangered wildlife, they ensure safe and sufficient water, among many, many other important things to protect our natural world.

It was really important to us to make this a crackling cool evening (not an earthy/crunchy one) and with the innovative leaders of the NRDC, partnered with the evening's honorees Wendy and Eric Schmidt and Arianna Huffington, all at the forefront of digital technology, we created an evening about interconnectedness. We asked the question, "What are you a part of?"

2011-12-24-oceanoflife.jpg

The evening started in the Rotunda of the museum for cocktails. A wall of dry erase boards (which were donated to schools after the gala) became an interactive installation where the guests responded to the evening's question at hand.

2011-12-24-newspaper.jpg

Dinner and the program followed in the Hall of Ocean Life, and as a focal point to the room, we created a giant, open newspaper, filled with headlines and stories heralding the news of NRDC current events. Instead of printing all of the images of the "paper," some were ever-changing projections that either punctuated moments of the presentation or provided incredible eye candy emphasizing why the world is so important to protect.

2011-12-24-dining.jpg

Each of the dining tables were dressed in cloths printed with a collage of news items concerning the environment, all culled from the Huffington Post, traditional newspapers, and other online sources. Thus, the "news" is the conceptual and physical background texture to the room and one of the things that connects us all. The cloths were made into tote bags and given as gifts after the event.

On the dining tables, and befitting the Museum, we created gorgeous nature studies that utilized magnifying glasses and an array of bell jars holding both actual, natural jewels like berries, feathers, and succulents to invented nature -- spiders created from recycled computer keys and webs from copper wire (also salvaged from computers), to name a few. The bell jars and magnifiers were donated to schools after the event.

2011-12-24-belljarspider.jpg

Designing for these kinds of evenings is a wonderful brain teaser. We start with the question, "How can we infuse the meaning of the evening into the d?cor?" That is a hard nut to crack, like the Sunday Times crossword puzzle, but when you do figure it out, it is such great fun! A huge thank you to our friends at the NRDC. We could not have been more honored to lead the charge on your important evening, and we thank you for the amazing work you do for us ALL. We are honored "to be a part of" YOU.

Photography by Susan Montagna.

?

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-stark/nrdc-gala-what-are-you-a-_b_1168439.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Richard_Florida: RT @thinkprogress: FACT: Obama's job-crushing economic policies have created 1.67 million private sector jobs in 2011 #bestof11

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FACT: Obama's job-crushing economic policies have created 1.67 million private sector jobs in 2011 #bestof11 thinkprogress

ThinkProgress

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Source: http://twitter.com/Richard_Florida/statuses/150690503770382336

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Just heard from our HP Canada team that Santa has been spotted off the coast of...

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

Source: http://www.facebook.com/HP/posts/10151084364680290

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

ProPublica: California Republicans Call for Official Investigation of Dems? Redistricting Tactics: http://t.co/fd7Oh765

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California Republicans Call for Official Investigation of Dems? Redistricting Tactics: bit.ly/u1R4Yd ProPublica

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Adidas Accused of Bullying Church in Trademark Dispute; Derrick Rose Caught in the Middle


A church in Northern Illinois claims Adidas is on a vicious campaign to torpedo the organization, and Chicago Bulls star Derrick Rose is caught in the middle.

The Christian Faith Fellowship Church in Zion, Ill., trademarked the name Add A Zero as a campaign to sell clothing and other items to raise money for a new building, a local food pantry and a day care program. Worthwhile endeavors, all.

But in 2009, years after the Church got its trademark, Adidas tried to register the name ADIZERO, for a sub-brand of its athletic clothing. Adidas is marking the line, using Bulls point guard and Chicago native Derrick Rose as its spokesperson.

D-Rose

The U.S. Trademark Office negged Adidas because the church registered it first.

Adidas offered the Church $5,000 to give up the name, and was turned down.

Then, in November 2010, Adidas petitioned the U.S. Trademark Office to cancel the Church's trademark, on ground the Church hadn't used it enough.

The petition is pending, but three weeks ago, Pastor E. James Logan from the Church sent letters to Adidas, begging them to back down. He wrote:

"I have long been an admirer of Adidas and would not expect a company of your stature to try to use wealth and power to bully a working class church."

The Pastor also wrote Rose, pleading for him to knock some sense into Adidas.

Rose rose from one of the Chicago's most dangerous neighborhoods to star for a franchise that has been searching for Michael Jordan's replacement since 1998.

He just signed a five year, $94.8 million contract with the Bulls, and has said he would like to use some of his newfound riches to improve his old neighborhood.

He says he'd like to bring indoor basketball courts and after-school programs to Englewood. Maybe he can start by helping this church keep its trademark.

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/adidas-accused-of-bullying-illinois-church-in-trademark-dispute/

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5 Christmas gifts for the Chicago sports fan in your life

Don't worry all you procrastinators out there.? Here at Lists That Actually Matter we have covered.? Choose any of these 5 gift options, and we promise your family will finally love you!

5. For the druggy Chicago Sports Fan: a Kingpin Jersey.? Go to the Bears website and personalize yourself a #81 jersey with the name "Kingpin" on it.

?

http://word.emerson.edu/fall11jr408-lopes/files/2011/10/theo-epstein-cubs.jpg

4. For the Chicago Cubs fan:? Slacks and a button-down.? A business casual outfit will work great for the Cubs fan in your life because the Cubs best player is their general manager

http://cbssports.com/images/blogs/caleb-hanie-jay-cutler-play-121511.jpg

3. For the Chicago Bears fan:? Give them a brand new Mercedes-Benz, then borrow it and crash it 5 hours later.? Return the next day with an ?07 Chevy Cobalt and apologize for forgetting to get insurance on the Benz.

http://www.hollywoodchicago.com/sites/default/files/Packshot_043396352988_B3079457.jpg

2.?For the Hawks fan: The box-set of the critically acclaimed show, "Community".? Just like "Community", the Hawks are great and loaded with talent, but nobody is watching.

http://d.yimg.com/i/ng/sp/reuters/20101023/17/1103145202-23102010174837.jpg

1.?For the College Sports Fan:? Give him his regular presents while everyone else is opening gifts, then, hours later, secretly give him an envelope with a few hundred dollars in it and tell him?he can keep expecting envelopes like this if he?announces to the room that you are his favorite family member.

Source: http://www.chicagonow.com/2011/12/5-christmas-gifts-for-the-chicago-sports-fan-in-your-life/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Wall Street jumps as traders welcome Santa rally (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? Stocks rebounded sharply on Tuesday as investors latched onto signs of easing stress in Europe's bond markets as well as some positive economic data at home and abroad.

U.S. housing starts and permits for future construction surged to a 1-1/2 year high in November as demand for rental apartments rose. The news reinforced the view that that U.S. economy will continue to see moderate growth.

The Dow Jones home construction index (.DJUSHB) jumped 5 percent led by Pultegroup (PHM.N), the second largest U.S. homebuilder, up 8.5 percent to $6.07, and MDC Holding (MDC.N), up 6.5 percent to $17.22.

"We have been expecting a rally for a couple of days now and finally we got it today," said King Lip, chief investment officer at Baker Avenue Asset Management in San Francisco.

"I think it will continue into the end of the year, the reason being that the economic data is clearly much better than everyone's expecting."

Major indexes were well over 2 percent higher in moderate trading volume, narrowing the S&P 500's losses for the year to a little under 2 percent. Some of the strongest gains came in cyclical areas of the market, such as financials and commodity-related stocks.

The S&P's financial index (.GSPF), which fell sharply in the last session, gained 3.2 percent. Bank of America (BAC.N) jumped 3 percent to $5.14 after falling below $5 for the first time in nearly three years on Monday.

In Europe, the Munich-based Ifo think-tank said German business sentiment rose sharply in December, defying expectations it would decline and underscoring the resilience of Europe's biggest economy.

Short-term financing costs for struggling Spain more than halved as banks lapped up debt at an auction. The fire power is apparently coming from the European Central Bank's first ever three-year funding tender on Wednesday. Investors hope banks will use the cheap funding to buy debt of fiscally troubled EU nations.

Investors have been focused on how the large southern European economies will refinance debt next year if financing costs remain excessively high. Any sign yields may be easing is seen as a positive for markets.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) gained 271.93 points, or 2.31 percent, to 12,038.19. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index (.SPX) rose 29.50 points, or 2.45 percent, to 1,234.85. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) added 71.06 points, or 2.82 percent, to 2,594.20.

"It's not just a question of a bounce back off of what happened yesterday, which is part of it, but you are also seeing to a large degree some fear alleviated particularly because of the appetite for Spanish debt that was showcased in the overnight," said Peter Kenny, managing director at Knight Capital in Jersey City, New Jersey.

"The U.S. is the relative darling for world markets and we get an inordinate amount of attention on the upside, when things in Europe stabilize, even if it's only momentarily."

Headlines and fluctuating European bond prices continue to spark high volatility. Stocks will be prone to large swings this week on expected low volume due to the upcoming Christmas Day and New Year's Day holidays.

The S&P 500 has gained an average of 1.6 percent in the last five days of the year and the first two days in January since 1969, according to the Stock Traders Almanac.

The phenomenon is called the Santa Claus rally. Occasions when the market does not rally during those dates often precede a bear market, the Almanac says.

The S&P fell more than 1 percent on Monday, coming close to a key technical support level at the 1,200 level.

Networking stocks rose after AT&T Inc (T.N) dropped its bid for T-Mobile USA, the Deutsche Telekom (DTEGn.DE) unit, as investors anticipate spending on wireless equipment would accelerate.

U.S.-listed shares of Alcatel-Lucent (ALU.N) surged 13.7 percent to $1.58 and Juniper Networks Inc (JNPR.N) climbed nearly 10 percent to $19.78. The NYSEArca Networking index (.NWX) jumped 5.5 percent. AT&T shares edged up 1 percent to $29.03.

(Reporting By Edward Krudy; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

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

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Monday, December 19, 2011

LG Optimus Slider (Virgin Mobile)


The LG Optimus Slider ($199.99) is an average, low-end Android smartphone. It has good voice quality and a roomy QWERTY keyboard, but it's certainly not going to thrill Android geeks. Factor in Virgin Mobile's low-cost service plans starting at $35 per month, though, and it's worth talking about. Although this isn't a four-star phone when compared to options on other carriers, it's the best keyboarded smartphone for Virgin, and that makes worthy of it our Editors' Choice award.

Design, Call Quality, and Plans
The Optimus Slider measures 4.5 by 2.3 by 0.6 inches (HWD) and weighs 5.5 ounces. It's a bit bulky, in part because of the large keyboard. It's made of dark gray plastic, with a soft touch back cover. The 3.2-inch, 320-by-480 pixel capacitive touch screen is?bright enough, though it could certainly benefit from higher resolution. But it's fine for most tasks, and compatible with most of the apps in the Android Market.

There are four physical function keys beneath the display, and the phone slides open to reveal a four-row QWERTY keyboard. The keyboard is comfortable and roomy with large, well-separated plastic keys. Typing long messages is easy on the Slider.

The Slider is a dual-band EV-DO Rev. A (850/1900 MHz) device with 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi support. Reception is good (Virgin uses Sprint's network), and call quality is solid overall. Voices sound clear in the phone's earpiece, though a bit thready. Calls made with the phone sound crisp and natural, with very good background noise cancellation. Calls sounded clear through a?Jawbone Era?Bluetooth headset ($129, 4.5 stars), and voice dialing worked fine over Bluetooth without training. The speakerphone sounds a bit thin and doesn't go loud enough for outdoor use. Battery life was great at 8 hours, 17 minutes of talk time.

The biggest selling point here is Virgin Mobile's inexpensive pricing plans. You can sign up for an unlimited text, data, and Web plan for as little as $35 per month with 300 voice minutes. 1200 minutes costs $45, and unlimited voice calling brings the price to $55 per month. If you're more of a message and data user than a talker, that $35 plan is hard to beat?especially considering that a data plan alone will cost you $30 on a carrier like Verizon Wireless, and for that price you're limited to 2GB of data per month! Virgin does have one downside for heavy data users: there's no tethering or hotspot mode, so you can't use a laptop with this connection.

Apps and OS
The Optimus Slider is running Android 2.3.4 (Gingerbread). There are a few minor customizations from LG, but this is pretty close to stock-Android. There are five home screens you can swipe between that come preloaded with a few useful apps and widgets. There's also some non-deletable bloatware, but it's kept to a minimum, and navigating around the phone feels swift and responsive. The Slider offers all of Android's usual benefits, including free, voice-enabled, turn-by-turn GPS navigation, excellent email capabilities, and a powerful WebKit browser. It should work with most of the 250,000+ third-party apps available in the Android Market.

The phone is powered by an 800MHz Qualcomm MSM7627T processor. It's no speed demon, but it pulled in average benchmark scores for a lower-end Android device. It should be up to task for most common uses, but count it out for high-end gaming. Also, don't assume this phone will get an Android 4.0 "Ice Cream Sandwich" update.

Multimedia, Camera, and Conclusions
There's a microSD card slot beneath the back phone's cover. A 2GB card comes preloaded; my 32 and 64GB cards worked fine as well. There's also 156MB of free internal storage. Music tracks sounded good through both wired headphones and Altec Lansing Backbeat?Bluetooth headphones ($99.99, 3.5 stars). I was able to play AAC, MP3, OGG, WAV, and WMA test files, but not FLAC. Standalone video support isn't as good. I was only able to play MP4 and H.264 test files, at resolutions up to 800-by-480. Audio for videos was slightly out of sync over Bluetooth.

The 3.2-megapixel auto-focus camera has no flash. Test photos were average, at best. There's a long, 1.3 second shutter delay, and photos taken indoors show average detail, but colors are dull. Outdoor shots in bright light are a little better, but still underwhelming. The camcorder records videos at a choppy 13 frames per second indoors and a slightly better 15 frames per second outside.

Video support and camera aside, the LG Optimus Slider is a solid keyboarded smartphone, and a really good value when you factor in Virgin's inexpensive plan pricing. We haven't reviewed it on Virgin, but the?Samsung Intercept?(3 stars) is less expensive, at $79.99, though it's running an older version of Android on a slower data network. If you're willing to drop the keyboard, your best bet is the Motorola Triumph?($239.99, 4 stars), which features a much larger, sharper display, and a faster processor. But if you value texting above all else, stick with the Slider.

Benchmarks
Continuous talk time: 8 hours 17 minutes

More Cell Phone Reviews:
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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/MHipTii-b24/0,2817,2397702,00.asp

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Russia Protests Demand Rerun Of Elections

MOSCOW -- About 1,000 demonstrators demanding a rerun of parliamentary elections gathered Saturday in central Moscow for a second weekend of protests against Russia's fraud-tainted vote, a comparatively small crowd that underlined the challenge to the opposition of keeping up public pressure on authorities.

The turnout was far below the nationwide protests last Saturday in at least 60 cities, including a dramatic gathering of tens of thousands in Moscow, the largest show of public anger in post-Soviet Russia. Demonstrations took place in at least two other cities on Saturday.

The protests follow the Dec. 4 national parliamentary elections, in which the ruling United Russia party lost a significant share of its seats in the State Duma, though it retained a narrow majority. Opposition forces claim even that was unearned, supported by reports from local and international observers of widespread vote-count irregularities and outright fraud.

Grigory Yavlinsky, the leader of the Yabloko party that failed to make it into the parliament and staged Saturday's rally, said it had filed hundreds of appeals to protest the vote results. "We need a new election law and new, honest elections," he told the rally at Bolotnaya Square, on an island in the Moscow River a few hundred meters (yards) from the Kremlin.

The combination of fraud and United Russia's declining fortunes galvanized opposition groups that have been repressed under Putin's 12 years of rule. After several nights of unauthorized protests that police broke up harshly, Moscow authorities showed unprecedented largesse in granting permission to hold several large protests last weekend.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin this week effectively rejected calls to rerun the election, declaring that its result reflected the people's will. The new Duma is to have its opening session on Wednesday.

President Dmitry Medvedev, who is stepping aside to allow Putin to run for a new term in the Kremlin, warned Saturday against attempts to "delegitimize" the government, saying it will mean the collapse of the state. Like Putin earlier this week, he promised to modernize Russia's political system, adding that the "old model has exhausted itself."

Medvedev on Friday had a phone call with President Barack Obama, who raised questions about the disputed election and welcomed his promise to investigate whether fraud had occurred, the White House said.

Taking a defiant note at a meeting with United Russia activists Saturday, Medvedev said he had told Obama Russia doesn't care about the U.S. assessment of the vote and that the U.S. criticism was unacceptable.

"When we hear lectures in the worst traditions of the Cold War, it causes indignation," Medvedev said.

Unimpressed by the government's vague promises of liberalization, the opposition aims to keep up the pressure with a series of protests, and is placing much hope on a Moscow rally Dec. 24 that organizers believe will attract at least 50,000 people.

Protesters on Saturday repeated demands of last weekend's protest, calling for a repeat election, the punishment of those responsible for vote fraud and the release of political prisoners. Speakers angrily dismissed Putin's comment this week in which he claimed protest leaders were acting at the West's behest and sarcastically said he thought the white ribbons many protesters wear as an emblem were condoms.

"He was calling us condoms financed by the State Department, crooks that are trying to steal the country, and I think that this is the reaction that shows he was scared," said Ilya Ponomarev of the Left Front opposition movement

"We are speaking here against vote fraud, which is a political HIV," Yabloko leader Sergei Mitrokhin said, citing an inscription Yabloko printed on white ribbons handed out to protesters.

Russian news media also reported about 500 people held a protest in the Siberian city of Irkutsk, several hundred gathered in Yekaterinburg in the Urals and about 100 tried for an unauthorized rally in Samara, where four demonstrators were arrested.

The wave of protest comes less than three months before Putin is to run for a new term as president, the post he held in 2000-2008, and indicates his return to the Kremlin may be less easy than initially assumed for the man who has dominated Russia over the past dozen years.

On Saturday, the Communist Party nominated its leader Gennady Zyuganov to run for president. Zyuganov forced Boris Yeltsin into a run-off in the 1996 presidential election and although the Communists' support has declined since then, he could attract a protest vote against Putin.

_____

Associated Press writer Jim Heintz in Moscow contributed to this report.

(This version corrects attribution of "scared" quote to Ponomarev.)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/17/russia-protests_n_1155327.html

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US lifts sanctions on Libya

The United States on Friday lifted most of the economic sanctions it had in place against Libya before the fall of former ruler Moammar Gadhafi.

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"After careful consultation with the new Libyan government, the United States rolled back most U.S. sanctions on the government of Libya to keep our commitment to the Libyan people,'' the White House said in a statement.

The action unfreezes all government and Central Bank of Libya funds within U.S. jurisdiction, with limited exceptions. Assets in the U.S. of the Gadhafi family and former Gadhafi regime members remain frozen.

The move was announced the same day the U.N. Security Council lifted sanctions on Libya's central bank and a subsidiary, clearing the way for their overseas assets to be unfrozen to ease a cash crisis, a council diplomat said.

The Central Bank of Libya and the Libyan Foreign Bank, an offshore institution wholly owned by the central bank, were taken off the council's sanctions list drawn up earlier this year amid civil war in the Arab state.

Gadhafi killing may be war crime, ICC says

After a rebellion broke out in February against Gadhafi, the Security Council froze Libyan assets abroad, estimated at $150 billion. Most of that sum has remained beyond the reach of the oil-rich country's new rulers.

Gadhafi's 42-year rule collapsed when his forces fled Tripoli in August, and the last of the fighting in Libya ended in October when he was captured and killed by rebels.

Yet by late November only about $18 billion in seized assets had been released by special provisions of the Security Council's Libya sanctions committee, and diplomats said only about $3 billion of that had been made available to Tripoli.

A U.N. resolution in September eased sanctions on Libya, removing them from the national oil company but leaving them largely in place on the central bank and LFB because of legal problems over unfreezing their foreign assets.

Last week, senior figures in Libya's new leadership wrote the committee asking it to delist the two banks, which had been sanctioned along with two Libyan investment authorities.

The move was "essential for the economic stability of Libya; for confidence in the banking sector; for the smooth execution and settlement of both domestic and international banking transactions; and to underpin the social and microeconomic stability of the new Libya," said the letter, obtained by Reuters.

Frustration at the delay in releasing the assets has been growing inside Libya, where the interim government says it urgently needs the cash to pay the wages of public sector workers and to start re-building state institutions.

Reuters contributed to this story.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45702880/ns/world_news/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Japan says stricken nuclear power plant in cold shutdown (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? Japan declared its tsunami-stricken Fukushima nuclear power plant to be in cold shutdown on Friday in a major step toward resolving the world's worst nuclear crisis in 25 years.

The Fukushima Daiichi plant, 240 km (150 miles) northeast of Tokyo, was wrecked on March 11 by a huge earthquake and a towering tsunami which knocked out its cooling systems, triggering meltdowns, radiation leaks and mass evacuations.

In making the much-anticipated announcement, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda drew a line under the crisis phase of the emergency at the plant and highlighted the next challenges: post-disaster clean-up and the safe dismantling of the plant, something experts say could take up to 40 years.

"The reactors have reached a state of cold shutdown," Noda told a government nuclear emergency response meeting.

"A stable condition has been achieved. It is judged that the accident at the plant itself has ceased," he added, noting radiation levels at the boundary of the plant could now be kept at low levels, even in the event of "unforeseeable incidents."

"The government is due to set a clear road map and will do the utmost to decommission the plant," Noda later told a news conference.

A cold shutdown is when water used to cool nuclear fuel rods remains below boiling point, preventing the fuel from reheating. One of the chief aims of the plant's operator, Tokyo Electric Power (Tepco), had been to bring the reactors to cold shutdown by the year-end.

After months of efforts, the water temperature in all three of the affected reactors fell below boiling point by September, but Tepco has been cautious about declaring a cold shutdown, saying it had to see if temperatures and the amount of radiation emitted from the plant remained stable.

The declaration of a cold shutdown could have repercussions well beyond the plant. It is a government pre-condition for allowing about 80,000 residents evacuated from within a 20 km (12 mile) radius of the plant to go home.

But Kazuhiko Kudo, professor of nuclear engineering at Kyushu University, said authorities still needed to determine exactly the status of melted fuel inside the reactors and stabilize a makeshift cooling system, which handles the tens of thousands of tons of contaminated water accumulated on-site.

"What is more important is the next steps the government and Tepco decide to take," Kudo said.

HUGE COSTS, ANXIETY

The government and Tepco will aim to begin removing the undamaged nuclear rods from the plant's spent fuel pools next year. However, retrieval of fuel that melted down in their reactors may not begin for another decade.

The enormous cost of the cleanup and compensating the victims has drained Tepco financially. The government may inject about $13 billion into the company as early as next summer in a de facto nationalization, sources told Reuters last week.

An official advisory panel estimates Tepco may have to pay about 4.5 trillion yen ($57 billion) in compensation in the first two years after the nuclear crisis, and that it will cost 1.15 trillion yen to decommission the plant, though some experts put it at 4 trillion yen ($51 billion) or even more.

Japan also faces a massive cleanup task outside the east coast plant if residents are to be allowed to go home. The Environment Ministry says about 2,400 square km (930 square miles) of land around the plant may need to be decontaminated, an area roughly the size of Luxembourg.

The crisis shook the public's faith in nuclear energy and Japan is now reviewing an earlier plan to raise the proportion of electricity generated from nuclear power to 50 percent by 2030 from 30 percent in 2010.

Japan may not immediately walk away from nuclear power, but few doubt that nuclear power will play a lesser role in future.

Living in fear of radiation is part of life for residents both near and far from the plant. Cases of excessive radiation in vegetables, tea, milk, seafood and water have stoked anxiety despite assurances from public officials that the levels detected are not dangerous.

Chernobyl's experience shows that anxiety is likely to persist for years, with residents living near the former Soviet plant still regularly checking produce for radiation before consuming it 25 years after the disaster.

(Editing by Tomasz Janowski, Mark Bendeich and Robert Birsel)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/wl_nm/us_japan_nuclear

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Roche melanoma drug wins European green light (Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) ? European regulators have recommended approval of a targeted melanoma drug from Swiss group Roche Holding AG, opening the way to a new treatment option for patients with the deadliest form of skin cancer.

The green light for Zelboraf from the European Medicines Agency -- which Roche said on Friday it expected to be formally endorsed by the European Commission in February -- follows U.S. approval in August.

The new drug is given as a twice-daily pill and is designed to be used alongside a companion diagnostic test, also from Roche, that identifies which patients have a specific genetic mutation that means they will benefit from the treatment.

The London-based agency said the benefits of Zelboraf, particularly the improvements seen in terms of patients going longer before their disease progressed and overall survival, outweighed its potential risks.

Side effects from Zelboraf can include secondary growths, rash, slight hair loss, extreme photosensitivity and joint pain.

Zelboraf was developed in partnership with Daiichi Sankyo and became the second drug to be approved for melanoma in the United States this year, after Yervoy from Bristol-Myers Squibb.

Roche said in August that Zelboraf would cost just over $56,000 for a six-month course of treatment in the United States. It has yet to announce a price in Europe.

Analysts tracked by Thomson Reuters Pharma, on average, forecast annual sales of $930 million for the medicine by 2016, making it a useful addition to Roche's market-leading portfolio of cancer therapies.

Zelboraf, known clinically as vemurafenib, is targeted for patients with tumors that have a mutation in a gene known as BRAF that allows melanoma cells to grow. About half of all melanomas have the genetic aberration the drug targets.

The European drugs watchdog said it backed Zelboraf for treating patients with the BRAF mutation who suffered from metastatic or unresectable melanoma, meaning it cannot be removed by surgery.

Melanoma globally afflicts nearly 160,000 new people each year. It can spread quickly to internal organs and average survival is six to nine months.

(Reporting by Ben Hirschler)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/cancer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111216/hl_nm/us_europe_medicines

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Putin's challenger vows to pardon Khodorkovsky (AP)

MOSCOW ? The Russian billionaire who plans to challenge Vladimir Putin in Russia's presidential election said Thursday that his first move if elected will be to pardon jailed tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky.

Mikhail Prokhorov said he would also allow free registration of opposition parties and restore popular elections of provincial governors if he wins March's vote. Putin has marginalized opposition forces, tightened election rules and abolished direct elections of governors.

The 46-year-old Prokhorov, estimated to be worth $18 billion, made his fortune in metals, banking and media. He also owns 80 percent in the New Jersey Nets. Khodorkovsky, once Russia's richest man, has been in jail since 2003 on tax evasion and fraud charges seen as a punishment for defying Putin's power.

Khodorkovsky's lawyers have lost numerous appeals to clear him of the charges.

Prokhorov's surprise announcement this week that he would seek the presidency came in the wake of nationwide protests over alleged fraud in national parliament elections. The protests, which included a throng of tens of thousands in Moscow, were an unprecedented public display of widespread discontent with the man who has dominated Russian politics for a dozen years as president and later as prime minister.

Putin stepped down as president in 2008 because of term limits, but seeks to return to the Kremlin in the March 4 election.

Speaking at a meeting with supporters at a meeting to nominate him for the race, Prokhorov hailed last weekend's protest in Moscow against vote fraud, which attracted tens of thousands in the largest show of discontent in 20 years.

"I deeply understand the demands and the strivings of the people who took to the streets," Prokhorov told reporters, adding that he may join a follow-up protest later this month.

Prokhorov said that "expert opinion" has prompted him to believe that the Dec. 4 parliamentary election was unfair and rigged. But he argued for a legal response to the fraud allegations.

The tycoon avoided criticizing Putin directly, but said he wasn't afraid to challenge his power: "Putin is a serious rival, but I'm not afraid of competition."

Prokhorov, noted for his playboy lifestyle, also humorously noted that he might need to settle down and find a potential first lady.

"I'm ready even for this ? if that's necessary for my country and for winning the presidential election."

Prokhorov's presidential bid follows his botched performance before the parliamentary election when he formed a liberal political party with the Kremlin's tacit support but abandoned it under what he called Kremlin pressure.

Some observers alleged that Prokhorov may have made amends with the Kremlin and might be running for president to accommodate voters unhappy with the authorities to steal the thunder from the opposition.

Prokhorov said in his blog Wednesday that he would play his own game.

"Naturally, my candidacy is good for the Kremlin. Naturally, they want to play democracy and show that people have 'some kind of a choice'," he wrote.

"But we must absolutely use the authorities, too, if we don't want to just make some noise and disappear, but to change our lives for the better."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_prokhorov

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Morocco bans EU fishing amid row

Morocco has ordered foreign fishing boats operating in its waters under an EU deal to leave immediately.

The moves comes after the European Parliament voted not to extend a deal under which the EU paid Morocco for access to its fish stocks.

MEPs said the deal was illegal as it did not benefit the people living in the disputed Western Sahara, off which most of the fishing took place.

The ministry said the parliament's decision was "regrettable".

In a statement, it said the move could have "serious consequences for co-operation between Morocco and the European Union in fishing".

The EU - Morocco's largest trading partner - had been paying 36m euros (?30m: $47m) a year to Morocco for the right to fish in its waters, primarily off the coast of Western Sahara.

The deal officially expired in February, and the EU wanted it to be renewed up until February next year.

But on Wednesday, MEPs using powers granted under the Lisbon Treaty voted 326 to 296 to block the renewal, saying there was not enough evidence to show the deal would benefit the Sahrawi population, who live in Western Sahara.

Critics of the deal also said it was a waste of public funds and led to over-fishing.

Morocco annexed Western Sahara in 1976 but its claims of sovereignty have not been internationally recognised.

The separatist Polisario movement fought a guerrilla war against Moroccan troops until 1991 and still seeks to be recognised as an independent state.

The European Parliament said a new deal should be negotiated which does more to take the Western Sahara issue into account.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-africa-16191266

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Europe's radical right focuses on fighting Islam (AP)

COPENHAGEN, Denmark ? As daylight broke on June 4, worshippers found a mosque in southern Denmark defaced with drawings of the Prophet Muhammad and slogans urging Muslims to "go home."

In late October, a dismembered pig was buried on the planned construction site of a planned mosque on the outskirts of Copenhagen.

Both acts were the work of the Danish Defence League, a year-old far-right group that claims it's not opposed to foreigners in general, just Muslims.

"We are not racists. We are not Nazis," insists Bo Vilbrand, the group's 24-year-old spokesman. As if to prove his point he says the Danish Defence League welcomes blacks and Jews.

The group and its larger English forebear represent a new crop of right-wing radicals who don't fit the mold of the boot-stomping, Jew-hating neo-Nazis. This movement claims its fight is against Islam, and uses crusader symbols instead of swastikas. It frames its mission as a cultural struggle, although opponents say it is little more than old-fashioned xenophobia hiding beneath anti-Islamic rhetoric.

European authorities were just starting to consider the far-right, anti-Muslim movement's potential for violence when Norwegian militant Anders Behring Breivik took it to unimaginable extremes on July 22, massacring 77 people in the name of an anti-Islamic revolution.

"Oslo was an eye-opener," says Hajo Funke, an expert on European right-wing extremism at the Free University Berlin.

Norway's PST security service highlighted the rise of the anti-Islamic groups in its annual threat assessment in March, although chief analyst Jon Fitje says the movement in many ways remains uncharted.

"There seems to be many people who share Breivik's general views, even though they of course condemn his actions," Fitje told The Associated Press. "But we don't know much about this. And we don't know how much we should know about it," because PST is not allowed to register people based on their political views.

Anti-Muslim sentiment in Europe is nothing new. Since the 9/11 terror attacks in the U.S. it has boosted anti-immigration political parties from Scandinavia to France. However, it started taking a more radical form in recent years, mostly online, but also with small groups organizing street protests against a perceived Islamization of Europe.

In France, the anti-Muslim Bloc Identitaire has emerged as one of the loudest voices on the extreme right fringes.

A key development came in 2009 with the creation of the English Defence League, which claims to be peaceful but whose anti-Muslim protests have ended in clashes with police and left-wing demonstrators. Two years after counting about 50 members, the group boasts its ranks have swollen to 10,000, though authorities say its fluid nature makes it hard to measure.

What is clear is that hundreds of people, including soccer hooligans, have turned up for the EDL's protests, and European police agency Europol in 2010 said its quick rise had raised the profile of right-wing extremism in Britain.

The EDL has spawned offshoots across northern Europe, with varying success. Most are Facebook groups only. A handful of people showed up for a Norwegian Defence League rally in April, and a Dutch version was disbanded earlier this year.

The Danish Defence League appears to have been more successful. Vilbrand says it has 200-300 active members and more than 1,000 supporters who pay membership fees but don't take part in activities.

Denmark's PET security service declined to comment on the group. Danish experts on right-wing extremism say the Danish Defence League exaggerates its size, but is growing ? unlike many traditional far-right group.

Danish blogger Margrethe Hansen, who spent three months infiltrating far-right groups online, says the Danish Defence League probably counts about 100 active members ? a considerable number considering the group was founded last year ? and has the potential to become the strongest far-right group in Denmark.

Last year, she spied on the Facebook pages of Scandinavian anti-Muslim groups, including the Danish Defence League, by creating a fake profile. Posing as a rabid nationalist, she says she found the anti-Muslim community has more in common with white supremacists than its leaders admit.

"Under the facade, when I was undercover on the Internet, I participated in closed groups where they are talking like racists: `Immigrants are stealing our money, our women,'" she says. "But it's an easier message to sell if you say `we are against extreme Islam.'"

Hansen says she lives at a secret address after receiving death threats from anti-Muslim extremists who see her as a traitor for embracing multiculturalism.

Using her fake profile, she even became Facebook friends with Breivik but says his rhetoric wasn't particularly extreme and that he didn't drop any hints of his plans to set off a bomb in Oslo and gun down youths at a left-wing party's summer camp.

"When I found out it was Breivik, I was totally shocked," she says. "I sometimes think, why didn't I see it coming?"

Hansen says Danish police have questioned her on behalf of Norwegian police about Breivik's online communication and her insights into the anti-Islamic community.

The anti-Islamic movement's ideological roots can be found in the so-called "counterjihadist" community of American and European bloggers who on sites such as "Gates of Vienna" and "Brussels Journal" say Muslim immigrants are colonizing Europe with the tacit approval of left-wing political elites.

In his online manifesto, Breivik cited many of those bloggers, including a fellow Norwegian using the pseudonym "Fjordman" ? who wrote chillingly that if governments don't stop Muslim immigration, Europeans must act to "protect our own security and ensure our national survival."

Breivik, who was recently declared criminally insane, also praised the English Defence League and other anti-Muslim groups, and reveled in the symbolic crusader imagery they use. The "Knights Templar" resistance movement he claims to belong to appears to be a figment of his imagination, investigators say.

Some of the American bloggers cited in Breivik's manifesto won devoted followings during the controversial 2010 attempt to base a mosque near the site of the destroyed World Trade Center in New York. But despite the bloggers' high-profile roles and a recent surge in anti-Islamic hate crimes in the U.S., there is no clear evidence that dangerous U.S.-based extremist groups have pursued strong anti-Muslim agendas, experts in domestic extremism say.

"The main focus of American extremists like neo-Nazis and the Klan is still aimed at African-Americans and Latino immigrants," said Heidi Beirich, director of research for the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups.

In Europe, "counterjihadist" blogs as well as defence leagues and other anti-Islamic groups have rejected Breivik as a deranged psychopath. Investigators believe he plotted and carried out his mayhem alone.

Still, some analysts believe the rhetoric used in the anti-Islamic community is so aggressive it should come as no surprise that, eventually, someone would leap from words to action.

"There is something in the ideology itself which makes violence a logical result," says Oeyvind Stroemmen, a Norwegian Green Party member and writer who warned of violence from anti-Muslim extremists before the July attacks.

British researcher Toby Archer, who has also studied the anti-Muslim movement, said it wasn't surprising that sooner or later "there would be people seeing themselves as the movement's special forces or shock troops."

Others caution against drawing far-reaching conclusions from what happened in Norway. Breivik's violence was unprecedented in the anti-Muslim movement, and it's rare in terms of the far-right in general.

The last European attack on a similar scale blamed on right-wing extremists was the 1980 bombing of a railway station in Bologna, Italy, that killed 85 people. Islamist terrorists are still considered the biggest threat to European security.

Yet many experts say the anti-Muslim groups have a greater potential to grow than traditional far-right extremists, who are struggling to boost their numbers.

That realization has led some political fringe groups, like the British National Party and Belgium's Vlaams Belang, to shift from blanket opposition to immigration to a focus on Islam.

The manifesto of the BNP, whose leader has a conviction for racial hatred and has denied the Holocaust in the past, includes a "counterjihadist" chapter, saying Europe is being invaded by Muslims.

Even hardcore white supremacists are debating whether to stress the anti-Muslim message as a marketing tool.

In Sweden, where neo-Nazis committed a series of murders in the 1990s, the white power movement is split between those who say "Holocaust denial" won't boost their following and hardline racists who stick to their old ways, says Johan Olsson, an analyst at the Swedish Security Service.

Vilbrand, who uses the alias "Bo Rightwing" on the Internet, claims his group focuses on radical Islam, like when it patrolled an immigrant neighborhood in Copenhagen where a handful of fundamentalist Muslims said they wanted to introduce Islamic law.

But its "blitz mission" in June targeted a mosque that hasn't been associated with radical Muslims. It belongs to a small community of Ahmadiyya Muslims, who are considered heretics by some mainstream Muslims and have faced persecution in many countries.

The mosque's imam, Naimatullah Basharat, says that next to the Muhammad drawings were stickers with a Latin inscription saying "If you wish for peace, prepare for war" ? the Danish Defence League's motto.

Basharat says he would like to explain his view of Islam to the group.

"We show our patience, also to those who do this kind of thing," he says. "Our motto is `love for all, hatred for none.'"

___

Associated Press Writers Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, and Stephen Braun in Washington D.C., contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111207/ap_on_re_eu/eu_europe_s_new_far_right

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