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War drawdowns wreak havoc on Guard soldiers' lives

Michigan National Guard 1st Lt. Demetries Luckett, of Harper Woods, is seen outside of Tech Town in Detroit, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Two months ago, Luckett left his job in Michigan, turned in his cable box, sent his daughter to live with her mother, and headed for Camp Shelby in Mississippi. As a 1st lieutenant in Michigan's National Guard, he was being deployed to Afghanistan. But just a month after he arrived for training, the Army decided Uncle Sam didn't need him after all. Now Luckett's unemployed and back home in Harper Woods, Mich. _ a victim of the Obama administration's ongoing effort to pull at least 33,000 U.S. troops out of Afghanistan by next fall. (AP Photo/Jerry S. Mendoza)

Michigan National Guard 1st Lt. Demetries Luckett, of Harper Woods, is seen outside of Tech Town in Detroit, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Two months ago, Luckett left his job in Michigan, turned in his cable box, sent his daughter to live with her mother, and headed for Camp Shelby in Mississippi. As a 1st lieutenant in Michigan's National Guard, he was being deployed to Afghanistan. But just a month after he arrived for training, the Army decided Uncle Sam didn't need him after all. Now Luckett's unemployed and back home in Harper Woods, Mich. _ a victim of the Obama administration's ongoing effort to pull at least 33,000 U.S. troops out of Afghanistan by next fall. (AP Photo/Jerry S. Mendoza)

Michigan National Guard 1st Lt. Demetries Luckett, of Harper Woods, walks outside of Tech Town in Detroit, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Two months ago, Luckett left his job in Michigan, turned in his cable box, sent his daughter to live with her mother, and headed for Camp Shelby in Mississippi. As a 1st lieutenant in Michigan's National Guard, he was being deployed to Afghanistan. But just a month after he arrived for training, the Army decided Uncle Sam didn't need him after all. Now Luckett's unemployed and back home in Harper Woods, Mich. _ a victim of the Obama administration's ongoing effort to pull at least 33,000 U.S. troops out of Afghanistan by next fall. (AP Photo/Jerry S. Mendoza)

Michigan National Guard 1st Lt. Demetries Luckett, of Harper Woods, walks outside of Tech Town in Detroit, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Two months ago, Luckett left his job in Michigan, turned in his cable box, sent his daughter to live with her mother, and headed for Camp Shelby in Mississippi. As a 1st lieutenant in Michigan's National Guard, he was being deployed to Afghanistan. But just a month after he arrived for training, the Army decided Uncle Sam didn't need him after all. Now Luckett's unemployed and back home in Harper Woods, Mich. _ a victim of the Obama administration's ongoing effort to pull at least 33,000 U.S. troops out of Afghanistan by next fall. (AP Photo/Jerry S. Mendoza)

Michigan National Guard 1st Lt. Demetries Luckett, of Harper Woods, outside of Tech Town in Detroit, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Two months ago, Luckett left his job in Michigan, turned in his cable box, sent his daughter to live with her mother, and headed for Camp Shelby in Mississippi. As a 1st lieutenant in Michigan's National Guard, he was being deployed to Afghanistan. But just a month after he arrived for training, the Army decided Uncle Sam didn't need him after all. Now Luckett's unemployed and back home in Harper Woods, Mich. _ a victim of the Obama administration's ongoing effort to pull at least 33,000 U.S. troops out of Afghanistan by next fall. (AP Photo/Jerry S. Mendoza)

(AP) ? Two months ago, Demetries Luckett left his job in Michigan, turned in his cable box, sent his daughter to live with her mother, and headed for Camp Shelby in Mississippi.

As a 1st lieutenant in Michigan's National Guard, he was being deployed to Afghanistan.

But just a month after he arrived for training, the Army decided Uncle Sam didn't need him after all.

Now Luckett's unemployed and back home in Harper Woods, Mich. ? a victim of the Obama administration's ongoing effort to pull at least 33,000 U.S. troops out of Afghanistan by next fall.

Unlike active-duty soldiers who are stationed at U.S. military bases across the country and can be sent on a moment's notice to a conflict anywhere in the world ? the nation's citizen soldiers have civilian jobs and lives they have to set aside when they get those deployment notices.

And unlike active-duty soldiers, Guard members may have little to go back to, if their country changes its mind.

Luckett is not alone.

In the last 60 days, as many as 8,900 Army National Guard soldiers were either sent home early from Iraq or Afghanistan, or were told that the Pentagon's plans to send them to war had either been shelved or changed. As a result, U.S. military and Guard leaders have been scrambling to find alternative missions for many of the soldiers ? particularly those who had put their lives and jobs on hold and were depending on the deployment for their livelihood.

"If you're a 25-year-old infantryman, and you're a student at Ohio State University, and you decide not to register for school in July because you were going to mobilize, and we say your services aren't needed anymore ? that becomes a significantly emotional event in that person's life," said Col. Ted Hildreth, chief of mobilization and readiness for the Army National Guard.

Guard members scheduled for deployment, he said, often quit or take extended leaves from their jobs, put college on hold, end or break their apartment leases, sell or rent their houses, and turn their medical or legal practices over to someone else. And in some cases, in this flagging economy, Guard members who may be unemployed or underemployed are relying on the year-long paycheck, which can include extra money for combat pay or tax-free benefits.

"These are commitments and contracts that have been signed, and so when these changes happen, they are not insignificant," he said. "So we work with the unit, the country team and the joint force headquarters to define who are no-kidding hardships and who we had to work to find other employments opportunities to fulfill the 400-day mobilization commitment that we made to that soldier."

In the coming weeks, as America works to extricate itself from two wars, the U.S. will pull the remaining 18,000 troops out of Iraq, and withdraw 10,000 forces from Afghanistan. Another 23,000 or more will come out of Afghanistan by next fall.

And while the political ramifications of the war drawdowns are hotly debated topics, there is often little said or known about the cascading effects such decisions have on the lives, jobs and schooling of the National Guard and Reserve troops.

Guard units are notified of their deployments as much as two years in advance, so they make long-term plans to meet the year-long military commitment.

But to meet the often-changing withdrawal timetables for Iraq and Afghanistan, the Pentagon has had to abruptly shuffle units, and even individual soldiers, around. The major moves include shifting forces from Iraq to new missions in Kuwait or to Afghanistan.

During a hearing on Capitol Hill, Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the military tries to do all it can to avoid changing deployment orders given to National Guard units once they are notified.

If a unit has been mobilized, he said, "we will find a place to use it," particularly if it is an aviation unit, since those are in high demand.

Usually, he said, officials try to identify soldiers who prefer not to deploy, since there often are some who are happy to stay home. Then the rest of the unit will, if possible, be sent to a different mission in the same country or to another location.

For example, the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, made up of more than 2,300 soldiers from Ohio and Michigan, was initially scheduled to go to Afghanistan in early October to do combat and other operations.

But when Pentagon leaders decided many weren't needed, they scrounged for other missions so that the soldiers who really wanted or needed to deploy could do so.

Maj. Jeff Kinninger, executive officer for the 126th Cavalry Squadron, was another soldier who got to Camp Shelby, then was told not to deploy. But for Kinninger and his family, it was more of a welcome decision because he has a full-time job working for the National Guard in Grand Rapids.

"For me, this would have been three deployments in the last seven years, so I wasn't too disappointed," said Kinninger, 42, who had served in Iraq in 2005 and 2008. "I'm disappointed not to be there with my soldiers, but my family is happy I'm not going."

His squadron is part of the 37th IBCT. So, of the 430 squadron members who headed to Camp Shelby to prepare to deploy, more than 200 were told they weren't needed. After sorting out who wanted to go home, military officials were able to find assignments for all the rest, Kinninger said.

Two other brigades are going through similar struggles ? the 27th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, based in New York, and the 29th Combat Aviation Brigade, which includes soldiers from across the U.S.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-28-National%20Guard-War%20Tours/id-17ec38131a7d4918a2681bc88f08f4bb

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6 players killed in Togolese team bus crash

By EBOW GODWIN

updated 6:13 p.m. ET Nov. 26, 2011

LOME, Togo - At least six topflight Togolese soccer players were killed and another 28 people critically injured on Saturday after a bus carrying their team plunged into a ravine and caught fire.

In a statement read on national television, the Togo government said President Faure Gnassingbe had ordered that those injured from the Etoile Filante club be taken to the military wing of the Lome Central Hospital to receive urgent medical attention.

A delegation, led by sports minister Christophe Tchao, traveled to the accident site with an ambulance to evacuate the injured.

The accident happened near the city of Atakpame, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) north of Lome, as Etoile Filante was on its way to Togo's second largest city of Sokode for Sunday's league game against Semassi.

A tire is believed to have burst, causing the bus to topple over and plunge down a ravine. Some of the victims reportedly burnt to death. Eyewitness accounts said the bus flipped over several times as it crashed into the ravine.

"We do not know how we managed to get out of the accident," said one of the survivors, goalkeeper Mama Souleyman.

Images on Togo national television showed the smoldering wreckage of the bus, which was almost completely burnt to ashes.

Lome-based Etoile Filante is a seven-time Togo national league champion and was runner-up in Africa's continental club competition in 1968.

Last year, two Togo national team officials were killed and several players hurt after a gun attack on the team's bus as it traveled to the African Cup of Nations tournament in Angola.

In 2007, Togo sports minister Richard Attipoe was among 22 people who died when a helicopter carrying Togolese soccer fans and officials crashed in Sierra Leone after an African Cup qualifying match.

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


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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45446882/ns/sports-soccer/

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Cosmic ray factory observed in stellar superbubble

New images link cosmic rays to an enormous bubble of gas blown by hot, young stars, implying that these mysterious high-energy particles may be made in the same factories where stars are born.

Cosmic rays have puzzled astronomers since they were discovered nearly a century ago. Most are protons and other atomic nuclei. They bombard our planet from all directions, travelling at close to the speed of light.

Where cosmic rays come from is unknown. Astronomers suspect that supernova explosions boost them to such high speeds. Supernovae happen most often in dense clouds of gas and dust where stars between 10 and 50 times the mass of the sun are born and die ? so those could be a good place to look. "We thought there would be a good chance to see cosmic-ray sources in those star-forming regions," says Isabelle Grenier of the Paris Diderot University in France.

Swanning about

In 2006, astronomers detected a slight excess of cosmic rays coming from the direction of Cygnus X, a star-forming nebula in the constellation Cygnus (the swan).

But that does not necessarily mean that Cygnus X is the source, because magnetic fields force cosmic rays to take a meandering path through the galaxy.

So instead of hunting for cosmic rays directly, Grenier and colleagues looked at gamma rays. Gamma rays are high-energy photons produced when cosmic rays interact with the matter or light around them, and they are not deflected by magnetic fields.

The team turned the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope towards Cygnus X. High-speed winds from massive stars in the nebula have sculpted their surroundings into a set of beautiful interlocking cavities called a superbubble, more than 100 light years across.

Ugly duckling

The images show this superbubble glowing in gamma rays, forming a bright region that looks roughly like a duck. "An ugly duckling inside the swan," says Grenier. The spectrum of these gamma rays implies that the cosmic rays are energetic and freshly accelerated, so they must be close to their sources.

In theory, protons and other nuclei can be accelerated to these high energies by shockwaves. Inside Cygnus X, those shockwaves could be generated both by supernovae and by the colliding winds from massive stars.

"It's the first credible claim of the detection of high-energy gamma ray emission from superbubbles," says Bob Binns at Washington University in St Louis, who was not involved in the new work. "My belief is when they look carefully at other superbubbles, they will also find this."

Journal reference: Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1210311

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Sticky goo on Pa. turnpike disables over 100 cars (AP)

PITTSBURGH ? A flood of gooey black muck dropped from a tanker truck disabled about 150 cars and damaged an unknown number of other vehicles along a nearly 40-mile stretch of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, officials said.

A leaking valve on a tanker spread driveway sealant over the eastbound lanes of a long stretch of the Turnpike between New Castle and the Oakmont Service Plaza on Tuesday night, Turnpike spokesman Bill Capone said.

Turnpike operations officials on Wednesday said 150 or more cars were disabled when the sticky goo covered their tires and wheels. Some state police and turnpike maintenance vehicles had to be towed away after getting stuck in the tar-like substance, according to the turnpike operations center.

Traffic was moving normally by Wednesday morning, but the sticky mess hindered the travel plans of some motorists traveling for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Laura Frick told WTAE-TV she was traveling from Cleveland to New Jersey for the holiday.

"Now we have to turn around and go back home," Frick said. "It's horrible."

Retired firefighter Bob King told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review the experience was the most harrowing of his life.

"It caught us off guard," said King, who now lives near Chicago. "It didn't seem like anyone knew what it was or what to do. It had to be an incredible amount of tar. It's still piled on my tires."

Cpl. Mike Corna, with the state police barracks that patrol the pike near Pittsburgh, said Wednesday the driver will be cited for not properly securing his load, though the specific tickets to be issued were still being determined. Police have yet to trace the origin of the load. The tank was filled somewhere in Ohio.

Maintenance crews got out quickly, dumping sand on the pooled goop and using snow plows to push it on to the shoulder, turnpike spokesman Carl DeFebo said. The mess was mostly confined to the right lane and the roadway didn't have to be shut down while workers tried to clean it up.

Turnpike officials urged motorists whose cars were damaged to call its operations center at (800) 331-3414. DeFebo said a number of callers have already been in touch with turnpike operations, which is still trying to determine how many motorists were affected.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weather/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_re_us/us_sticky_substance_turnpike

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Gun issue represents tough politics for Obama (AP)

WASHINGTON ? They are fuzzy about some issues but the Republican presidential candidates leave little doubt about where they stand on gun rights.

Rick Perry and Rick Santorum go pheasant hunting and give interviews before heading out. Newt Gingrich and Herman Cain speak to the National Rifle Association convention. Michele Bachmann tells People magazine she wants to teach her daughters how to shoot because women need to be able to protect themselves. Mitt Romney, after backing some gun control measures in Massachusetts, now presents himself as a strong Second Amendment supporter.

President Barack Obama, on the other hand, is virtually silent on the issue.

He has hardly addressed it since a couple of months after the January assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Ariz., when he promised to develop new steps on gun safety in response. He still has failed to do so, even as Tucson survivors came to Capitol Hill last week to push for action to close loopholes in the gun background check system.

Democrats have learned the hard way that embracing gun control can be terrible politics, and the 2012 presidential election is shaping up to underscore just how delicate the issue can be. With the election likely to be decided largely by states where hunting is a popular pastime, like Missouri, Ohio or Pennsylvania, candidates of both parties want to win over gun owners, not alienate them.

For Republicans, that means emphasizing their pro-gun credentials. But for Obama and the Democrats, the approach is trickier.

Obama's history in support of strict gun control measures prior to becoming president makes it difficult for him to claim he's a Second Amendment champion, even though he signed a bill allowing people to take loaded guns into national parks. At the same time, he's apparently decided that his record backing gun safety is nothing to boast of either, perhaps because of the power of the gun lobby and their opposition to anything smacking of gun control.

The result is that while Republicans are more than happy to talk up their support for gun rights, Obama may barely be heard from on the issue at all.

"Gun control is a fight that the administration is not willing to pick. They're not likely to win it," said Harry Wilson, author of a book on gun politics and director of the Institute for Policy and Opinion Research at Roanoke College in Virginia. "They certainly would not win it in Congress, and it's not likely to be a winner at the polls. ... It comes down to one pretty simple word: Politics."

Administration officials say they are working to develop the gun safety measures promised after the Giffords shooting, and they say they have taken steps to improve the background check system. White House spokesman Matt Lehrich says the White House goal is to "protect the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens while keeping guns out of the hands of those who shouldn't have them under existing law."

But when it comes to guns and politics, Democrats haven't forgotten what happened in 1994. That year, President Bill Clinton was pushing for passage of a landmark crime bill featuring a ban on assault-style weapons, and then-House Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash., twisted Democrats' arms to get it through the House. Come November, Democrats suffered widespread election losses and lost control of the House and the Senate. Foley was among those defeated, and Clinton and others credited the NRA's campaigning with a big role in the outcome. And when the assault weapons ban came up for congressional reauthorization in 2004, it failed.

Given that history, the NRA expects to see Obama treading carefully on guns through 2012.

"It's bad politics to be on the wrong side of the Second Amendment at election time," said Wayne LaPierre, NRA executive vice president. "They're trying to fog the issue through the 2012 election and deceive gun owners into thinking he's something he's not, which is pro-Second Amendment."

For gun control advocates, it adds up to frustration with Obama and the Democrats. The group Mayors Against Illegal Guns argues that polling shows voters support certain gun safety measures like stronger background checks ? although a recent Gallup poll also finds more support for enforcing current laws than for passing new ones.

"Good policy here is good politics," said John Feinblatt, an adviser to New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is a co-chairman of the mayors' group. "Unfortunately, for too long the administration has bought the conventional wisdom" that gun control is bad politics.

But the NRA outspends gun-control groups by a wide margin, and analysts say that when it comes time to vote, the gun issue is more likely to motivate gun rights activists than gun control supporters.

Since becoming president, Obama has been extremely cautious on the issue. In his 2004 Senate race, for example, Obama said it was a "scandal" that then-President George W. Bush didn't force renewal of the assault weapons ban. But Obama himself has done nothing to promote that issue since becoming president.

Obama's commitment to act on gun safety may also be complicated by an unrelated controversy over a Justice Department program aimed at stanching gun trafficking into Mexico. The government lost track of numerous weapons in connection with the program.

Obama has vowed to figure out what went wrong with the operation and make sure it's corrected, but with Republicans seizing on the issue to attack the White House, the politics around taking action on guns hasn't gotten any easier.

So for now, supporters who hoped to see Obama adopt a stronger stance on guns and act in the wake of the Giffords shooting look like they're going to be disappointed.

"We haven't given up hope," said Dennis Henigan, acting president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, "but our impatience is growing with each passing day."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_el_pr/us_obama_guns

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US troops celebrate last Thanksgiving in Iraq (AP)

COS ECHO, Iraq ? American troops marked their last Thanksgiving in Iraq Thursday with turkey, stuffing and a rocket fire alarm.

Fewer than 20,000 American troops remain in Iraq at eight bases across the country. All of the forces must be out of Iraq by the end of this year, and American soldiers have been busily packing up their equipment and heading south.

Many of the bases no longer have civilian contractors making meals for them, so the troops have been eating prepackaged meals.

At COS Echo in southern Iraq, the soldiers celebrated the occasion with a special meal including turkey, stuffing, and pumpkin pie. Bottles of nonalcoholic sparkling cider were brought in especially for the occasion. The incoming rocket alarm was nothing special for the holiday ? they're heard all the time.

Lt. Col. Robert Michael Rodriguez from Santa Fe, N.M. said they worked especially hard to make the food as good as possible for what could be the last Thanksgiving in a war zone for many of the assembled troops.

"All of the commanders and the first sergeants and myself have been serving the soldiers all day. All the fixings, turkey, ham, lobster, shrimp. Trying to make it as close to home as possible," he said.

Thanksgivings in the U.S. are more about food and footballs games, not warfare. The afternoon meal at Echo was marked by the distinctive, loud whirring sound signaling incoming fire at the base, and all the soldiers hit the floor. It was unclear if anything hit the base located near Diwaniyah, 80 miles (130 kilometers) south of Baghdad.

U.S. military officials have blamed Shiite militias backed by Iran for much of the violence in southern Iraq directed at departing American forces.

Attacks have let up in recent months compared to the frequent rocket barrages fired at U.S. troops over the spring and summer. American commanders say they are prepared for further violence against their forces as U.S. troops leave the country.

"They are probably going to shoot at us the last day that we are here," Gen. Lloyd Austin, the top American general in Iraq told soldiers during a stop at Camp Victory in Baghdad Thursday.

Austin spent the day touring many of the remaining bases around the country including Echo. He said he has spent six of his last nine Thanksgivings deployed in places such as Iraq, Afghanistan and Qatar.

As he prepares to wrap up America's military presence in Iraq, Austin said he is heartened by the improvements that he's seen since he first came into the country with the initial invasion force in 2003.

"We've seen things ebb and flow, and we've seen a very persistent effort to help the Iraqis move forward. And you can see that progress as you go from place to place. It's going to take time, and we're hopeful that the right decisions will continue to be made," Austin told The Associated Press in an interview Thursday.

The dangers Iraq faces after American troops leave was on display Thursday. In the southern city of Basra, 19 people were killed and dozens more injured when three bombs went off in an open-air market.

Violence has dropped considerably since the dark days of the insurgency, but the threat from Shiite militias with loyalties to Iran, as well as Sunni militants such as al-Qaida, remains potent.

Many of the troops marking the U.S. military's eighth and final Thanksgiving in Iraq have experienced multiple deployments, as part of an all-volunteer military that has been waging wars on two fronts for nearly a decade.

"I came here in the invasion. It was a little rough at the beginning. We lost a lot of friends, lost a lot of battle buddies," said Sgt. 1st Class Fred Enrique Fox from Ft. Hood, Texas. "It got better tour after tour, but the first one was the hardest one."

The 32-year-old said he has done four tours in Iraq and has spent time in Fallujah, once the center of the insurgency in Anbar province, and the once-volatile city of Iskandariyah, 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of Baghdad.

During this tour his platoon is helping secure the main road through Iraq, by which almost all American equipment and many U.S. soldiers will travel out of the country into Kuwait by the end of this year.

He said he is looking forward to being home to see the birth of his baby daughter in February, but now he's concentrating on getting his troops home safely.

"That is my biggest focus, making sure my 24 guys get home alive," he said before going back to help serve food to the troops.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111124/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iraq_last_thanksgiving

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Vieux Carre Commission protects French Quarter (AP)

NEW ORLEANS ? On a muggy autumn French Quarter morning, away from bawdy Bourbon Street and within earshot of the calliope on the steamer Natchez, residents sat on their stoops drinking rich cafe au lait, reading the newspaper, or watching the passing traffic.

Replace the cars with horses and carriages and the scene could well be from a couple of hundred years ago.

The old city remains vital with a steady mix of residents and small businesses mostly thanks to the Vieux Carre Commission, which regulates changes to the 2,500 to 3,000 buildings in the small section of New Orleans near the Mississippi River. The commission has control over every part of a building's exterior, not just those that can be seen from the street.

A rotting sill in the back of the house cannot be replaced without permission. A wall can't be painted or a window removed or a roof changed without permission. It's a sore point for some, but the results of such strict control are noticeable.

The nation's second-oldest regulatory body for a historic district has been riding herd on the old buildings in the French Quarter and the people who work and live there for 75 years this month. Only the Preservation Society of Charleston, formed in 1931, is older than the New Orleans commission. Both pre-date the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which was founded in 1949.

When the commission was formed during the Great Depression, the 85-square-block Quarter that was laid out by French settlers in 1718 had become a collection of derelict buildings. The idea of preserving an entire area was novel.

"What was considered ahead of time was that up until then American preservation was preservation of individual structures, Mount Vernon for instance," said Walter Gaillas, with the National Trust for Historic Preservation. "Back then, nobody thought of it as, `Gee, maybe there is another way to preserve a whole community.' Now there are hundreds of commissions like that around the country."

The French Quarter, also known as the Vieux Carre (Old Square) as it was once called, had fallen on hard times by 1936. Once-grand townhouses were tenements, and city officials were seriously considering tearing down the majestic old buildings that frame Jackson Square ? Upper Pontalba and the Cabildo ? where the Louisiana Purchase was signed in 1803.

Then along came the Vieux Carre Commission, dedicated to preservation while keeping the area a functioning part of the community.

"The commission is not about keeping things looking pretty but addressing what's appropriate to character and quality of all the parts that make up this neighborhood," said Vieux Carre Commission Director Lary Hesdorffer. "We have the benefit of not being frozen in time."

The idea, Hesdorffer said, is not to return the French Quarter ? which is a real neighborhood with people living there and real businesses operating on its streets ? to what it was when it was founded, but to keep the historical presence this generation inherited.

"We have many different styles in the French Quarter from different eras," Hesdorffer said. "We're now treasuring buildings that have been renovated along the way."

As an example, Hesdorffer points to the famous "lace" iron work on French Quarter balconies, which came in the 1800s, replacing the original plain ironwork.

"That sort of layering thing is what makes this historic district particularly rich because we represent some things that date to the colonial period," he said. "But not many are in pure form. Over the years, they've been updated, changed."

The worth of the commission is easy to see, said John Klingman, a professor at the Tulane University School of Architecture.

"The easiest way to see the value is to look at the parts of the city around the French Quarter where they have no control," Klingman said. "Canal Street is a mish-mash, Rampart Street was the home of jazz and now it's almost all parking lots."

Nine volunteer members and a staff of five make up the commission. The volunteers are appointed by the mayor and approved by the city council. Three of the volunteers are from a list submitted by the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects. One is chosen from a list from the Chamber of Commerce, One from the Louisiana Historical Society, one from the Louisiana State Museum Board, and three at-large members.

Although French Quarter residents appreciate the preservation all around them, sometimes the strict rules, which Hesdorffer said are designed to "guide them to make that building as treasured as it should be for the next generation," can chafe.

Earl Bernhardt has operated six bars in the Quarter for 27 years and lives half a block from Bourbon Street. He just received a citation against one of his businesses.

First Bernhardt said, the commission told him he could not hang a group of flags, one advertising his trademark drink, the "Hand-grenade," from the front of his building. So he moved to the windows of the vacant second floor above the bar.

"So now they're telling me they can't hang there either," Bernhardt said. "They don't enforce these rules evenly or fairly. They tell me not to put out a sandwich board on the sidewalk, but just across the street they have a couple of them."

There's appreciation as well.

At Antoine's Restaurant ? founded in in 1840 ? preservation is a way of life. The meticulously maintained restaurant offers up fine Creole dining and a healthy helping of history as well. CEO Rick Blount said he is grateful every day for the Vieux Carre Commission.

"I look at the buildings around me and think about what they would be like if there was no oversight," Blount said. "We have a treasure and we are still surrounded by them, thank God."

Glade Bilby has lived in his 1934 townhouse for 36 years, and went through a prolonged battle with the commission over his plan to install solar panels on his roof. The panels would be hard to see, but could be seen from at least one vantage point and the commission turned him down.

Bilby appealed to the city council, which granted him permission.

"But I applaud the commission," Bilby said. "It's a yeoman's job keeping some character to these streets, because you always have someone like me who doesn't fall in line."

Linda Kiel found out the hard way when she tried to replace a small section of roof in the back of the 1832 Creole cottage she had moved into.

"We got a very nasty letter and stop-work order from the commission and they were threatening to fine us," Kiel said. Although she ended up having to pay an architect $1,600 in order for the work to be approved, she said she has since come to appreciate the commission and its work.

"Look at where we live," she said. "It's a very special place, and it wouldn't be this way if someone wasn't looking out for it."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_re_us/us_french_quarter_guards

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IPOs are lifting investor spirits, but not stocks (AP)

NEW YORK ? U.S. companies are on track to post record profits this year. Stocks are cheap by some measures. And now even the hot IPO is back, handing riches to a lucky few and filling the rest of us with two emotions necessary for any bull market ? envy and greed.

It's enough to make you think stocks might recapture their April highs soon. But don't bet on it.

Angie's List Inc., the consumer review site, rose 25 percent in its public debut Thursday, more than double the average first-day gain for initial public offerings. It was the highlight of one of the busiest weeks for IPOs this year, a welcome break after almost no offerings for three months as companies pulled plans because of wild swings in the stock market.

"IPOs have recovered from their summer doldrums," says Jay Ritter, a finance professor at the University of Florida and IPO expert. "Good companies can go public again."

Most investors couldn't care less, however. The Standard & Poor's 500 fell 3.8 percent this past week, the worst since September.

In addition to Angie's List, seven companies made public debuts this week including Delphi Automotive PLC, a once-bankrupt auto parts maker, which slipped 3 percent on its first day. On Friday, Mattress Firm Holding Corp., a mattress retailer, had a first-day gain of 16 percent. Those sales followed a hot initial offering this month by Groupon Inc., the online coupon company.

The question now: Will a few successful offerings help convince companies that have delayed IPOs to go ahead?

A.B. Mendez, a stock analyst at the research firm Greencrest Capital, is hopeful. He notes that shares of Angie's List rose despite the fact that the company has yet to turn a profit and generated only $59 million in revenue last year.

"They've stoked excitement," he says of the recent offerings. "The bar for IPOs has come down."

While making it easier for iffy outfits to sell shares might sound bad, it could help break the logjam of planned offerings. Some companies are small with little or no profits, too.

The backlog totals 179 companies, according to Dealogic, a research firm. The companies hope to raise $30 billion selling stock. That's about as much as IPOs raised in the last six months of 2007, when the economy was still expanding and stock offerings were booming.

In the past, a hot IPO during dry spell has helped kick-start the market. In the summer of 1998, stocks tumbled after Russia defaulted on its government debt and stock offerings ground to a halt. Then, in September, a much-anticipated IPO of Ebay Inc. set the market afire. On its first day trading, shares of the online auctioneer nearly tripled.

By the end of 1998, 284 firms had gone public ? less than half the record 675 in 1996 but better than in most years. The S&P 500 rose 27 percent that year.

Earlier this year, 2011 was shaping up as the best year for IPOs in a decade. In April, Zipcar Inc., the popular online car rental firm, rose more than half on its first day of trading. The next month, LinkedIn Corp., the online professional network, doubled on its first day. Other popular offerings included Pandora Media Inc., the internet radio company, and Zillow Inc., the real estate website, whose stock rose 79 percent in its July debut.

In August, the IPO market collapsed. Stocks fell sharply as investors braced for a possible default by the U.S. government. That didn't happen, but then it began looking more likely that Greece might default. In September, no company went public. Even in the worst months of the credit crisis three years earlier, one or two companies managed to have initial public offerings.

For all the buzz surrounding IPOs, they may reflect optimism in the market more than they feed it. Ritter, the IPO scholar, argues that IPOs are bit players in the stock market, at least in terms of dollars they control. He notes that even in the boom years of the late 1990s, IPOs never raised more than $100 billion annually ? less than 1 percent of the total value of publicly traded U.S. companies.

His conclusion: Stocks are moved by larger forces than IPOs.

For now, that means Europe. On Thursday, as Angie's List was soaring, investors were selling nearly everything else. They were focused on news that government lenders were bolting from Spain, sending borrowing costs there higher. The S&P 500 fell 1.7 percent.

Still, there's no harm in hoping.

Among the companies that have filed paperwork with regulators to go public: Toys R Us, which hopes to raise $800 million, and online games creator Zynga Inc., which is aiming for $1 billion. And as Angie's List was soaring Thursday, another consumer review site generated excitement with a filing of its own. Yelp Inc. says it hopes to raise $100 million.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111120/ap_on_bi_co_ne/us_wall_street_week_ahead

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2 killed in stampede at SEA Games soccer final

updated 12:28 p.m. ET Nov. 21, 2011

JAKARTA, Indonesia - A stampede at the soccer final of the Southeast Asian Games has left two fans dead.

Spectators unable to get inside the 80,000-seat Bung Karno Stadium set two ticket booths ablaze, and police fired warning shots to break up the rowdy crowd.

Later, fans rushed the stadium in an effort to get in.

Nur Somad, a morgue official at the Ciptomangunkusumo hospital, said at least two Indonesians died. Scores more were injured, witnesses said, many of them left unconscious.

In the match, Malaysia defended its gold medal in the regional tournament by Indonesia 5-4 on penalty kicks.

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


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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45387957/ns/sports-soccer/

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Economic woes dampen demand at Burgundy auction (Reuters)

BEAUNE, France (Reuters) ? A sale of Burgundy wine at the world's biggest charity auction Sunday drew lower bids than in previous years as economic jitters hit home.

The sale of the so-called President's Lot is a highlight of the annual "Hospices de Beaune" auction, at which rich wine enthusiasts bid for fine Burgundy wines in a yearly sale whose proceeds are donated entirely to charity.

But economic worries crimped enthusiasm at Sunday's sale. Most auctioned bottles drew less than their expected bids, while the President's Lot -- a 460-liter barrel -- raised 110,000 euros, a steep drop from the 400,000 euros it raised last year.

"This year's auction takes place in a difficult financial and economic context," said Alain Suguenot, chairman of the hospices and mayor of Beaune, home to a striking medieval-era hospice in the midst of wine-growing country.

The auction is a meeting place for jet-setting millionaires and wine trades set on obtaining quality wines and funding charitable organizations.

Fashion figure Ines de la Fressange and comic film actor Christian Clavier presided over the sale of the special lot according to the traditional candle-flame method -- where bidding continues until the flame dies.

The revenue goes to the French Alzheimer's disease research association and a charity that funds cardiac surgery in France for children from poor countries.

The wines are from the 2011 harvest and will need to mature for a few years before they are ready for drinking.

"This vintage is the best of the century," said Claude Chevallier, president of the Burgundy vintners association. "That makes it the 11th in a row," he added.

Louis-Fabrice Latour, head of Burgundy's wine merchant group, said he expected the Burgundy prices in 2012 to be stable to slightly lower due to the financial crisis.

ALOXE-CORTON

This year the President's Lot was a Corton Clos du Roi Cuvee Baronne du Bay, named after the daughter of Jean-Louis Peste, a doctor at the hospice for 30 years in the 19th century.

In 1924, when she was alive, she donated vineyards to the hospital on the Aloxe-Corton hillsides. Over 45 percent of this Grand Cru terroir is planted with 37-year-old Pinot vines.

Clavier, born in 1952, is best known for his role in "The Visitors," a French film in which a group of medieval people are lost in modern times.

Aristocrat Fressange is a former top model and is well-known in France's fashion scene. She consults for fashion designer Jean-Paul Gaultier and still works occasionally as a model, gracing the catwalk at Chanel's 2011 spring-summer show at the age of 53.

Aside from the President's Lot, the general hospices bidding is for lots of 228 litres of wine in barrels that can be transformed into 288 standard bottles. The wine is from the 2011 harvest and has to stay in barrels for at least two years.

The wines are among the best and most expensive of Burgundy, France's second-biggest wine-making area after Bordeaux.

The auction, by Christie's, still takes place in the medieval building but telephone lines and Internet connections allow bidders to participate from all over the world.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111120/lf_nm_life/us_france_wine_burgundy

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Rahm Emanuel Focuses Fire on Romney (ABC News)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/164398347?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Google Music: Will it threaten iTunes? (The Week)

New York ? The search titan launches its own digital music store, opening a new front in its vicious techie turf war with Apple

The Google-Apple war continues to rage. On Wednesday, Google unveiled its highly anticipated digital music store,?which will sell songs ? priced from $.69 to $1.29, just like Apple's iTunes ? along with apps, movies, and books.?Google secured deals with three of the four major labels (Universal, EMI, and Sony ? Warner Music Group is a holdout), good for an archive of 13?million tracks. Google Music users can also share music on the Google+ social network, letting friends listen to their songs once for free. Google Music, which launched in beta as a streaming only service earlier this year, also includes a cloud storage locker where users can upload and store up to 20,000 songs for free. Amazon and Apple offer similar storage options, but for an annual fee. Does Google Music seriously challenge iTunes' dominance?

Nope. This is unimpressive: Google Music is an "entirely unoriginal idea," says Adrian Covert at Gizmodo. Music storage lockers, mp3 lending, and a music store that allows users to purchase individual tracks ? that's old news. Amazon and iTunes have been selling music this way for years, and there's no compelling reason to switch to Google Music. "Google is late to the digital music party," and Google Music is a "complete letdown" from "one of the only companies in the world with the clout to actually change the system, not just recycle it."
"Google Music is a complete letdown"

Not yet... but maybe one day: "Google Music in its current form is no iTunes killer," and "without improvement, it's unlikely to even maim," says Greg Sandoval at CNET. Without Warner, Google Music is missing big names like the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Green Day, and Google's sharing feature is more restrictive than Spotify's. Still, "Apple shouldn't take the Google threat lightly." And whatever happens between the tech giants, the competition can only benefit consumers. "Rock on, Google."
"Google Music hits almost all the high notes"

But the social component is a big plus: Google Music's integration with Google+ could give it a "big boost" in competing with iTunes, says Sharon Gaudin at Computerworld. The new service allows users to share tunes, and even an entire album, with their buddies through Google+. That's something "different" that "gives Google Music a great shot at being successful," says analyst Zeus Kerravala. "iTunes is music. Google Music is social music."
"Going social could be 'game changer' for Google Music"

And the price is right: Google's most "notable improvement" to the digital music experience is that there's no charge for users to upload and store songs they already own, says Thomas Claburn at InformationWeek. Apple charges $25 a year for that privilege, while Amazon charges $20.? Another "added incentive" is that Google is offering exclusive recordings, from artists like the Rolling Stones, Coldplay, and Dave Matthews Band, for free.
"Google Music: 7 key facts"

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The Resurrection of Gabby Giffords, the Latest Non-Romney, and Lessons From Penn State

?The Cruel Lesson of Penn State: How what happened in State College forced me to confront my own abuse,? by Mark P. McKenna. The details of the Jerry Sandusky abuse case might have been hard for anyone to stomach, but they were far more nerve-wracking for the author, who was abused as a child in circumstances similar to the Penn State scandal. ?, I no longer think every single day about that terrible winter night. There are still plenty of reminders, to be sure, and there are some things that will never be normal for me. But most days, the wound is insulated by lots of scar tissue. Not this week, though. ?The story hit me at a bad time, during a year that was already very difficult. And the similarities were too hard to ignore.?

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=b1a8ced371eff37a7059b16cd1273f6c

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Energy Secretary Stephen Chu to Defend Solyndra Loan to Congress

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Stephen Chu, in advance testimony before a House committee, will defend the program that loaned $535 million to Solyndra, the solar-panel maker that went bankrupt.

Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=bf5390a32e339391bc5dc8da619fea40

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Cubs hire Sveum as new manager (AP)

The Chicago Cubs have hired Dale Sveum as their new manager, hoping the Milwaukee Brewers hitting coach can help turn around the long-suffering franchise. The Cubs said Sveum would be introduced at a news conference Friday at Wrigley Field.

Sveum replaces Mike Quade, who was fired by Theo Epstein, the team's new president of baseball operations. The Cubs finished 71-91 after a disappointing season that extended their infamous championship drought to 103 seasons.

Sveum, who turns 48 next Wednesday, has little experience as a manager, other than an interim stint for the Brewers late in 2008 after Ned Yost was fired.

Sveum had competition for the Cubs job. Rangers pitching coach Mike Maddux, Phillies bench coach Pete Mackanin and Indians bench coach Sandy Alomar Jr. all interviewed face-to-face for the spot. Red Sox bench coach DeMarlo Hale was interviewed over the phone and former Boston manager Terry Francona pulled himself out of contention.

Sveum also interviewed for the Red Sox manager's vacancy and met a second time this week with officials from both the Cubs and Boston.

Sveum -- the name is pronounced swaym -- will take over a team that finished fifth in the NL Central and is saddled with big contracts belonging to Carlos Zambrano and Alfonso Soriano. The Cubs also boast a talented young player in All-Star shortstop Starlin Castro, but have a host of personnel questions to sort through.

The Cubs' new management team comes with a championship pedigree that the new manager knows well: Sveum served as Boston's third base coach in 2004-05, when Epstein was the general manager.

At the time, Sveum was often criticized for an aggressive approach that led to runners being thrown out at the plate. But the coach with the nickname of "Nuts" was part of a championship team and is a believer in the advanced statistical analysis that Chicago's new leadership loves and is counting on to build up the farm system.

"I do my due diligence and video work and prepare as much as anybody," Sveum said before he was hired. "As far as the stats, those are what they are, and we can use them to our advantage. It's a big part of the game now. It's helping us win a lot of ballgames, the stats and the matchups. That's just part of the game now, and you use what you can."

Sveum was a switch-hitting shortstop for the Brewers and had a 25-homer season before his career was slowed after an outfield collision. In 12 seasons with Milwaukee and six other teams, he batted .236 with 69 home runs and 340 RBIs in 862 games. He was drafted by Milwaukee in the first round (25th overall) in 1982.

Sveum did well in his limited run as Milwaukee's manager. After Yost was fired following a 3-11 slide in September, Sveum led the Brewers to their first playoff appearance in 26 years, winning six of seven down the stretch and capturing the wild card on the final day of the regular season.

Milwaukee then decided to hire a more experienced manager in the offseason and went with Ken Macha, who lasted two seasons. Sveum stayed on as the hitting coach and oversaw one of the best offenses in the National League last season. With Ryan Braun and Prince Fielder leading the way, the Brewers hit an NL-high 185 homers and were third with a .261 batting average on their way to the NL Central title -- well ahead of the Cubs.

The past two seasons have bottomed out for Chicago.Lou Piniella abruptly retired in August 2010 and while Quade stepped in and did well, the Cubs didn't respond as well this season.

Zambrano was suspended late in the season after another outburst and is likely gone, even with a year left on his five-year, $91.5 million contract. There is a potential ace in Matt Garza and a promising young arm in Andrew Cashner.

First baseman Carlos Pena, a free agent who hit 28 homers with 80 RBIs and a .225 average, would like to come back. Aramis Ramirez, who hit .306 with 26 homers and 93 RBIs, said he plans to explore the free agent market, though there is a mutual $16 million option on the table. Soriano, who has three years remaining on his deal, batted .244 but did hit 26 homers with 88 RBIs.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111118/ap_on_sp_ba_ne/bbn_cubs_sveum

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'Immortals' ascends to No. 1 weekend with $32.2M (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? The action adventure "Immortals" claimed the top spot at the weekend box office with $32.2 million, debuting ahead of Adam Sandler's comedy "Jack and Jill," which opened at No. 2 with $25 million.

The top 20 movies at U.S. and Canadian theaters Friday through Sunday, followed by distribution studio, gross, number of theater locations, average receipts per location, total gross and number of weeks in release, as compiled Monday by Hollywood.com are:

1. "Immortals," Relativity Media, $32,206,425, 3,112 locations, $10,349 average, $32,206,425, one week.

2. "Jack and Jill," Sony, $25,003,575, 3,438 locations, $7,273 average, $25,003,575, one week.

3. "Puss in Boots," Paramount, $24,726,193, 3,903 locations, $6,335 average, $108,035,359, three weeks.

4. "Tower Heist," Universal, $12,773,765, 3,370 locations, $3,790 average, $43,465,615, two weeks.

5. "J. Edgar," Warner Bros., $11,217,324, 1,910 locations, $5,873 average, $11,315,858, one week.

6. "A Very Harold & Kumar 3-D Christmas," Warner Bros., $5,915,143, 2,875 locations, $2,057 average, $23,237,525, two weeks.

7. "In Time," Fox, $4,081,881, 2,591 locations, $1,575 average, $30,598,618, three weeks.

8. "Paranormal Activity 3," Paramount, $3,611,283, 2,776 locations, $1,301 average, $100,808,835, four weeks.

9. "Footloose," Paramount, $2,726,736, 2,215 locations, $1,231 average, $48,767,514, five weeks.

10. "Real Steel," Disney, $1,864,688, 1,758 locations, $1,061 average, $81,612,804, six weeks.

11. "Moneyball," Sony, $1,066,267, 813 locations, $1,312 average, $71,857,836, eight weeks.

12. "Courageous," Sony, $1,012,220, 905 locations, $1,118 average, $31,565,808, seven weeks.

13. "The Ides of March," Sony, $944,292, 696 locations, $1,357 average, $38,358,318, six weeks.

14. "The Rum Diary," FilmDistrict, $803,456, 947 locations, $848 average, $12,371,440, three weeks.

15. "Dolphin Tale," Warner Bros., $693,294, 705 locations, $983 average, $69,634,072, eight weeks.

16. "Rockstar," Eros International, $612,235, 112 locations, $5,466 average, $612,235, one week.

17. "Anonymous," Sony, $582,527, 482 locations, $1,209 average, $3,753,918, three weeks.

18. "Margin Call," Roadside Attractions, $545,521, 199 locations, $2,741 average, $3,312,204, four weeks.

19. "50/50," Summit, $507,529, 424 locations, $1,197 average, $33,841,644, seven weeks.

20. "Like Crazy," Paramount Vantage, $504,512, 70 locations, $7,207 average, $1,055,778, three weeks.

___

Online:

http://www.hollywood.com

___

Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by Rainbow Media Holdings, a subsidiary of Cablevision Systems Corp.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111114/ap_en_ot/us_box_office

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Lady Gaga And Laurieann Gibson Split: Experts React

'It's shocking and it's not,' one music writer tells MTV News.
By Jocelyn Vena


Lady Gaga
Photo: WireImage

After spending nearly her entire career working with Laurieann Gibson, Lady Gaga confirmed Monday (November 14) that she and her creative director had decided to part ways.

It was a move that may have been surprising to Gaga's Little Monsters, considering how closely the two have created some of the Mother Monster's most-memorable visuals, but did the split surprise music-industry observers?

"On the one hand, I get why [they split], because it seems like Laurieann's been doing a lot outside of the Gaga universe," Entertainment Weekly's Kyle Anderson told MTV News, referring to Gibson's starring roles on the BET dance-competition show "Born to Dance" and another dance reality series, E!'s "The Dance Scene." "On the other hand, it's a little bit strange, because Gaga's circle of people is so small, and all those people have been with her since pretty much the duration. She's really, really loyal, so it's a little bit strange to me, because I think she has this circle of people she trusts with her work."

Who should be Gaga's next choreographer? Let us know in the Newsroom!

As a key member of the Haus of Gaga, Gibson was never afraid to share her honest opinion about Gaga's work. Most notably, she spoke out publicly against Gaga's Jo Calderone performance at the VMAs, as well as her Nick Knight-directed "Born This Way" clip.

That unbridled honesty could be behind the Gaga/Gibson split, according to Us Weekly senior music editor Ian Drew.

"It's shocking and it's not," Drew told MTV News. "They were extremely close, and she let Laurieann have an unprecedented amount of control in her camp. Let's face it: Laurieann is very headstrong, never holds back what she thinks, and that tends to rub people the wrong way. I'm not totally surprised; it was only a matter of time.

"Look, I love Laurieann, and as a journalist, she's an interviewer's dream, because you'd catch her and she'd always just say what was going on," he added. "Laurieann would just say it. She would give you that perfect sound bite. She tended to be a little bit loose-lipped. But on the other hand, I can see why that maybe ruffled Gaga's feathers, because Gaga's all about the performance piece and not giving away too much. Laurieann really liked to take credit — not that that was bad, [and] maybe it was due, but maybe Gaga didn't want everyone knowing that. In the end, I do tend to think it was something to do with creative differences."

The big question is how the duo's severed partnership will impact Gaga's future endeavors. Will Little Monsters notice Gibson's absence?

"It always puts a really, really heavy focus on whatever the next project is," Anderson explained. "With stars like these, people become curious to know: 'Well how much do these individual cogs play into what we see in front of us?' These two have been together [for years], so we don't yet know what Gaga is like without her. So we don't know exactly what part of that personality plays into her projects."

What do you think about Gaga and Laurieann's split? Let us know on Facebook.

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1674353/lady-gaga-laurieann-gibson-split-experts.jhtml

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Somebody Ordered Tons of Satellite Photographs of China's Mysterious Structures [Mystery]

There are lots of explanations for the gigantic structures built in China's desert. But the most mysterious thing is invisible: according to a former CIA analyst, there's someone who has ordered tons of satellite photos of this area since 2004. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/VuHPa_vRGjs/somebody-ordered-tons-of-satellite-photographs-of-chinas-mysterious-structures

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Italy's new premier Monti rushes to build new govt (AP)

ROME ? Italy's premier-designate Mario Monti began talks on Monday to create a new government of non-political experts tasked with overhauling an ailing economy to keep market fears over the country from threatening the existence of the euro.

Investors initially cheered Monti's appointment, though concern lingered about the sheer amount of work his new government will have to do to restore faith in the country's battered economy and finances.

After losing all confidence in financial markets, Silvio Berlusconi resigned as premier this weekend, as promised, after both houses of Parliament passed emergency austerity and reform measures with unusual speed.

President Giorgio Napolitano tapped Monti on Sunday to create a government capable of implementing economic reforms aimed at reviving stagnant growth to bring down public debt, stuck near 120 percent of GDP.

Improving market confidence in Italy is crucial to the future of the eurozone as the country would be too expensive to rescue. A default on its euro1.9 trillion ($2.6 trillion) in debt would cause massive chaos in financial markets and shake the global economy.

As in Greece, where a new government of technocrats also took over last week, the hope is that administrations of experts not affiliated to parties will be more willing to make the tough but necessary decisions that politicians have so far balked at.

Monti appeared to have the respect of many Italians, eager to see an end to the financial crisis that threatens their own well-being.

"In my opinion he will be better than what we had before, obviously. He seems to me to be a person who is serious, normal and with experience," said Bernardo Albrigo, in the Campo Dei Fiori open-air market in central Rome.

The next six months will be a tough test of the Italian government's ability to restore credibility in its finances ? some euro200 billion ($273 billion) in public debt comes due through the end of April.

On Monday, Italy easily raised euro3 billion ($4.1 billion) in the sale of five-year bonds, though at a higher cost. Investors demanded an interest rate of 6.29 percent for the bonds, the highest level since 1997, compared with 5.32 percent at a similar auction a month ago.

The auction result highlighted how it will take time to bring Italy's borrowing rates significantly lower after spiking last week well above the 7-percent level that eventually forced three other eurozone countries to need bailouts.

On Monday, the yield on Italy's benchmark 10-year bonds fell as low as 6.28 percent before stabilizing around 6.40 percent ? still uncomfortably high for the country. The yield is indicative of the rate the government would pay if it were to tap financial markets to raise cash.

Monti said Sunday that he would act "with a sense of urgency" to identify ministers in the new government but said he would also take the time necessary to secure a strong team. He will be meeting with various political parties throughout the day to garner support for his mission.

"In a moment of particular difficulty for Italy, in a troubled global and European context, the country must win the challenge to redeem itself. Italy needs to return to being an element of strength and not weakness in the European Union, of which we were founders and in which we need to be protagonists," Monti said.

Monti must now draw up a Cabinet, lay out his priorities, and see if he has enough support in Parliament to govern. Rival political parties offered various degrees of support, including one demand from Berlusconi's party ? the largest in Parliament ? that his government last only as long enough as it takes to heal Italy's finances and revive the economy.

The 68-year-old economics professor proved his mettle as European competition commissioner in the 1990s. But he'll have to win a confidence vote in Parliament before he can lead the nation.

Despite his resignation, Berlusconi pledged to continue playing a role in Italian politics.

"Berlusconi made his position very clear when he left on Sunday. He sent a video message to Italy saying that he is not finished," said James Walston, a political analyst at the American University of Rome. "So at the moment he is certainly not retired, he is not the retiring type."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111114/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_italy_financial_crisis

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