Monday, October 31, 2011

Public sector union curbs face fierce fight in Ohio (Reuters)

HAMILTON, Ohio (Reuters) ? Hamilton, Ohio firefighter Tony Harris did not want to take "yes" for an answer.

Working a phone bank to urge voters to vote "no" on an Ohio law that sharply curbs public sector union rights, Harris politely but persistently argued with a voter who said she did not like collective bargaining.

"The biggest thing for us in police and fire is it affects negotiating for safe staffing," Harris said. "It affects how many firetrucks we have on the streets and how many guys we have on those firetrucks." While he didn't get the voter to pledge a "no" vote, he did ask her to keep studying the issue.

Harris is part of an army of Ohio public employees who have vowed to work phone banks and ring doorbells through election day on November 8 to fight a law which bans public worker strikes and so limits union negotiating power that opponents say it reduces "collective bargaining" to "collective begging."

A REFERENDUM FIGHT

A centerpiece of Republican Gov. John Kasich's legislative agenda, the bill passed the Republican-dominated assembly in the spring. But opponents were able to gather 1.3 million signatures to halt the law's enactment and put it on the November 8 ballot for repeal.

Both sides are fighting furiously with phone banks, yard signs, and TV ads. We Are Ohio, seeking to defeat the bill, has spent $17.3 million between June and October. Building a Better Ohio, which supports the law, has spent $5.9 million, according to the Ohio Secretary of State.

A Quinnipiac University poll shows that as of late October, nearly 6 out of 10 Ohio voters say they want to repeal the law. Kasich's popularity has fallen along with sentiment about the bill, and some Democrats say the first-term governor overreached on the bill -- which is more expansive than the anti-union law passed in Wisconsin.

But proponents say they're gaining momentum as more people learn about the law.

"We feel that as people start to understand that this is just a reasonable set of reforms that ultimately people will support it," said Alex Triantafilou, chair of the Hamilton County Republican Party. He said the law empowers taxpayers to cut costs in a sagging economy.

The bill allows bargaining on wages but bans it for health coverage, pensions or staffing levels. If management and a union do not reach a settlement, management can impose its final offer -- which Republican State Senator and law opponent Bill Seitz mocked as a "heads I win, tails you lose" proposition.

"The other side is trying to confuse people by saying this is some kind of mild reform to collective bargaining," said David Pepper, a Democrat and former Cincinnati councilman and Hamilton County commissioner. "That's not what it is -- for all intents and purposes it eliminates collective bargaining."

The law also requires firefighters, police officers and teachers to pay at least 15 percent of their health insurance premiums, and would get rid of automatic pay increases and replace them with merit pay.

OHIO MORE IMPORTANT

While massive protests in Wisconsin earlier this year grabbed national attention, Ohio is more important to unions. It has 360,000 public sector union members and the fifth largest number of total union members in the country, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Unlike Wisconsin, the Ohio bill includes not only teachers and health workers but police and firefighters -- a group that tends to be popular with conservatives.

"I guess you could argue that the legislators in Ohio are even more reckless than they are in Wisconsin," said Cincinnati Mayor Mark Mallory, a Democrat, who said that the governors of Wisconsin and Ohio seem to be trying to "out-Republican" each other.

Kasich said he is trying to keep jobs in Ohio, by keeping taxes under control.

"The simple matter is if our communities cannot stabilize their costs, they will lose jobs," Kasich told reporters at a rally outside Cincinnati. "I know because I meet with companies who either want to expand here or come to Ohio and they say if my costs are too high I'm going elsewhere."

'SAFETY EQUIPMENT'

Firefighter and police unions, who were not allowed to strike even before the new law, said it would prevent them from having a say in staffing levels and safety equipment, such as bulletproof vests. Triantafilou said that soldiers do not get to bargain for their safety equipment, and that government bodies would not dare allow unsafe conditions for fire and police.

"The safety argument is one of the ways the other side, I think, is partly deceiving the public," said Triantafilou."

Mike Allen, a former prosecutor and Cincinnati cop now running for city council as an independent, said governments have compromised worker safety in the past, which is why the right to collective bargaining was enacted in 1984.

After a number of Cincinnati police officers were killed in the line of duty, police held an illegal 24-hour strike in 1979 over what they said were unsafe work conditions. They pulled their squad cars in front of City Hall, turned on their revolving lights and let the car batteries run down, Allen said. Toledo firefighters also held a massive 1979 strike, leaving fires to burn with no one to put them out.

"That was the impetus for reform," Allen said.

The issue has crossed party lines -- with Republicans such as Seitz opposing the bill, while Jeff Berding, a Democratic former Cincinnati councilman, has been debating in the bill's favor around the state.

Berding said he knows elected officials want reasonable collective bargaining reforms, but are afraid to speak up because of union power.

"If you are pro (the new law), you are considered anti-union and your career with the Democratic party is over," Berding said. Berding said he lost his Democratic endorsement for city council after he riled unions.

Ohio Republicans are also campaigning on another referendum item -- a constitutional amendment that would let state residents opt out of requirements of the federal health care law. Triantafilou said he hopes it will motivate conservatives to go to the polls, and vote yes on both measures.

(Writing by Mary Wisniewski, Editing by Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111029/us_nm/us_ohio_unions

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Legal Theory Blog: O'Beirne on Legal Philosophy & a Theory of the ...

Brian H. O'Beirne (Trinity College Dublin) has posted Does Legal Philosophy Need a Theory of the State? on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

    This article is of a decidedly analytic bent. It seeks to show that Legal Philosophy does not need a theory of the State. In other words, that an account of the State is neither logically nor conceptually necessary to the enterprise of Legal Philosophy. After having clarified in what sense I am using the term "Legal Philosophy," I go on to consider an array of different theories of the State, ranging from the more modern accounts of Green, to the more archaic of Weber. The latter understands the State to be a distinctive phenomenon in virtue of its capacity to successfully claim a monopoly on the legitimate use of force. This article spends much of its time showing why force itself is not a necessary feature of a legal system (in doing so, it runs up against both Dworkin's and Bobbio's accounts), and, therefore, why any coercion-based theory of the State, such as Weber's, is not necessary to Legal Philosophy.

Source: http://lsolum.typepad.com/legaltheory/2011/10/obeirne-on-legal-philosophy-a-theory-of-the-state.html

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Consumer spending jumped 0.6 pct. in September (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Americans spent in September at three times the pace of the previous month, even though their incomes barely budged. They financed their spending binges by saving at the lowest level since the start of the Great Recession.

Consumer spending rose 0.6 percent last month, the Commerce Department said Friday. The gain was driven by a big rise in purchases of durable goods, such as autos.

Consumers earned only 0.1 percent more after their income fell by the same amount in August. And after adjusting for inflation, their after-tax incomes fell 0.1 percent last month ? the third straight monthly decline.

As a result, they saved less. The savings rate fell to 3.6 percent, the lowest level since December 2007.

Expectations were high after the government said Thursday that consumer spending helped fuel annual growth of 2.5 percent in the July-September quarter, the best quarterly expansion in a year.

Consumer spending is closely watched because it accounts for 70 percent of economic activity. It grew at an annual rate of 2.4 percent in the third quarter. That's more than triple the growth in the April-June quarter.

The economy would have to grow at nearly double the third-quarter pace to make a dent in the unemployment rate, which has stayed near 9 percent since the recession officially ended more than two years ago.

Economists doubt consumers can keep spending like they did this summer without earning more. Many are struggling with higher prices for food and gas. For spending gains to be sustained, employers need to step up hiring.

In recent months, job growth has stagnated. Employers have added an average of only 72,000 jobs per month in the past five months. That's far below the 100,000 per month needed to keep up with population growth. And it's down from an average of 180,000 in the first four months of this year.

Employers added only 103,000 jobs in September, and the unemployment rate remained 9.1 percent for a third straight month.

The government releases the October employment report on Nov. 4.

And spending could tumble next year if Congress fails to extend a Social Security tax cut, which gave most Americans an extra $1,000 to $2,000 this year, or long-term unemployment benefits. Both expire at the end of the year.

Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist for Capital Economics, predicts that overall growth will cool in the fourth quarter and next year. He predicts growth of just 1.5 percent for all of 2012.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, is more optimistic. He expects roughly the same 2.5 percent growth in the October-December quarter and also in the first three months of next year.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_bi_go_ec_fi/us_consumer_spending

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Lockheed airs gripes with Pentagon contract demands (reuters)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/153968167?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Haitian lawmaker released from jail amid protests (AP)

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti ? A Haitian lawmaker who was jailed on charges that he escaped prison on the day of last year's massive earthquake was let go Friday.

Following his release, Dep. Arnel Belizaire went to parliament as several dozen supporters gathered outside the building to greet him with hugs and cheers.

The overnight detention of Belizaire was a rare instance in which police have locked up a government official. Investigators must formally request that immunity be lifted before they can question an official.

Police jailed Belizaire Friday shortly after he had returned from a trip to France. Police say Belizaire was an escaped prisoner who fled the national penitentiary in the chaotic aftermath of the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake. He had been locked up since 2004 on an illegal weapons charge.

Despite his criminal record, Belizaire somehow proved eligible to run for office in a drawn-out election that began last year and ended early this year; candidates are required to show they have a clean record. Belizaire was elected to parliament in a March 20 runoff.

Since he took office, Belizaire has been an open critic of Haitian President Michel Martelly, who was sworn in in May, and the two have been heard lashing out at each other at the National Palace.

Belizaire is a member of Veye Yo, a political party headquartered in Miami, Florida, that has strong ties to former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

The detention of Belizaire threatens to aggravate already uneasy relations between Martelly and parliament, whose members rejected the leader's first two picks for prime minister before approving the third.

The head of the United Nations mission in Haiti and the French Embassy on Friday responded to Belizaire's detention by issuing statements. France urged the government and legislature to bear in mind "procedures" involving the separation of powers and parliamentary immunity.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/cb_haiti_deputy_detained

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Beware the Digital Disruptors: They're Coming for Your Industry (Mashable)

James L. McQuivey, Ph.D. is a Vice President and Principal Analyst at Forrester Research serving Consumer Product Strategy professionals. Follow him on Twitter at @jmcquivey. Growing up in the '70s, I was the world?s biggest fan of The Bionic Man. Every Sunday night at 7 p.m. you could find me glued to our Trinitron TV to watch Steve Austin battle every villain from Bionic Sasquatch to the evil Dr. Dolenz. The appeal of the show was simple: Amplified by technology, the Bionic Man is better, stronger, and faster than his enemies.

[More from Mashable: How to Time Your Facebook Posts to Reach the Most Fans]

It turns out to be a morality tale for our own day. But you are not the bionic man in the drama I?m unfolding -- you are his target. Because while you were carefully planning your business strategy, hundreds -- if not thousands -- of individuals and competitors have been exploiting technology to make themselves better, stronger, and faster than you.

We call these people digital disruptors. And they?re coming right for you.

[More from Mashable: Startup Success: How 7 Top Angel Investors Do Business]

No matter what industry you are in, you are their target. Where you could once dismiss digital disruption as the sole province of the music or other media industries where it destroyed billions in value, digital disruption has now expanded. These disruptors employ technologies -- and the platforms they enable -- to build better products than you can, establish a stronger customer relationship than you have, and deliver it all to market faster than you ever thought possible.

Oh, and it doesn?t cost anywhere close to six million dollars for them to get started. I offer Lose It! as one of many case studies worth considering. Targeting the weight loss and fitness business -- one of the most analog industries on the planet -- Lose It! is disrupting the more than $40 billion Americans spend on weight loss each year. It?s a costly industry to enter -- think of Jenny Craig?s marketing budget alone, then add its hundreds of physical locations, prepared meals, and all the infrastructure to support the entire enterprise. So while franchises like The Biggest Loser have succeeded in entering this business recently, they have done so at great cost.

Meanwhile, a single app that helps dieters keep track of the calories they consume on their smartphones has gone from 0 to 7 million downloads in just a few years. FitNow, the company behind the app, pulled this off with four employees, establishing an unheard of customer-per-employee metric of 1.75 million.

This is digital disruption at its finest: better, stronger, faster. The app got to market quickly, partly because as a digital disruptor, FitNow could afford to launch something that didn?t try to solve all the problems in the weight-loss world. As Charles Teague, CEO, told me recently, ?Let?s not pretend that we know the endgame here. Let?s do the least amount of features to know if it will work. Then improve it if people use it.? And improve it they have, adding fitness tracking and more recently a robust social community of like-minded dieters.

Because it sounds so easy, a CEO I shared this with asked me why, if digital is so quick and dirty, his company?s website redesign was over time and over budget. I told him it was precisely because he staffed up his business under assumptions about design and functionality that were true in 2005 but are no longer the case. Digital disruption has even disrupted the digital businesses that preceded them.

While digital disruptors are better, stronger, and faster, they are not untouchable. Their ease of entry comes from the fact that traditional barriers have fallen to zero. That means your direct cost to emulate their practices can also be low.

That?s why I recommend you steal the digital disruptor?s handbook. Use the iPad, the Kinect, and whatever platform is next to build a digital bridge to your customers. Like with Lose It!, your bridge must engage customers more often than your current product can, packaging and delivering benefits that you didn?t realize were part of your consumer contract because before now, they weren?t. You have to change your understanding of your product so you can then change your customer?s understanding of it as well. This will require better thinking than you currently do ? I previously explained how digital disruptors take advantage of a type of thinking called "innovating the adjacent possible." It?s crucial to generating more ideas more quickly so that you can find the nearby opportunities that will succeed while quickly culling those that will fail.

There?s more to do, but before you can even begin, you have to know: Are you ready to do this? Does your company have the energy, skills, and policies to turn into a disruptor or are you more likely to be displaced by the digital disruptor nearest you?

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Nikada

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111027/tc_mashable/beware_the_digital_disruptors_theyre_coming_for_your_industry

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

App Turns iPhone Into spiPhone

60-Second Science | Technology

An iPhone app can enable the smartphone to tell what somebody is typing on a nearby computer keyboard. Christopher Intagliata reports.

More 60-Second Science

Used to be if spies wanted to eavesdrop, they planted a bug. These days, it's much easier. Because we all carry potential bugs in our pockets?smartphones. One team of researchers used an iPhone to track typing on a nearby computer keyboard with up to 80 percent accuracy. They presented the findings at a computer security conference in Chicago. [Philip Marquardt et al, (sp)iPhone: Decoding Vibrations From Nearby Keyboards Using Mobile Phone Accelerometers, 18th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security]

The researchers designed a malicious app for the iPhone 4. When you place the phone near a keyboard, it exploits accelerometer and gyroscope data to sense vibrations as the victim types?detecting whether keystrokes come from the left or right side of the keyboard, and how near or far subsequent keys are from each other. Then, using that seismic fingerprint, the app checks a pre-created "vibrational" dictionary for the most likely words?a technique that works reliably on words of three letters or more.

Of course, you'd need to install the app to allow it to spy. But whereas most apps have to ask permission to access location data or the camera, that's not so for the accelerometer. This kind of attack may offer good reason to limit accelerometer access too?and keep iPhones from becoming "spiPhones."

?Christopher Intagliata

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=7f049276fce0fe09dca51a8a4e4a97ba

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Articling and Access to Justice: An Ontario Legal Corps ? Why Not ...

October 25, 2011

Adam Dodek

Articling and Access to Justice: An Ontario Legal Corps ? Why Not?


by Adam Dodek ? October 25, 2011

We need to create an Ontario Legal Corps composed of lawyers and articling students to address the access to justice crisis in this province and we need to do it now. An Ontario Legal Corps will also go a long way to addressing the current deficit in available articling positions.

The articling crisis in Ontario is a supply-side program. It deals with the issue of the scarcity of supply of articling positions. As many judges and now the Governor General have reminded us, we have an Access to Justice crisis which is a demand side problem. The demand for legal services far outstrips the available supply as the Ontario Civil Legal Needs Project revealed.

Why not come up with solutions that attempt to match the two problems?

Clayton Ruby recently mooted the creative suggestion of paying a legal aid ?articling student bonus? for legal aid work done by articling students. This is a great idea except that the prospect of any significant infusion of legal aid dollars coming from either level of government in the near future is remote. We need to keep working on governments but that is a long term strategy. In the short term, government is simply not the answer.

If we are to address the twin crises of articling and access to justice we must do so on our own. And it is in our collective interest as a profession to do so because as the Governor General warned us in August, if we fail to meet our obligations under the social contract ?Society will change the social contract, and redefine professionalism for us. Regulation and change will be forced upon us?quite possibly in forms which diminish or remove our self-regulatory privilege.?

An Ontario Legal Corps ? modeled along President John F. Kennedy?s Peace Corps - would provide legal services by lawyers and articling students to underserviced communities across Ontario. The idea of articling students providing legal services may be new to Ontario but it has recently been accepted by the Law Society of British Columbia.

It seems that lawyers in Ontario support articling in their rhetoric but not in their actions. In 2008, the Law Society of Upper Canada?s Licensing and Accreditation Task Force reported that that lawyers overwhelmingly wanted to retain articling. It also reported that there were only 1171 approved articling principals out of approximately 31,000 lawyers in private practice, government and corporate practice and other employment available to serve as articling principals. That is less than a 4% participation rate. The rest of the profession ? including myself ? is freeloading on the work of that 4% who are shouldering the burden of training the next generation of lawyers. If we believe in the need for practical training for new lawyers, we should all share in this responsibility.

Thus, out of necessity, the funding for an Ontario Legal Corps would come mostly from us, from lawyers. Under this proposal, each lawyer in Ontario would pay a $200 Access to Justice levy. With 40,000 lawyers, this will create 200 fully-funded Access to Justice Articling positions paying annual salaries of $40,000. In short, my idea is 200 articling positions for $200 per lawyer in Ontario. Or simply ?200 for 200?. I think this is a fair price to pay to promote access to justice, train the next generation of lawyers and protect self-regulation.

The University of Ottawa proposed a similar idea in its submissions to the LSUC?s 2008 Licensing and Accreditation Taskforce as one of its nine suggestions that it made to that Task Force. It proposed instituting a ?lawyer levy? that the LSUC would impose on the 30,000 lawyers who do not employ articling students in any given year contributed $100 each year, the LSUC could provide two hundred articling subsidies in the amount of $15,000 in any given year. Subsidies could be focused on both geographical and cultural areas that are currently underrepresented by lawyers. That suggestion was not given serious consideration at the time. It should be now.

But that 2008 proposal did not go far enough. The access to justice crisis worsens and we are back looking at articling only three years later because we need bold solutions. An Ontario Legal Corps is worth considering.

We need to create an Ontario Legal Corps composed of lawyers and articling students to address the access to justice crisis in this province and we need to do it now. An Ontario Legal Corps will also go a long way to addressing the current deficit in available articling positions.

The articling crisis in Ontario is a supply-side program. It deals with the issue of the scarcity of supply of articling positions. As many judges and now the Governor General have reminded us, we have an Access to Justice crisis which is a demand side problem. The demand for legal services far outstrips the available supply as the Ontario Civil Legal Needs Project revealed.

Why not come up with solutions that attempt to match the two problems?

Clayton Ruby recently mooted the creative suggestion of paying a legal aid ?articling student bonus? for legal aid work done by articling students. This is a great idea except that the prospect of any significant infusion of legal aid dollars coming from either level of government in the near future is remote. We need to keep working on governments but that is a long term strategy. In the short term, government is simply not the answer.

If we are to address the twin crises of articling and access to justice we must do so on our own. And it is in our collective interest as a profession to do so because as the Governor General warned us in August, if we fail to meet our obligations under the social contract ?Society will change the social contract, and redefine professionalism for us. Regulation and change will be forced upon us?quite possibly in forms which diminish or remove our self-regulatory privilege.?

An Ontario Legal Corps ? modeled along President John F. Kennedy?s Peace Corps - would provide legal services by lawyers and articling students to underserviced communities across Ontario. The idea of articling students providing legal services may be new to Ontario but it has recently been accepted by the Law Society of British Columbia.

It seems that lawyers in Ontario support articling in their rhetoric but not in their actions. In 2008, the Law Society of Upper Canada?s Licensing and Accreditation Task Force reported that that lawyers overwhelmingly wanted to retain articling. It also reported that there were only 1171 approved articling principals out of approximately 31,000 lawyers in private practice, government and corporate practice and other employment available to serve as articling principals. That is less than a 4% participation rate. The rest of the profession ? including myself ? is freeloading on the work of that 4% who are shouldering the burden of training the next generation of lawyers. If we believe in the need for practical training for new lawyers, we should all share in this responsibility.

Thus, out of necessity, the funding for an Ontario Legal Corps would come mostly from us, from lawyers. Under this proposal, each lawyer in Ontario would pay a $200 Access to Justice levy. With 40,000 lawyers, this will create 200 fully-funded Access to Justice Articling positions paying annual salaries of $40,000. In short, my idea is 200 articling positions for $200 per lawyer in Ontario. Or simply ?200 for 200?. I think this is a fair price to pay to promote access to justice, train the next generation of lawyers and protect self-regulation.

The University of Ottawa proposed a similar idea in its submissions to the LSUC?s 2008 Licensing and Accreditation Taskforce as one of its nine suggestions that it made to that Task Force. It proposed instituting a ?lawyer levy? that the LSUC would impose on the 30,000 lawyers who do not employ articling students in any given year contributed $100 each year, the LSUC could provide two hundred articling subsidies in the amount of $15,000 in any given year. Subsidies could be focused on both geographical and cultural areas that are currently underrepresented by lawyers. That suggestion was not given serious consideration at the time. It should be now.

But that 2008 proposal did not go far enough. The access to justice crisis worsens and we are back looking at articling only three years later because we need bold solutions. An Ontario Legal Corps is worth considering.

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Source: http://www.slaw.ca/2011/10/25/articling-and-access-to-justice-an-ontario-legal-corps-why-not/

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

HistoryMiami Hosts Fifth Annual Legal Legends Awards Dinner ...

Photo Credit: HistoryMiami?s 11th Judicial Circuit Historical Society

Each year HistoryMiami?s 11th Judicial Circuit Historical Society recognizes South Florida lawyers, judges and legal professionals who have contributed to our legal system.

Honorees are selected from a prestigious group of nominees who have shaped the legal community for over 25 years and reflect the outstanding legal heritage of Miami and South Florida.

Nominations for the Legal Legends Awards are accepted from January 1st through April 15th. ?Selection is limited to lawyers, judges and all others (alive or deceased) who have made substantial contributions to the law, the legal system, or the administration of justice within the 11th Judicial Circuit. ?Nominees must have served the community for 25 years. ?This prestigious award has been bestowed upon many well known Miamians including the 2010 honorees: Hon. Irving Cypen, Hon. Mattie Belle Davis, Mr. Marty Fine, Mr. George Knox, Mr. Aaron Podhurst, Hon. Patricia Seitz, and Mr. Stephen Zack.

Proceeds from the event go toward improving HistoryMiami?s impact in the legal community and producing year-round program support to Miami-Dade County Public Schools curriculum.

For More information please contact Amanda Israel at 305-375-1614 or 11JCHS@historymiami.org

Photo Credit: HistoryMiami?s 11th Judicial Circuit Historical Society

WHEN:?November 12, 2011

WHERE:

J.W. Marriott Hotel
1109 Brickell Avenue
Miami, FL

TICKETS: Members of?HistoryMiami?s 11th Judicial Circuit Historical Society ? $250 per individual ticket. Non-members $290.

?

Source: http://askmissa.com/2011/10/25/historymiami-hosts-fifth-annual-legal-legends-awards-dinner/

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Skin-Like Sensors Could Bring Tactile Sensations to Robots, Humans

We're used to tapping away at flat, glass-covered touchscreen devices like smartphones and tablets. A group of Stanford researchers have taken that capacitive touch concept and applied it to a completely new form factor, which could have wide-ranging applications in consumer technology, robotics and beyond.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GearFactor/~3/D4wmKigNRI0/

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Taking Blood Pressure Meds at Bedtime May Be Better (HealthDay)

MONDAY, Oct. 24 (HealthDay News) -- For the millions of Americans on blood pressure-lowering drugs, a new study suggests that taking the pills at bedtime may be best.

It was known that taking blood pressure medications at different times of the day can affect patients' blood pressure patterns, but the impact on health wasn't known.

The new Spanish study included 661 patients with chronic kidney disease and hypertension. Half of them took their prescribed blood pressure-lowering drugs at bedtime and half took their medications first thing in the morning.

After an average follow-up of 5.4 years, the researchers found that patients who took at least one blood pressure-lowering drug at bedtime had better control of their blood pressure and were about one-third as likely to suffer a heart-related event such as heart attack, heart failure or stroke.

The team at the University of Vigo also found that sleep-time blood pressure provided a much more accurate measure of heart health than wake-time blood pressure.

The study was published online Oct. 24 in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.

"Our results indicate that cardiovascular event rates in patients with hypertension can be reduced by more than 50 percent with a zero-cost strategy of administering blood pressure-lowering medications at bedtime rather than in the morning," study author Ramon Hermida wrote in a journal news release.

One U.S. doctor said taking advantage of "chronotherapy" -- timing drug delivery to a patient's biorhythms -- might have real value.

"Physicians don't commonly specify which time of day patients should take their medications; however, most patients with hypertension take their antihypertensive drugs in the morning. Upon taking these medications, patients oftentimes complain of side effects, most commonly, fatigue and drowsiness," noted Dr. Robert Graham, an internist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

He believes the study reveals a "low-cost, win-win scenario" of better adherence to blood pressure medications and higher effectiveness when they're taken in the evening versus the morning. "As a result, chronotherapy may help minimize the side effects, and maximize the beneficial effects of antihypertensive medications," Graham said.

Another expert agreed.

"The notion of nocturnal medication use is not new," said Dr. Howard S. Weintraub, clinical director of the Center for the Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease at NYU Langone Medical Center, New York City. "This strategy may be especially effective with the use of [blood pressure drugs such as] ACE inhibitors, angiotensin receptor blockers or direct renin inhibitors."

Weintraub added that, "while taking a diuretic at bedtime may have a disruptive effect on sleep, in general, I think many of us have been doing this for some time with the intent to best control nocturnal blood pressure and to also mitigate some of the usual spike in blood pressure that occurs early in the morning (starting around 5 am)."

In the United States, about one in three adults has high blood pressure.

More information

The American Heart Association has more about blood pressure medications.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/meds/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111024/hl_hsn/takingbloodpressuremedsatbedtimemaybebetter

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Monday, October 24, 2011

City Center to reopen after $56 million spruce-up (AP)

NEW YORK ? For one of the oldest major performing arts venues in New York ? one that's hosted many of the world's premier artists for nearly 70 years ? City Center seems to have had something of a self-esteem problem.

It seated over 2,700 people in its main theater, but many of those seats were uncomfortable, the sightlines less than desirable. The lobby felt small and crowded. The beautiful vaulted ceiling in the upstairs lobby was dulled with layers of wear and dust.

The distinctive neo-Moorish facade, a city landmark, was barely visible from the street because of dark green awnings in front of it. And you couldn't see the building, located on West 55th Street, from either nearby corner.

In short, though it's only a block from the more famous Carnegie Hall, likely no one ever joked, "How do you get to City Center?" (Practice, practice, practice.)

But all this is changing.

New York City Center, proudly inaugurated by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia in 1943, is being reintroduced this week following a renovation to the tune of $56 million. Old layers of paint have been scraped away with razor blades, original color schemes restored. Seats have been ripped out, replaced with plusher, wider models. Better sloping has improved sightlines.

Outside, those nondescript green awnings have been removed, replaced by a marquee that shows off the sandstone facade. And ? hello, self-esteem! ? illuminated signs are now visible from Sixth and Seventh avenues in Midtown Manhattan.

"This place has been around a long time, and was truly getting a little dreary," its president and CEO, Arlene Shuler, said in an interview last week as workers around her applied the finishing touches. "People would come here for performances, but not know they were coming to City Center. We felt it was very important to be more competitive in this environment."

The building known now as City Center actually began as a home to the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, otherwise known as the Shriners. "They'd been using Carnegie Hall as their meeting house, but Carnegie Hall didn't like all the cigar smoke. So they built their own place a block away," said Duncan Hazard, the chief architect on the job.

In 1943, though, the Shriners could no longer keep it and the building was headed for demolition, until LaGuardia and the city council took it over and turned it into an arts center. (It's still owned by the city, which was the major donor to the capital campaign that paid for the renovation.) At the opening, LaGuardia himself took the baton to conduct the New York Philharmonic in the national anthem. Mayor Michael Bloomberg is scheduled to conduct, as well, at a star-studded reopening Tuesday.

City Center was a major home for New York culture for decades ? early on, as an alternative to Broadway theater, and the original home of New York City Ballet and New York City Opera. When those companies later moved to the newly built Lincoln Center, it became underused. It was refocused as a major dance center, and today is home to the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater ? which recently signed a new 10-year deal ? and to American Ballet Theatre's fall season. It brings in countless visiting troupes, from the Kirov to flamenco performers to tango groups.

It also hosts the extremely popular Fall for Dance Festival, a 10-day smorgasbord of global dance that sold out in five hours this year (it begins later this week) and the equally popular Encores! musical theater series. In a smaller theater, it houses the Manhattan Theater Club.

One recent loss was the Paul Taylor Dance Company, which recently announced a move to Lincoln Center's David H. Koch Theater, newly vacated by New York City Opera.

Shuler hopes they will return, and that the renovation will draw others, of course. Leading a reporter around the new digs, she and Hazard began on the stage ? now refitted with a sprung floor, kinder to dancers' feet. Out in the audience, a worker in a cherry-picker was cleaning the domed ceiling with what looked like a giant mop.

"Over a few unfortunate restorations, the color had become an unappealing gray-white," Hazard said of the theater's Moorish-style ceiling and walls. "We did some archaeology of the paint finishes, and found out the original 1923 color scheme." Now, there are vivid blues and greens.

There's also a spiffy new lighting booth. But the first challenge was to improve those sightlines. Undesirable seats were ripped out, bringing the seat count down to 2,250 from over 2,700. Rows were also resloped, adding to better visibility, and staggered. Seats were widened, too, with better cushioning for the derriere.

The renovation, which was completed over two summers to minimize disruption, also focused on the inner and outer lobbies. Patrons now enter from the sides of the auditorium, creating more lobby space and improving audience flow.

The outer lobby now has a bar, and paned glass doors so one can see in from the street. And for all the faithful reconstruction, a contemporary touch has found its way in: Large video monitors in the inner lobby, which will host three video installations per year.

There are added elevators, and even the restrooms have been redone with an eye to Moorish style. (And cast and crew now have their own restroom on stage level, something they were lacking.)

Shuler and Hazard seemed especially proud of the Grand Tier lobby, a level up from the orchestra, with its colorfully painted vaulted ceiling and the desert-themed murals on the walls.

Restoring the ceiling, workers with razor blades scraped off layers of paint and shellac for four to five months. "It was a real labor of love," said Shuler.

On the other hand, the upstairs lobby floor had been buffed with so much love last week that it was dangerously slippery underfoot. That will be adjusted, Shuler said.

Back in the theater, sitting in the best Grand Tier seats, Shuler said she believed they were the best seats in the city, bar none ? they hang over row H, bringing one close to the stage, yet above it.

Hopefully, she said, more people will know about them now.

"We think people are going to be aware now that they're coming to City Center," Shuler said.

___

If You Go...

NEW YORK CITY CENTER: 130 W. 55th St., between Sixth and Seventh Avenues; http://nycitycenter.org or 212-581-1212. Easily reached by subway and bus (directions on the website.)

WHAT'S ON: All offerings on City Center's Mainstage and at its two smaller stages are listed on its website. After the Oct. 25 reopening gala, the sold-out Fall for Dance Festival runs Oct. 27-Nov. 6, featuring five wildly diverse dance programs. Other upcoming highlights:

_American Ballet Theatre, Nov. 8-13.

_"Richard II" from the Pearl Theatre Company, Nov. 8-Dec. 24.

_Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Nov. 30-Jan. 1.

WHERE TO EAT: The City Center website lists 30 restaurants nearby, including Molyvos (Greek), the Russian Tea Room and Osteria del Circo (Italian). For quick snacks, try Dean & Deluca, 156 W. 56th St.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_en_ot/us_travel_city_center_take_two

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Chavez says he's free of cancer ? The Greenroom

posted at 11:07 am on October 21, 2011 by Fausta Wertz
[ Politics ]??? printer-friendly

That?s the headline today, but first, a fable,

An Ox came down to a reedy pool to drink. As he splashed heavily into the water, he crushed a young Frog into the mud. The old Frog soon missed the little one and asked his brothers and sisters what had become of him.
?A great big monster,? said one of them, ?stepped on little brother with one of his huge feet!?

?Big, was he!? said the old Frog, puffing herself up. ?Was he as big as this??

?Oh, much bigger!? they cried.

The Frog puffed up still more.

?He could not have been bigger than this,? she said. But the little Frogs all declared that the monster was much, much bigger and the old Frog kept puffing herself out more and more until, all at once, she burst.

Back to the headline, Hugo Ch?vez Says His Cancer Is Gone, Sim?n Romero, writes,

President Hugo Ch?vez of Venezuela declared on Thursday that he had beaten cancer, less than five months after he stunned Venezuelans by revealing that he had undergone emergency surgery to remove a tumor while in seclusion in Cuba.

This is not the first time he?s said that. Back in July he was saying exactly the same thing; now he continues to assert,

?No abnormal cellular activity exists,? said Mr. Ch?vez in comments broadcast on state media while on a visit to western Venezuela, where he was preparing to visit a Roman Catholic shrine. ?I?ve begun to exit the cave,? said the president, dressed in a green military uniform.

Despite Mr. Ch?vez?s announcement, which he made after a brief trip to Cuba for a checkup, mystery still shrouds his condition.

Clearly, Hugo is sick ? no doubt about it. Whatever condition he has is manifesting itself in many clear ways that he can not hide. Obviously it is a severe medical condition. Rumors have been flying on the nature of the illness(es), the most recent include kidney failure and medullary aplasia.

Is it cancer?

He?s the one who?s saying it?s cancer, he?s the one saying he?s cancer-free. However, as I pointed out in the past, ?cancer? is a good smoke screen (there are some 200 types of cancers), elicits compassion ? we all have family/friends who have been devastated by it ? and explains a multitude of therapies and absences (and trips to Cuba).

Ask yourselves, with the decades-long propaganda on ?Cuba?s excellent health care?, if Cuban doctors had actually cured Ch?vez?s cancer, wouldn?t both regimes (Cuba?s and Venezuela?s) be parading a team of oncologists on innumerable press conferences confirming this ?cure??

He has never publicly revealed what type of cancer afflicted him. Altogether, Mr. Ch?vez, 57, underwent four chemotherapy treatments, including three in Cuba and one in Venezuela, according to the government.

Physically, he still looked like a changed man on Thursday, appearing bloated and with a green military cap covering a bald head. Spiritually, Mr. Ch?vez also seems to have acquired a more religious air. ?I?m more Christian every day,? he said Thursday. ?Socialism is the road to Christ.?

Hugo must think that having close ties to Iran and moving Venezuela?s gold to Caracas may bring him closer to heaven, then. Hugo also spent some time beating up on the rich and mangling Biblical parables (video in Spanish)

Salvador Navarrete is the only physician who has dared to speak about Ch?vez?s medical condition (emphasis added),

a prominent Venezuelan doctor who describes himself as the president?s former personal surgeon, said this week that Mr. Ch?vez had less than two years to live, attributing his illness to a ?very aggressive? tumor in the pelvic area.

Dr. Navarrete, a former militant in Mr. Ch?vez?s political movement, said he drew his conclusions from recent discussions with Mr. Ch?vez?s family.

It?s not clear if Navarrete has treated Ch?vez during this ?cancer? occurrence ? and, from a public-relations point of view, Navarrete?s statement that Ch?vez has been treated for bipolar disorder may be more damaging than a ?cancer? (yet another reason for Ch?vez to bang the ?cancer? drum loudly).

What is clear is that Navarrete has had to leave, along with his family, Venezuela suddenly (apparently going to Mexico) because of the fallout. Romero reports,

agents from the Sebin, Mr. Ch?vez?s secret intelligence police, had appeared at Dr. Navarrete?s office this week to question him.

Navarrete?s private practice and his teaching position are ended.

The moral from the fable at the start of this post? Take everything coming out from Ch?vez?s mouth as so much puffery, particularly when it comes to his health.

Cross-posted at Fausta?s blog

Source: http://hotair.com/greenroom/archives/2011/10/21/chavez-says-hes-free-of-cancer/

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Congress open to cost-cutting changes in military benefits; veterans groups fight back (Star Tribune)

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Michael Douglas' son pleads guilty to drug charge (omg!)

Lindsay Lohan arrived late to her first day of community service at the county morgue Thursday and was turned away, another hiccup in the actress' effort to prove to a judge that she is complying with terms of her probation. More??Lohan Late to Day 1 of Community Service at Morgue

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Deschanel, country stars to sing at World Series (AP)

NEW YORK ? Zooey Deschanel has double duty on Fox: The star of the new series "New Girl" also is performing at the World Series.

Deschanel is from the indie pop duo She & Him. She'll sing the national anthem at Game 4 of the Major League Baseball seven-game series between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Texas Rangers. It airs Sunday on Fox.

Before the actress takes the stage, country singer Trace Adkins will perform the anthem at Game 2 on Thursday, and Ronnie Dunn will do the same two days later at Game 3.

The Cardinals and Rangers battle it out Wednesday night in Game 1 at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, where "American Idol" champion Scotty McCreery will perform the national anthem.

___

Online:

http://mlb.mlb.com/

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/celebrity/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111019/ap_en_tv/us_music_world_series_singers

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Hospital safety practices unrelated to outcomes

Whether or not trauma centers meet national safety standards says little about a patient's risk of dying or getting an infection while there, according to new research.

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The findings add to evidence that quality measures meant to improve hospital outcomes may not be as effective as hoped.

Earlier this month, for instance, another study found that hospitals scoring high for their treatment of children with asthma aren't better at preventing those kids from ending up in the emergency room with asthma attacks.

The latest results, published in the Archives of Surgery, show that hospital scores on the so-called Leapfrog Safe Practices Survey weren't linked to either death rates or hospital-associated infections.

The survey asks hospitals about how they staff their intensive care unit, among other things, and how they try to avoid blood stream infections from catheters.

The Leapfrog Safe Practices have been adopted by the National Quality Forum, a non-profit organization that receives government as well as private funding, to try to improve patient safety and health care quality.

According to a 1998 report from the Institute of Medicine, 98,000 Americans die each year from preventable medical errors at hospitals.

The new study is based on data on more than 42,000 patients from 58 trauma centers across the country.

Dr. Laurent G. Glance, who led the work, said its findings were preliminary and don't mean the safety practices themselves aren't effective. Rather, he suggested in a telephone interview, the Leapfrog survey is falling short.

"You can't just rely on what the hospital executive says," Glance, of the University of Rochester School of Medicine in Rochester, New York, told Reuters Health. "You'd probably also need to have some sort of auditing in place."

He also called for studies following hospitals over time, to make sure that those with high scores aren't just the ones that had bad outcomes and therefore decided to up their game.

"We need additional studies to look at whether or not these safety practices are beneficial for trauma patients," Glance said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/psguZq Archives of Surgery, October 17, 2011.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44951419/ns/health-health_care/

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Smoking, tobacco ads banned at Euro 2012

Associated Press Sports

updated 10:09 a.m. ET Oct. 20, 2011

NYON, Switzerland (AP) -UEFA has imposed a ban on smoking and tobacco advertising at next year's European Championship.

UEFA says the ban will apply in and around all eight host stadiums in Poland and Ukraine.

UEFA President Michel Platini says the ban is about "respecting the health of our spectators."

Host cities will also be urged to extend the policy to "ensure smoke-free public transport, restaurants and fan zones."

UEFA worked with the World Health Organization and European Union to introduce the policy.

The 16-nation tournament will be played from June 8-July 1.

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


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Easy win

Barcelona set a club record by extending its unbeaten streak to 13 games with a 2-0 victory over the Czech Republic's Viktoria Plzen in the Champions League.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/44971103/ns/sports-soccer/

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Senate backs measure to avoid another gun scandal (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) ? The Senate on Tuesday passed a measure aimed at avoiding another botched operation to track guns smuggled from the United States, many of which ended up at crime scenes on both sides of the Mexico-U.S. border.

The "Fast and Furious" sting operation run by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) was meant to try to slow the flow of weapons to violent drug gangs.

The Senate voted 99-0 for a proposal that would bar the government from using funds to knowingly transfer guns to drug cartels if U.S. law enforcement agencies are not monitoring or controlling the weapons at all times.

The House of Representatives must pass a similar measure before President Barack Obama, a Democrat, can sign it into law. Border security, also tied to illegal immigration and the broader economy, is an important issue as U.S. politicians gear up for elections in November 2012.

The Senate bill amendment was introduced by Texas Republican John Cornyn after the ATF failed to track guns after they were bought by suspected suppliers to Mexican drug cartels in the operation that ran from late 2009 through 2010.

"When 2,000 firearms go missing and at least one is found at the crime scene of a murdered U.S. Border Patrol agent, we must do everything possible to ensure that such a reckless and ill-advised operation like 'Fast and Furious' is not repeated," Cornyn said in a statement earlier this week.

Republican congressional investigators have demanded Attorney General Eric Holder turn over documents and communications about the operation.

Escalating a battle between Holder and the House Oversight Committee, the panel subpoenaed the Justice Department -- which oversees the ATF -- seeking voluminous information from senior Obama administration officials.

(Editing by John O'Callaghan)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111018/pl_nm/us_usa_mexico_guns

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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Occupy Wall Street reaches 1-month birthday (AP)

NEW YORK ? The month-old Occupy Wall Street movement continues to grow, with nearly $300,000 in the bank and participants finding satisfaction in the widening impact they hope will counter the influence on society by those who hold the purse strings of the world's economies.

The expanding occupation of land once limited to a small Manhattan park in the shadow of the rising World Trade Center complex continued through the weekend, with hundreds of thousands of people rallying around the world and numerous encampments springing up in cities large and small.

For the most part, the protest action remained loosely organized and there were no specific demands, something Legba Carrefour, a participant in the Occupy D.C. protest, found comforting on Sunday.

"When movements come up with specific demands, they cease to be movements and transform into political campaign rallies," said Carrefour, who works as a coat check attendant despite holding a master's degree in cultural studies. "It's compelling a lot of people to come out for their own reasons rather than the reasons that someone else has given to them."

The demonstrations worldwide have emboldened those camped out at Manhattan's Zuccotti Park, the epicenter of the movement that began a month ago Monday. But there is conflict too. Some protesters eventually want the movement to rally around a goal, while others insist that isn't the point.

"We're moving fast, without a hierarchical structure and lots of gears turning," said Justin Strekal, a college student and political organizer who traveled from Cleveland to New York to help. "... Egos are clashing, but this is participatory democracy in a little park."

Even if the protesters were barred from camping in Zuccotti Park, as the property owner and the city briefly threatened to do last week, the movement would continue, Strekal said.

Wall Street protesters are intent on building on momentum gained from Saturday's worldwide demonstrations, which drew hundreds of thousands of people, mostly in the U.S. and Europe.

Nearly $300,000 in cash has been donated through the movement's website and by visitors to the park, said Bill Dobbs, a press liaison for Occupy Wall Street. The movement has an account at Amalgamated Bank, which bills itself as "the only 100 percent union-owned bank in the United States."

Donated goods ranging from blankets and sleeping bags to cans of food and medical and hygienic supplies are being stored in a cavernous space donated by the United Federation of Teachers, which has offices in the building a block from Wall Street near the private park protesters occupy.

Among the items are 20 pairs of swimming goggles (to shield protesters from pepper-spray attacks). Supporters are shipping about 300 boxes a day, many with notes and letters, Strekal said.

"Some are heartwrenching, beautiful," and come from people who have lost jobs and houses, he said. "So they send what they can, even if it's small."

Strekal said donated goods, stored for a "long-term occupation," have been used to create "Jail Support" kits consisting of a blanket, a granola bar and sanitary wipes for arrested protesters to receive when they are freed.

The movement has become an issue in the Republican presidential primary race and beyond, with politicians from both parties under pressure to weigh in.

President Barack Obama referred to the protests at Sunday's dedication of a monument for Martin Luther King Jr., saying the civil rights leader "would want us to challenge the excesses of Wall Street without demonizing those who work there."

Many of the largest of Saturday's protests were in Europe, where those involved in long-running demonstrations against austerity measures declared common cause with the Occupy Wall Street movement. In Rome, hundreds of rioters infiltrated a march by tens of thousands of demonstrators, causing what the mayor estimated was at least euro1 million ($1.4 million) in damage to city property.

U.S. cities large and small were "occupied" over the weekend: Washington, D.C., Fairbanks, Alaska, Burlington, Vt., Rapid City, S.D., and Cheyenne, Wyo. were just a few. In Cincinnati, protesters were even invited to take pictures with a couple getting married; the bride and groom are Occupied Cincinnati supporters.

More than 70 New York protesters were arrested Saturday, more than 40 of them in Times Square. About 175 people were arrested in Chicago after they refused to leave a park where they were camped late Saturday, and there were about 100 arrests in Arizona ? 53 in Tucson and 46 in Phoenix ? after protesters refused police orders to disperse. About two dozen people were arrested in Denver, and in Sacramento, Calif., anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan was among about 20 people arrested after failing to follow police orders to disperse.

Activists around the country said Saturday's protests energized their movement.

"It's an upward trajectory," said John St. Lawrence, a Florida real estate lawyer who took part in Saturday's Occupy Orlando protest, which drew more than 1,500 people. "It's catching people's imagination and also, knock on wood, nothing sort of negative or discrediting has happened."

St. Lawrence is among those unconcerned that the movement has not rallied around any particular proposal.

"I don't think the underlying theme is a mystery," he said. "We saw what the banks and financial institutions did to the economy. We bailed them out. And then they went about evicting people from their homes," he said.

In Richmond, Va., about 75 people gathered Sunday for one of the "general assembly" meetings that are a key part of the movement's consensus-building process. Protester Whitney Whiting, a video editor, said the process has helped "gather voices" about Americans' discontent.

"In regards to a singular issue or a singular focus, I think that will come eventually. But right now we have to set up a space for that to happen," Whiting said.

Some U.S. protesters, like those in Europe, have their own causes. Unions that have joined forces with the movement have demands of their own, and on Sunday members of the newly formed Occupy Pittsburgh group demanded that Bank of New York Mellon Corp. pay back money they allege it overcharged public pension funds around the country.

New York's attorney general and New York City sued BNY Mellon this month, accusing it of defrauding clients in foreign currency exchange transactions that generated nearly $2 billion over 10 years. The company has vowed to fight the lawsuit and had no comment about the protesters' allegation about pensions.

Lisa Deaton, a tea party leader from southern Indiana, said she sees similarities between how the tea party movement and the Wall Street protests began: "We got up and we wanted to vent."

But the critical step, she said, was taking that emotion and focusing it toward changing government.

The first rally she organized drew more than 2,500 people, but afterward, "it was like, `What do we do?'" she said. "You can't have a concert every weekend."

___

Associated Press writers Suzette Laboy in Miami, Steve Szkotak in Richmond, Va., Kevin Begos in Pittsburgh, Laurie Kellman, Ben Nuckols and Stacy A. Anderson in Washington, Tom LoBianco in Indianapolis, Sophia Tareen and Carla K. Johnson in Chicago contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111017/ap_on_re_us/us_wall_street_protest

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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Mindy Weiss Gives Migraine Sufferers the Chance to "Rewrite" Their Day (omg!)

Imagine having to miss out on one of the most important events of your life.

For those suffering with chronic migraines, missing weddings, graduations, birthdays and other milestones due to pain is a reality. But celebrity event planner Mindy Weiss -- who planned the weddings of stars like Gwen Stefani and Heidi Klum -- is partnering with the National Headache Foundation, HealthyWomen and Allergan, Inc to help 15 people recreate the special moment they missed with Rewrite Your Day.

PHOTOS: Stars' good deeds

"We take it for granted that you plan an event for a year, that you're going to walk down the aisle or going to have your birthday party, but people living with chronic migraines,they can wake up that morning and not be able to attend their wedding," Weiss told Us Weekly. "That's how awful this is."

PHOTOS: Lavish kids' birthday parties

So how, for example, would Weiss help a woman who missed out on her wedding recreate her special day? "We'd let her invite people to it, and [she'd] walk down the aisle," she told Us. "We probably wouldn't do a four-course dinner, ten-piece band and all that, but we would do really the important elements? We're going to do a little wedding, where they cut the cake and have the important people there."

PHOTOS: Celebs' gorgeous wedding pics

Weiss -- who's currently planning Jessica Simpson's wedding -- has a busy schedule. "But this is important," she told Us of the Rewrite Your Day campaign.

If you or someone you know missed out on a special event because of migraine pain, visit rewriteyourday.com and share your story.

Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

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Wall Street protesters buoyed by global support

Anti-Wall Street demonstrators were on the march again Saturday in New York City as protests against corporate greed and economic inequality spread around the world.

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Over the past month, the protests have expanded from New York's financial district to cities across the United States and abroad. Demonstrations were called this weekend in the U.S., Canada and Europe, as well as in Asia and Africa.

In New York, as many as 1,000 protesters marched Saturday morning to a Chase bank branch in the financial district, banging drums, blowing horns and carrying signs decrying corporate greed. A few protesters went inside the bank to close their accounts, but they didn't stop other customers from getting inside or seek to blockade the business.

Story: Day of global Occupy protests gets under way

Police told the marchers to stay on the sidewalk, but the demonstration appeared to be fairly orderly as it wound through downtown streets. Other demonstrations were planned around the city all day Saturday.

The march came a day after protesters at the heart of the "Occupy Wall Street" movement in New York exulted Friday after beating back a plan they said was intended to clear them from the privately owned park where they have slept, eaten and protested for the past month. They said their victory will embolden the movement across the U.S. and abroad.

"We are going to piggy-back off the success of today, and it's going to be bigger than we ever imagined," said protester Daniel Zetah after Friday's announcement that protesters could remain in the park.

In the U.S., marches were planned in cities large and small from Providence, Rhode Island, to Little Rock, Arkansas; to Seattle. About 200 people camped overnight in Detroit, a group spokeswoman said.

How does a group like Occupy Wall Street get anything done?

In New York, a march on a bank was scheduled for late morning with a rally simultaneously elsewhere, to be followed by other events through the day that were to culminate in what organizers called an Occupation Party starting late in the afternoon in Times Square.

The U.S. protests were linking up with anti-austerity demonstrations that have raged across debt-ridden Europe for months.

A call for mass protests on Saturday originated a month ago from a meeting in Spain, where mostly young and unemployed people angry at the country's handling of the economic crisis have been demonstrating for months. It was reposted on the Occupy Wall Street website and has been further amplified through social media.

On Saturday, tens of thousands nicknamed "the indignant" marched in European cities from Sarajevo, Bosnia, to Stockholm.

The Friday showdown in New York came as tensions rose, with dozens of arrests in several U.S. cities and scattered clashes between demonstrators and police.

The owners of Zuccotti Park in lower Manhattan had planned to temporarily evict the protesters Friday morning so the grounds could be power-washed. The protesters, their numbers swelled to about 2,000 before daybreak, feared the cleanup was a pretext to break up the demonstration. They vowed to stand their ground.

Just minutes before the appointed hour, park owners Brookfield Office Properties announced it would postpone the cleanup at the request of "a number of local political leaders." The company gave no details. Word of the decision brought boisterous cheers from the demonstrators.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whose girlfriend is on Brookfield's board of directors, said his staff was under strict orders not to pressure the company one way or the other. He noted that Brookfield can still go ahead with the cleanup at some point.

In San Diego, police used pepper spray to break up a human chain formed around a tent by anti-Wall Street demonstrators. Police in riot gear herded hundreds of protesters away from the Colorado state capitol early Friday in Denver, arresting about two dozen people and dismantling their encampment. In New Jersey's capital of Trenton, protesters were ordered to remove tents near a war memorial.

In New York City, police arrested 15 people, including protesters who obstructed traffic by standing or sitting in the street and others who turned over trash baskets and hurled bottles. A deputy inspector was sprayed in the face with an unknown liquid.

Organizers in Des Moines, Iowa, accepted an offer Friday night from the mayor to move from the state Capitol where they were prohibited from staying overnight to a city park blocks away, averting a possible showdown.

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Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Meghan Barr, Karen Matthews and Patrick Walters in Philadelphia, Patrick Condon in Minneapolis, Mike Householder in Detroit, Colleen Long in New York and Michael J. Crumb in Des Moines, Iowa.

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

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44914155/ns/us_news-life/

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