Friday, November 16, 2012

Train kills four at U.S. parade for troops

By Greg Botelho and Joe Sutton, CNN

November 16, 2012 -- Updated 1713 GMT (0113 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NEW: Sgt. Maj. Gary Stouffer and Sgt. Maj. Lawrence Boivin died at the scene
  • NEW: Sgt. Joshua Michael and Sgt. Maj. William Lubbers died at a hospital
  • The last truck in the parade is hit by a train, a police spokesman says

(CNN) -- A train rammed into a flatbed truck carrying participants in a West Texas parade saluting U.S. troops, killing four people and injuring several others, a police spokesman said.

The incident happened around 4:30 p.m. Thursday, during the "Hunt for Heroes" event in Midland. According to the group Show of Support, these festivities -- including a banquet and, after that, an "all expense paid whitetail deer hunt" -- are to honor members of all branches of the U.S. military.

The last flatbed truck in the parade was crossing tracks when an eastbound train slammed into it, said Midland police spokesman Ryan Stout.

Some people were able to jump off the truck in time.

First responders found two dead at the scene, while two others were later pronounced dead at Midland Memorial Hospital, Stout said. Ten other people were treated and released at the hospital, while five remained hospitalized Thursday night, one of them in critical condition.

Army Sgt. Maj. Gary Stouffer, 37, and Army Sgt. Maj. Lawrence Boivin, 47, were pronounced dead at the scene. Army Sgt. Joshua Michael, 34, and Army Sgt. Maj. William Lubbers, 43, died at Midland Memorial Hospital.

Five others continue to be treated at University Medical Center in Lubbock. One remains in critical condition.

Parade attendee: 'I'm waving at these guys and then you ... find out this happened'

Authorities don't yet know why the truck was on the tracks as the train arrived at the crossing, Stout said.

The National Transportation Safety board will initiate an investigation Friday that will include review of video from a camera on the train.

The gates and lights at the intersection were working at the time, and the train's two-member crew sounded the horn prior to impact, according to Tom Lange, a spokesman for Union Pacific Railroad. The train included more than 80 rail cars carrying double-stacked containers, he said.

The NTSB said it has not confirmed whether the crossing gates and signals were active at the time of the accident.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with family and friends of those affected," Lange said, adding that Union Pacific employees are on site and more are heading that way to investigate.

Lange said the train itself is operational and its crew was not injured. They are being offered counseling, he said.

Part of complete coverage on

November 16, 2012 -- Updated 1714 GMT (0114 HKT)

The rockets come mostly in the morning, but those in Ashkelon are always afraid. 'How would you feel if your children were constantly scared?' they ask.

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Zlatan Ibrahimovic scored all four goals in Sweden's 4-2 win over England -- but his final shot was something special. Was it the best one ever?

Source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/11/15/us/texas-parade-deaths/index.html?eref=edition

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NBA schedule 2012: Mavs start weekend with back-to-back

The Dallas Mavericks will play a back-to-back on the road against the Pacers and Cavaliers over the weekend.

This season, the Dallas Mavericks have started slow away from home, putting up a 1-3 record so far when playing away from American Airlines Center, and they'll start the weekend with a tough task ahead of them in the form of a weekend back-to-back on the road. They'll start in Indiana on Friday and move to Cleveland on Saturday, looking to boost themselves up in the Southwest Division a bit.

The Mavs can gain a game on the Spurs if they win both weekend contests, with San Antonio playing only once over the weekend. Memphis, the Southwest's top team at the moment, will play a back-to-back on Friday and Saturday as well.

Here is the weekend's schedule for teams in the Southwest Division:

Friday, Nov. 16

Mavericks at Pacers, 6 p.m. CT, FSN Southwest

Knicks at Grizzlies, 8:30 p.m. CT, ESPN

Rockets at Trail Blazers, 9 p.m. CT, CSN Houston

Saturday, Nov. 17

Grizzlies at Bobcats, 6:30 p.m. CT, NBA League Pass

Mavericks at Cavaliers, 6:30 p.m. CT, FSN Southwest

Hornets at Bucks, 7:30 p.m. CT, FSN

Nuggets at Spurs, 7:30 p.m. CT, Altitude

Sunday, Nov. 18

Rockets at Lakers, 8:30 p.m. CT, CSN Houston

A full NBA schedule can be found at SI.com.

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Source: http://dallas.sbnation.com/dallas-mavericks/2012/11/16/3653650/2012-nba-schedule

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Research fellowships in South Africa for our MPH graduates and doctoral students and graduates

November 15th, 2012

CGHD?s partner in South Africa, the Health Economics and Epidemiology Research Office, has launched the QuantCorps, a program of funded, one-year research fellowships for quantitatively-skilled MPH graduates and doctoral students and graduates. Please encourage qualified students and alumni to apply!

Please click here for more information.

Source: http://www.bu.edu/ihblast/2012/11/15/research-fellowships-in-south-africa-for-our-mph-graduates-and-doctoral-students-and-graduates/

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This is just the ?beginning?: Israel ready to expand attacks after assassinating Hamas head

Israel carried out a blistering offensive of more than 20 air strikes in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, assassinating Hamas? military commander Ahmed Jabari and targeting the armed group?s training facilities and rocket launchers in Israel?s most intense attack on the territory in nearly four years.

?We must be clear that Israel will not tolerate a situation in which there is incessant [rocket] fire on our citizens. No life-loving country would accept this situation,? Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak said at a news conference Wednesday. ??We are still at the beginning of the event, not at the end, and we expect some complicated tests ahead.?

The onslaught shattered hopes that a truce mediated on Tuesday by Egypt could pull the two sides back from the brink of war after five days of escalating Palestinian rocket attacks and Israeli strikes at militant targets.

Israel said the airstrikes, launched in response to days of rocket fire out of Hamas-ruled Gaza, were the beginning of a broader operation against the Islamic militants codenamed ?Pillar of Defence.? Israeli defence officials said a ground operation was a strong possibility in the coming days though they stressed no decisions had been made and much would depend on Hamas? reaction. There were no immediate signs of extraordinary troop deployments along the border.

?Today we relayed a clear message to the Hamas organization and other terrorist organizations,? Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. ?And if there is a need, the [Israel Defence Forces] are prepared to broaden the operation. We will continue to do everything in order to protect our citizens.?

Meanwhile, Hamas immediately called for revenge were broadcast over radio after Al-Jabari?s death.

?The occupation has opened the gates of hell,? Hamas?s armed wing said. Smaller groups also vowed to strike back.

?Israel has declared war on Gaza and they will bear the responsibility for the consequences,? Islamic Jihad said.

Southern Israeli communities within rocket range of Gaza were on full alert, and schools were ordered closed for Thursday. About one million Israelis live in range of Gaza?s relatively primitive but lethal rockets, supplemented in recent months by longer-range, more accurate systems.

?The days we face in the south will, in my estimation, prove protracted,? Brigadier-General Yoav Mordechai, Israel?s chief military spokesman, told Channel 2 TV.

The Obama administration responded to the flareup by strongly condemning Hamas, an Islamist group shunned by the West as an obstacle to peace.

?There is no justification for the violence that Hamas and other terrorist organizations are employing against the people of Israel,? said Mark Toner, deputy U.S. State Department spokesman.

?We call on those responsible to stop these cowardly acts immediately. We support Israel?s right to defend itself, and we encourage Israel to continue to take every effort to avoid civilian casualties.?

Jabari, the shadowy Hamas military chief killed in the initial missile strike, had long topped the Jewish state?s most-wanted list for masterminding a string of deadly attacks.

One was the 2006 capture of an Israeli soldier in a complex cross-border raid that killed two other soldiers.

Jabari, a former history student who spent 13 years in Israeli prisons, also commanded Hamas fighters during a 2007 takeover of Gaza in which they drove out forces loyal to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

During nine years as leader of the Hamas Izzedine al Qassam Brigades, Jabari largely stayed out of the public eye. His highest profile appearance came in October 2011, when he escorted the captured Israeli soldier, Sgt. Gilad Schalit, out of Gaza in a swap for about 1,000 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.

Jabari was born in 1960 in Gaza City. He began as a member of Abbas? Fatah movement, but switched his allegiance to Hamas during his time in Israeli prisons.

Jonathan Kay: In Gaza, Hamas military leader Ahmed Jaabari got what he deserved

In general terms, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict requires a political solution: If it were merely a matter of military might, Israel could have declared victory decades ago. A two-state solution ? which Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas both nominally seek ? will require deals to be struck on borders, the status of Jerusalem, water rights and refugees.

Read the whole story

After Israel released him in 1995, he worked for a Hamas-run support group for prisoners. In 1998, he was jailed by Palestinian security forces in Gaza for his involvement with the Hamas military wing. Jabari was released two years later, after Israel shelled Gaza prisons as part of its crackdown on a Palestinian uprising.

In 2003, Jabari became the de facto commander of the Hamas military wing after then-chief Mohammed Deif was seriously wounded in an Israeli attack. Jabari survived four attempts by Israel to kill him. In 2004, an air strike on Jabari?s house killed his son, Mohammed, a brother and three other relatives.

Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005 but still controls its airspace, seacoast and all but one of its land crossings.

Hamas has ruled Gaza with an iron hand since the 2007 takeover, deepening the political split with Abbas. Repeated attempts at reconciliation have failed.

The takeover deepened the isolation of Hamas and prompted the group to rely increasingly on Iran and Syria. Jabari was instrumental in developing the Hamas military arsenal and the group?s networks in Iran, Sudan and Lebanon.

The Hamas founding charter calls for the destruction of Israel, though the group has been grappling with its political direction in recent years.

Founded in Gaza in 1987, Hamas carried out scores of suicide bombings in Israel, killing hundreds of Israelis, but halted most such attacks several years ago. Gaza militants, including those from Hamas, have fired thousands of mortars and rockets at Israel in the past decade, drawing Israeli retaliation.

Jabari was considered close to Hamas hard-liner Mahmoud Zahar, a Gaza strongman. In 2011, Jabari wrote in a Hamas publication that ?as long as the Jews occupy our land, they have one thing (in store), death, or they leave the occupied Palestinian territories.?

Files from Ibrahim Barzak and Josef Federman, The Associated Press, and Nidal al-Mughrabi, Reuters

Source: http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/11/14/this-is-just-the-beginning-israel-ready-to-expand-attacks-after-assassinating-hamas-head/

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High Schools Teaching The War On Terror: The Atlantic Looks At A History Textbook

What kids learn in school tends to change with the times, and some curricular regulations that are either antiquated or simply embedded in beliefs have raised eyebrows across the country as of late.

Yet regulation aside, in a layer of education that reaches students firsthand, is the textbook: the student's omniscient manual in any given subject. Because these books dictate student knowledge and can shape perspective, their contents are sometimes the source of controversy. In Louisiana, for example, one commonly used textbook teaches students "the accumulated wisdom of the past from a biblical worldview."

And while September 11 is a recent memory that many still live with, the attacks are a distant reference to schoolchildren today. As the event and its subsequent war have become "recent history," The Atlantic's Conor Friedersdorf took to examine how high schoolers are learning about 9/11 and the years following.

His general findings: the threat of terrorism can be eliminated, the Patriot Act was not controversial and Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.

Friedersdorf's analysis is decidedly unscientific, looking only at one history textbook: a 2003 edition of The American Vision by Professors Joyce Appleby, Alan Brinkley, Albert Broussard, James McPhereson, and Donald Ritchie. Still, the book is one of the most used American history textbooks in schools for 11th graders.

He criticizes the book's flat portrayal of 9/11, perhaps misleading students to believe that the day's attacks killed more people than the invasion of Normandy. The authors, he points out, also use examples of "terrorist attacks" on America that don't fit the book's own definition of terrorism. Friedersdorf writes:

What follows is an account of the early War on Terrorism told from the perspective of the Bush Administration, often using paraphrased or direct quotes from government officials rather than exercising judgment. "President Bush decided the time had come to end the threat of terrorism in the world," the authors say, as if discussing a plausible proposal that might well end up succeeding.

Isn't that the sort of myopia historical study is supposed to gird us against?

To be sure, Friedersdorf points to the book's 2003 publish year as indication that its contents were written during a volatile time in America -- when tensions ran high and when public sentiment was patriotic. But that's not a factor in how students are learning about the country's recent history.

Click through to continue reading excerpts from the textbook and Friedersdorf's analysis of the chapter's teachings of the Patriot Act, acts of terrorism against America, anthrax and the Bush administration's response and decisions leading up to the Afghanistan War.

Friedersdorf's criticisms of the history textbook come as American students are continuously proving to know less in subjects like history. A study released last month by the American Council of Trustees and Alumni and GfK roper saw abysmal results on surveys gauging American history literacy among college graduates. The results seemingly echoed the findings of two viral videos from earlier this year that suggested students do not possess adequate knowledge of U.S. history, politics and current events.

A 2010 study by the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) showed the U.S. history testing scores are "stagnant," with only 9 percent of fourth graders correctly identifying a photograph of Abraham Lincoln and stating two reasons for his importance.

Lee White, executive director of the National History Coalition, says the problem stems from history's place in American curriculum.

"They've narrowed the curriculum to teach to the test. History has been deemphasized," he said. "You can't expect kids to have great scores in history when they're not being taught history."

Check out some of the Roper survey?s results -- and test your own knowledge -- below:

  • <strong>Test Your Own Knowledge WIth These Six History Questions Asked Of 300 College Graduates...</strong>

  • <strong>The Emancipation Proclamation issued by Lincoln stated that:</strong> A. Slavery was abolished in the Union B. Slaves were free in both the Union and Confederate states C. Slaves were free in areas of the Confederate states D. Slavery could continue nationwide, but buying or selling slaves was no longer legal

  • Confederate States

    Just 16.6 percent of students could identify that the Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in areas of the Confederate states. 41.2 percent believed it to have abolished slavery in the Union, while 32.1 percent said it freed slaves in both the Union and Confederate states.

  • <strong>Which document established the division of powers between the states and the federal government?</strong> A. The Constitution B. The Articles of Confederation C. The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions D. The Marshall Plan

  • The Constitution

    58.2 percent of respondents answered this correctly, identifying the U.S. Constitution as establishing the division of powers. Another 25.2 percent believed the document to have been the Articles of Confederation.

  • <strong>Who was the American general at Yorktown?</strong> A. George Washington B. Ulysses S. Grant C. Robert E. Lee D. William T. Sherman

  • George Washington

    <strong>Fewer than half</strong> of college graduates surveyed could <a href="http://whatwilltheylearn.com/public/pdfs/Roper_GfK_History_Questions.pdf">identify George Washington as the general at Yorktown</a>, when asked to choose among him, Ulysses S. Grant, Robert E. Lee and William T. Sherman. Ulysses S. Grant was the second-most popular answer, at 20.1 percent.

  • <strong>Who was the "Father of the Constitution?"</strong> A. Thomas Jefferson B. James Madison C. Benjamin Franklin D. John Adams

  • James Madison

    Only <strong>20 percent</strong> of college graduates surveyed could <a href="http://whatwilltheylearn.com/public/pdfs/Roper_GfK_History_Questions.pdf">identify the "Father of the Constitution."</a> 50.2 percent of respondents chose Thomas Jefferson.

  • <strong>What was the source of the following phrase: "Government of the people, by the people, for the people"?</strong> A. Declaration of Independence B. U.S. Constitution C. Gettysburg Address D. George Washington's Farewell Address

  • The Gettysburg Address

    Only <strong>17 percent</strong> knew the <a href="http://whatwilltheylearn.com/public/pdfs/Roper_GfK_History_Questions.pdf">source of the phrase</a>, "Government of the people, by the people, for the people." 54 percent selected the Declaration of Independence.

  • <strong>The Battle of the Bulge occurred during:</strong> A. World War II B. Revolutionary War C. World War I D. The Civil War

  • World War II

    <strong>Fewer than half</strong> of college graduates surveyed could identify the <a href="http://whatwilltheylearn.com/public/pdfs/Roper_GfK_History_Questions.pdf">war in which the Battle of the Bulge</a> occurred.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/14/high-schools-teaching-the_n_2130316.html

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Thursday, November 15, 2012

People magazine says Channing Tatum is sexiest man

This magazine cover image released Wednesday, Nov. 14, 2012, by People shows actor Channing Tatum on the cover of People's Sexiest Man Alive special double issue. (AP Photo/People)

This magazine cover image released Wednesday, Nov. 14, 2012, by People shows actor Channing Tatum on the cover of People's Sexiest Man Alive special double issue. (AP Photo/People)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Channing Tatum is People magazine's "sexiest man alive" for 2012.

The 32-year-old actor says his first thought on hearing the news was: "'Y'all are messing with me.'"

Tatum's film roles include "Magic Mike" and the upcoming "Foxcatcher."

Other actors who have received the "sexiest" label include George Clooney, Matt Damon, Brad Pitt, Johnny Depp and Ryan Reynolds. Last year's "sexiest man" was Bradley Cooper.

People announced its 2012 list Wednesday.

___

Online:

http://www.people.com/people

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-11-14-People-Channing%20Tatum/id-998482a84a484e42814b621952be49c2

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Preserving Your Income Stream Through Retirement Part 3

Rick Rodgers, CFP?, CRPC?
Certified Retirement Counselor?

Even a novice investor has heard of the importance of diversification as a tool to lower risk. Diversifying among investment classes and diversifying within the investment classes themselves reduces volatility. The main concept is to avoid concentrating your assets in one position that could cause serious harm if it the investment doesn?t work out.

Diversification is just as important on the basis of taxability as it is to investing. Simply put, tax diversification involves allocating investment assets across accounts and investment vehicles that are taxed differently ? taxable, tax deferred, and tax free. We call these three vehicles the?New Three-Legged Stool??of tax efficient retirement planning. A sound tax diversification plan includes the following techniques:

Allocate assets by tax treatment.?The return from your equity investments is generated in the form of dividends and capital gains. Qualified dividends and long-term capital gains are currently taxed at maximum rate of 15%. Therefore a larger percentage of your equity holdings should be held outside of retirement accounts. A larger percentage of your fixed-income holdings should be kept in retirement accounts because the return is taxed as ordinary income. The return from equity investments is taxed at a maximum rate of 35% when it is held inside retirement accounts because it is considered a retirement distribution.

Use tax-free bonds when holding fixed income in taxable accounts.?It is not always practical to hold all your fixed income in retirement accounts and all equities in non-retirement accounts. When fixed income must be kept in non-retirement accounts consider using municipal bonds which are free from federal, and in some cases, state and local income taxes. These bonds are particularly advantageous for investors in the highest tax brackets. Tax-free bonds may even be attractive to those in lower tax brackets now because their yields are equal to and in some cases above the long-term average versus comparable taxable fixed income securities. When equities must be held in retirement accounts use those with higher dividend payments such as real estate investment trusts.

Find ways to fund a Roth regularly. Consider funding a Roth IRA or Roth 401(k) account based on your tax bracket each year. Only put enough money in a traditional tax-deferred account to stay in the 15% tax bracket. This will require estimating your taxable income to determine when you have reached the optimum tax deferral and saving additional funds in a Roth. Use this chart to check your taxable income.

You should consider converting part of your IRA to a Roth in a year when you know your taxable income will be in the 15% tax bracket. For example, a couple filing jointly that estimates their taxable income will be $60,000 should consider converting $10,000 of their IRA to a Roth IRA.

The financial press will often advise retirees to take money from their accounts in the following order:

  • Taxable
  • Tax-deferred
  • Tax-free

The reasoning is to preserve tax-deferred assets for as long as possible thus delaying payment of the tax. This reasoning is not without merit. However, depending on an individual?s tax situation, this order may not be the best course of action. Consider the following chart (click the image for a larger view).

Anyone with significant unrealized capital gains in taxable accounts may want to withdraw funds from tax-deferred accounts first. Appreciated assets will get a ?stepped-up? cost basis when passed on to heirs but tax-deferred accounts are fully taxable to heirs when the assets are withdrawn.

It is very important to actively estimate taxable income each year. Distributions from tax-deferred accounts need to be adjusted to maximize the 15% tax bracket. You should take more from your tax-deferred accounts when income is low especially in the years before you are age 70 1/2. Consider Roth conversions if you don?t need the income for living expenses. This way the taxable income is realized in a low tax year. It can be withdrawn tax-free from the Roth in a later year when the income is needed but your tax situation may not be as favorable.

Maintaining your lifestyle through a potential 30 years of retirement is a challenging goal. Start with a sound investment strategy and be sure to include tax-efficiency when implementing the plan. A tax-efficient portfolio requires smaller distributions to maintain your spendable income. This could make the difference between having plenty to pass on to your kids or running out of money.

Rick Rodgers

This article is the third in a three part series. Read parts 1 and 2 below.
Preserving Your Income Through Retirement ? Part 1
Preserving Your Income Through Retirement ? Part 2?

Source: http://www.restartretirement.com/2012/11/14/preserving-income-stream-retirement-part-3/

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Wednesday, November 14, 2012

US wholesale prices fell 0.2 percent in October

A woman shops for groceries by flashlight in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. Wholesale prices fell in October as a big drop in gasoline and other energy prices offset a rise in the cost of food. Wholesale prices dipped 0.2 percent last month, the Labor Department said Wednesday, Nov. 14. 2012. It was the first decline since May and followed big gains of 1.1 percent in September and 1.7 percent in August, increases that had been driven by spikes in energy. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

A woman shops for groceries by flashlight in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2012. Wholesale prices fell in October as a big drop in gasoline and other energy prices offset a rise in the cost of food. Wholesale prices dipped 0.2 percent last month, the Labor Department said Wednesday, Nov. 14. 2012. It was the first decline since May and followed big gains of 1.1 percent in September and 1.7 percent in August, increases that had been driven by spikes in energy. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

(AP) ? Wholesale prices fell in October as a big drop in gasoline and other energy prices offset a rise in the cost of food.

Wholesale prices dipped 0.2 percent last month, the Labor Department said Wednesday. It was the first decline since May and followed big gains of 1.1 percent in September and 1.7 percent in August, increases that had been driven by spikes in energy.

Energy prices retreated a bit in October, dipping 0.5 percent but food costs were up 0.4 percent as the summer drought continued to put pressure on some food prices.

Core prices, which exclude food and energy, fell 0.2 percent in October, the biggest drop in two years. Over the past year, core prices were up a moderate 2.1 percent, evidence inflation remains under control.

In October, the fall in energy costs included a 2.2 percent drop in gasoline prices, the biggest since July, and a 3.3 percent decline in home heating oil costs.

Gas prices averaged $3.44 a gallon nationwide on Tuesday, down 35 cents from a month ago, according to a survey by AAA's Fuel Gauge.

The 12-month rise in core prices of 2.1 percent reflected a moderation from the start of the year. Core wholesale prices were up 3.1 percent for the 12 months ending in January.

"Inflationary pressures at the producer level are moderate and have been slowly retreating in recent months," said Stephen Wood, chief economist at Insight Economics.

The rise in food costs was led by an 8.1 percent increase in the price of pork, the biggest spike in four years. The summer drought in the Midwest has driven up food costs include the cost of beef and pork because animal feeds made with corn have increased in price.

The 0.2 percent drop in core prices in October reflected in part big declines in the price of passenger cars and light trucks. Without those declines, core prices would have been unchanged.

Low inflation means consumers have more money to spend, which helps the economy. It also gives the Federal Reserve more room to keep interest rates low in an effort to spur economic growth. If prices were to begin rising rapidly, the central bank might be forced to raise rates in response.

Economists believe that the modest gains in wholesale prices should translate into further moderation in consumer inflation, keeping it close to the Fed's 2 percent inflation target and allowing the central bank to keep focusing its policy on efforts to boost economic growth and reduce the unemployment rate.

The government will issue its October report on consumer prices on Thursday and economists are also expecting moderation at the retail level because of falling gas prices.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-14-Wholesale%20Inflation/id-8b38bc9f839e43bda1e28ddeb46a9739

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Language Learning Service Duolingo Launches Its First iPhone App

Duolingo on the goThe language learning service Duolingo currently has about 300,000 active users and continues to grow rapidly. Starting today, the service's users will also be able to work through their lessons on their iPhones, as the company just launched its first mobile app.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/4BgaSUBrcc8/

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Wine & Dine Around the World at Trump National Nov. 15 ...

Editor's Note: Thanks to the Patch user who submitted this piece.?

Click here for?Wine & Dine Around the World invite and to purchase tickets online.

From Bruce Apar of Harrison Apar Field of Dreams Foundation:

I'm proud to serve on the Board of Directors of Hudson Valley Hospital Center Foundation, and thought you might want to know about our fundraiser this Thursday, Nov. 15, at Trump National Westchester?in Briarcliff: Wine & Dine Around the World.?

You can enjoy fine food from more than 25 area restaurants and a broad array of world-class wines and spirits. It's $100 ($80 tax deductible). And if you've never been to Trump National, it's worth the price of admission alone.

Proceeds benefit The Ashikari Breast Center at Hudson Valley Hospital Center.

Wine & Dine Around the World will feature top tasting wines from: Portugal, Spain, Argentina, France, Italy, Greece, Islands of the Mediterranean, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Virginia, Sonoma Valley and Napa Valley. PLUS special tastings of Bourbon, Irish Whiskey, Sambucca and Vodka.

You can find out more by clicking above to see the invite and purchase tickets online.?

If you do attend, kindly use Bruce Apar as the name who invited you. Thank you.???

For further information, call the Foundation Office on 914-734-3526.

Source: http://yorktown-somers.patch.com/announcements/wine-dine-around-the-world-at-trump-national-nov-15

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Jay-Z & Coldplay To Rock New York&#39;s Barclays Center On New ...

Jay-Z will be joining his British pals?Coldplay for a co-headlining show to ring in the new year at Brooklyn?s Barclays Center on December 31.?The two superstar acts have collaborated in the studio and have teamed up on stage twice before ? once for a New Year?s Eve show in Las Vegas in 2010, and more recently at the 2012 Paralympic Games Closing Ceremony, along with Rihanna. Coldplay is also headlining the NYC venue sans Jay-Z the night before, December 30. For Jay-Z, it?ll be his first time performing at the arena since christening it with an eight-show run that began in late September.

[via MTV]

Source: http://idolator.com/7266872/jay-z-coldplay-new-years-eve-barclays-center

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Erosion has a point, and an edge

ScienceDaily (Nov. 12, 2012) ? Erosion caused by flowing water does not only smooth out objects, but can also form distinct shapes with sharp points and edges, a team of New York University researchers has found. Their findings, which appear in the latest edition of the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), reveal the unexpected ways that erosion can affect landscapes and artificial materials.

The impact of erosion is widely recognized by environmentalists and geologists, but less clear is how nature's elements, notably water and air, work to shape land, rocks, and artificial structures, often resulting in unusual formations.

"The main focus of this study was to understand how and why erosion makes these funny shapes," explained Leif Ristroph, a post-doctoral researcher at NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences and one of the study's co-authors.

To explore these questions, the researchers designed an experiment, conducted in the Courant Institute's Applied Mathematics Laboratory, to replicate natural erosion. In it, the researchers submerged clay -- shaped as balls or cylinders -- into a 15-ft. long water tunnel. The apparatus was designed to continuously generate a uniform flow of water, which would allow the researchers to observe how erosion shapes an entire object.

What they found was water flow acts as a shearing force -- not unlike a nail file -- against objects, working them into specific shapes. Starting from a clay ball, the flowing water sheared the sides away, producing a cone with a pointed face. Likewise, the clay cylinder was sculpted into a triangular shape. The researchers then sought to confirm these findings by replicating the experiment using a computer model. These results were consistent with the experimental findings, revealing in a computer simulation how the shape was maintained as the body eroded away.

"Water acts tangentially to the surface of objects and skims off material to create these unique shapes," explained Ristroph. "In a sense, it works as a sculptor to naturally mold materials into new forms."

The study's other co-authors were: Matthew Moore, a Courant post-doctoral fellow; Courant Professors Stephen Childress and Michael Shelley; and Jun Zhang, a professor at the Courant Institute and NYU's Department of Physics.

The research was supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy (DE-FG02-88ER25053) and the National Science Foundation (DMS-1103876, MRI-0821520).

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by New York University, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Leif Ristroph, Matthew N. J. Moore, Stephen Childress, Michael J. Shelley, and Jun Zhang. Sculpting of an erodible body by flowing water. PNAS, November 12, 2012 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1212286109

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/-6DC9Ce82uY/121112171221.htm

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Monday, November 12, 2012

Aristocrat purchases nLive? online platform - Innovate Gaming

  • Business | 12th November, 2012 | Sydney, AU | NLIVE? ? PRODUCT INFO
  • Aristocrat OnlineAristocrat Leisure has announced an agreement with GameAccount Network (GAN) by which Aristocrat will assume full ownership of the award-winning nLive? platform solution.

    The agreement encompasses the purchase of GAN?s internet gaming system and remote game server. GAN, a UK-based and privately held firm, owns and operates an internet gaming platform, powering online casinos in regulated jurisdictions. Aristocrat and GAN previously entered into a partnership to provide internet gaming platform services and solutions to North American operators via the nLive? platform.

    Jamie Odell, Aristocrat CEO & Managing Director, said this transaction positions Aristocrat to benefit as the online gaming segment gains momentum over the medium term, representing a significant milestone in the execution of Aristocrat?s online strategy.

    ?The nLive platform is an integral part of our plans, offering land-based operators a turn-key, wager-ready, virtual casino online,? said Odell, ?Since its launch in the US in April, nLive has delivered impressive results and generated strong customer interest?

    ?This acquisition delivers two advantages to Aristocrat. Firstly, it bolsters our position in regulated gaming markets around the world by facilitating more rapid content distribution through an RGS. Secondly, it positions us well in the critical U.S. market, where we will assume full ownership of the nLive IGS,? concluded Odell.

    Manjit Gombra Singh, Aristocrat Senior VP of Enabling Technologies, added, ?Full ownership of the platform is the next logical step in Aristocrat?s digital strategy. It provides the ability to innovate in the nLive platform, distribute Aristocrat?s great content across multiple channels and meet the growing needs of our customers.?

    About Aristocrat Leisure Ltd
    Aristocrat Leisure is a leading global provider of gaming solutions. The company is licensed by more than 200 regulators and its products and services are available in over 90 countries around the world. Aristocrat offers a diverse range of products and services including electronic gaming machines, interactive video terminal systems and casino management systems.

    More Information
    Info: InnovateGaming.com/Aristocrat
    Website: AristocratGaming.com
    Twitter: @AristocratSlots
    Facebook: Facebook.com/AristocratSlots
    YouTube: YouTube.com/user/AristocratSlots

    Source: http://www.innovategaming.com/e25747?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=aristocrat-purchases-nlive%25e2%2584%25a2-online-platform

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    Justin Bieber Goes Shirtless, Taunts Selena Gomez?

    Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/11/justin-bieber-goes-shirtless-taunts-selena-gomez/

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    Sunday, November 11, 2012

    Missing war records hurt veterans

    By Peter Sleeth, Special to ProPublica,?and Hal Bernton, The Seattle Times

    A strange thing happened when Christopher DeLara filed for disability benefits after his tour in Iraq: The U.S. Army said it had no records showing he had ever been overseas.

    DeLara had searing memories of his combat experiences. A friend bled to death before his eyes. He saw an insurgent shoot his commander in the head. And, most hauntingly, he recalled firing at an Iraqi boy who had attacked his convoy.

    The Army said it could find no field records documenting any of these incidents.

    DeLara appealed, fighting for five years before a judge accepted the testimony of an officer in his unit. By then he had divorced, was briefly homeless and had sought solace in drugs and alcohol.

    DeLara's case is part of a much larger problem that has plagued the U.S. military since the 1990 Gulf War: a failure to create and maintain the types of field records that have documented American conflicts since the Revolutionary War.

    A joint investigation by ProPublica and The Seattle Times has found that the recordkeeping breakdown was especially acute in the early years of the Iraq war, when insurgents deployed improvised bombs with devastating effects on U.S. soldiers. The military has also lost or destroyed records from Afghanistan, according to officials and previously undisclosed documents.


    The loss of field records ? after-action write-ups, intelligence reports and other day-to-day accounts from the war zones ? has far-reaching implications. It has complicated efforts by soldiers like DeLara to claim benefits. And it makes it harder for military strategists to learn the lessons from Iraq and Afghanistan, two of the nation's most protracted wars.

    Military officers and historians say field records provide the granular details that, when woven together, tell larger stories hidden from participants in the day-to-day confusion of combat.

    The Army says it has taken steps to improve handling of records ? including better training and more emphasis from top commanders. But officials familiar with the problem said the missing material may never be retrieved.

    "I can't even start to describe the dimensions of the problem," said Conrad C. Crane, director of the U.S. Army's Military History Institute. "I fear we're never really going to know clearly what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan because we don't have the records."

    The Army, with its dominant presence in both theaters, has the biggest deficiencies. But the U.S. Central Command in Iraq (Centcom), which had overall authority, also lost records, according to reports and other documents obtained by ProPublica under the Freedom of Information Act.

    In Baghdad, Centcom and the Army disagreed about which was responsible for keeping records. There was confusion about whether classified field records could be transported back to the units' headquarters in the United States. As a result, some units were instructed to erase computer hard drives when they rotated home, destroying the records that had been stored on them.

    Through 2008, dozens of Army units deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan either had no field records or lacked sufficient reports for a unit history, according to Army summaries obtained by ProPublica. DeLara's outfit, the 1st Cavalry Division, was among the units lacking adequate records during his 2004 to 2005 deployment.

    Recordkeeping was so poor in Afghanistan from 2004 to 2007 that "very few Operation ENDURING FREEDOM records were saved anywhere, either for historians' use, or for the services' documentary needs for unit heritage, or for the increasing challenge with documenting Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)," according to an Army report from 2009.

    Entire brigades deployed from 2003 to 2008 could not produce any field records, documents from the U.S. Army Center of Military History show.

    The Pentagon was put on notice as early as 2005 that Army units weren't turning in records for storage to a central computer system created after a similar recordkeeping debacle in the 1990-91 Gulf War.

    In that war, a lack of field records forced the Army to spend years and millions of dollars to reconstruct the locations of troops who may have been exposed to toxic plumes that were among the suspected causes of Gulf War Syndrome.

    At the outset of the Iraq war, military commanders tried to avoid repeating that mistake, ordering units to preserve all historical records.

    But the Army botched the job. Despite new guidelines issued in 2008 to safeguard records, some units still purged them. The next summer, the Washington National Guard's 81st Brigade Combat Team in Iraq was ordered to erase hard drives before leaving them for replacement troops to use, said a Guard spokesman, Capt. Keith Kosik.

    Historians had complained about lax recordkeeping for years with little result.

    "We were just on our knees begging for the Army to do something about it," said Dr. Reina Pennington, a Professor at Norwich University in Vermont who chaired the Army's Historical Advisory Committee. "It's the kind of thing that everyone nods about and agrees it's a problem but doesn't do anything about."

    Critical reports from Pennington's committee went up to three different secretaries of the Army, including John McHugh, the current secretary. McHugh's office did not respond to interview requests. His predecessor, Peter Geren, said he was never told about the extent of the problem.

    "I'm disappointed I didn't know about it," Geren said.

    In an initial response to questions from ProPublica and the Times, the Army did not acknowledge that any field reports had been lost or destroyed. In a subsequent email, Maj. Christopher Kasker, an Army spokesman, said, "The matter of records management is of great concern to the Army; it is an issue we have acknowledged and are working to correct and improve."

    Missing field records aren't necessarily an obstacle for benefit claims. The Department of Veterans Affairs also looks for medical and personnel records, which can be enough. The VA has also relaxed rules for proving post-traumatic stress to reduce the need for the detailed documentation of field reports.

    But even the VA concedes that unit records are helpful. And assembling a disability case from witness statements can take much more time, said Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the retired Army vice chief of staff who worked to combat suicides and improve treatment of soldiers with PTSD and brain injuries.

    "You would always love to have that operational record available to document an explosion, but there are other ways," Chiarelli said. "You can provide witness statements from others who were in that explosion. But it's going to be more difficult."

    After reviewing findings of the ProPublica-Times investigation, Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who chairs the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, asked Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to report on efforts to find and collect field records.

    "Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who are unable to document the location and functions of their military units could face the same type of problems experienced by Cold War veterans exposed to radiation, Vietnam era veterans exposed to herbicides and Gulf War veterans exposed to various environmental hazards," Murray said in a statement.

    Already, thousands of veterans have reported respiratory problems and other health effects after exposure to toxic fumes from huge burn pits that were commonly used to dispose of garbage in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    DeLara remains embittered about the five years he spent waiting for his disability claim. In an interview at his home in Tennessee, he pointed to Army discharge papers showing he'd received the Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, awarded for service in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Next to that were blank spaces where his deployment dates should have been.

    "If they'd had the records in the first place, and all the after-action reports," DeLara said, "this never would have stretched on as long as it did."

    A desperate search for records
    The Army is required to produce records of its actions in war. Today, most units keep them on computers, and a 4,000-soldier brigade can churn out impressive volumes ? roughly 500 gigabytes in a yearlong tour, or the digital equivalent of 445 books, each 200 pages long.

    Field records include reports about fighting, casualties, intelligence activities, prisoners, battle damage and more, complete with pictures and maps. They do not include personnel or medical records, which are kept separately, or "sigact" reports ? short daily dispatches on significant activities, some of which were provided to news organizations by WikiLeaks in 2010.

    By mid-2007, amid alarms from historians that combat units weren't turning in records after their deployments, the Army launched an effort to collect and inventory what it could find.

    Army historians were dispatched on a base-by-base search worldwide. A summary of their findings shows that at least 15 brigades serving in the Iraq war at various times from 2003 to 2008 had no records on hand. The same was true for at least five brigades deployed to Afghanistan.

    Records were so scarce for another 62 units that served in Iraq and 10 in Afghanistan that they were written up as "some records, but not enough to write an adequate Army history." This group included most of the units deployed during the first four years of the Afghanistan war.

    The outreach effort by the Army was highly unusual. "We were sending people to where they were being demobilized," said Robert J. Dalessandro, executive director at the Army's Center of Military History. "We even said ... 'Look we'll come to you' ? that's how desperate we got."

    As word of missing records circulated, the Joint Chiefs of Staff became worried enough to order a top-level delegation of records managers from each service branch to Baghdad in April 2010 for an inspection that included recordkeeping by U.S. Central Command.

    Centcom coordinated action among service branches in the theater. Among other things, Centcom's records included Pentagon orders, joint-service actions, fratricide investigations and intelligence reviews, with some records from Army units occasionally captured in the mix.

    After five days, the team concluded that the "volume, location, size and format of USF-1 records was unknown," referring to the acronym for combined Iraq forces. The team's report to the chiefs cited "large gaps in records collections ... the failure to capture significant operational and historical" materials and a "poorly managed" effort to preserve records that were on hand.

    In a separate, more detailed memo, two of the team's members from the National Archives and Records Administration went further.

    "With the exception of the Army Corps of Engineers, none of the offices visited have responsibly managed their records," they wrote. "Staff reported knowledge of only the recently created and filed records and knew little of the records created prior to their deployments, including email. ... It is unclear the extent to which records exist prior to 2006."

    Part of the problem was disagreement and lack of coordination about who was responsible for certain records, including investigations into casualties and accidents, according to Michael Carlson, one of the two archivists.

    "The Army would say it's Centcom's responsibility to capture after-action reports because it's a Centcom-led operation. Centcom would say it's an Army responsibility because they created their own records," Carlson said in an interview. "So there's finger-pointing ... and thus records are lost."

    Nearly a year after the U.S. pullout from Iraq, Centcom said it still is trying to index 47 terabytes of records for storage, or some 54 million pages of documents. It's not clear if those include anything recovered after a 2008 computer crash the Baghdad team termed "catastrophic."

    Lt. Col. Donald Walker, an Air Force officer who took over as Centcom records manager in 2009, acknowledged that there was confusion about responsibility and confirmed that that some Centcom records may have been lost. In part, he blamed computer problems and the competing demands of wartime.

    "Something just had to fall off the plate, there was so much going on," said Walker, who worked out of Centcom's Tampa, Fla., headquarters but was among the Baghdad inspectors.

    Rather than risk letting classified information fall into the wrong hands, some commanders appeared to buck the orders to preserve records. One Army presentation asserts that in 2005, V Corps, which oversaw all Army units then in Iraq, ordered units to wipe hard drives clean or physically destroy them before redeploying to the States.

    "They did not maintain the electronic files. They just purged the servers," according to the Military History Institute's Crane, who said he heard similar accounts from more than a dozen veteran officers in classes at the Army War College.

    The orders directing Washington National Guard's 81st Brigade to erase hard drives before leaving Iraq came "from on high," according to unit spokesman Kosik, who said he confirmed the erasures with a senior Guard officer with first-hand knowledge. He said the orders came from outside the Washington Guard.

    "There was a lot of confidential information, and they were not allowed to take it out of theater," said Kosik. "All that was wiped clean before they came home. ... It was part of their 'to-do' list before leaving country."

    Steven A. Raho III, the Army's top records manager, said in an interview that he couldn't estimate what, if any, records might be missing. But Raho said his agency wasn't responsible for collecting records, only for storing them in the Army's central records system when individual units handed them over.

    Units are not required to do so, he emphasized. "All's I know is we have some and units have some," Raho said.

    As a test, ProPublica filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests for a month's worth of field records from four units deployed in Iraq in 2003 and 2004. The requests went to Raho's Records Management and Declassification Agency, which forwarded them to each unit.

    One brigade ? the 2nd Combat Brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division ? did not respond, but FOIA officers from the three others said they searched and could find no responsive records.

    "I don't know where any Iraq operational records are," said Daniel C. Smith, a privacy act officer at Fort Carson, Colo., who handled the request for the 2nd Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division. "I've never been able to find out where they went."

    At Fort Riley, Kan., FOIA officer Tuanna Jeffery looked for records from the 1st Battalion, 41st Infantry Regiment, 1st Armored Division. "Prior to and upon the inactivation of the unit on March 15, 2008, that unit had turned in absolutely no records," she responded.

    In a follow-up email, Jeffery said the entire 1st Armored Division did not turn in any field records through 2008.

    'They couldn't find it'
    Chris DeLara is not the type of soldier to wear his heart on his sleeve, but the 1st Cavalry Division's shoulder patch is tattooed on his right forearm in a swirling piece of body art. Beneath it are the words: "Baghdad, Iraq."

    DeLara, 38, grew up in Albany, N.Y., never dreaming he might someday fight a war. Now, his tour in 2004 and 2005 haunts his every day. Since winning his appeal in March 2011, he is classified as fully disabled by post-traumatic stress and cannot work. He was awarded a stipend of about $30,000 a year and has moved near Knoxville, Tenn., where he recently bought a modest house.

    Getting to a stable point wasn't easy.

    DeLara was an administrative specialist, essentially a personnel clerk. But he was repeatedly pulled out of his scrivener's life for missions as a roof gunner on convoys. It was a time of insurgency and exploding factional violence in Baghdad.

    "They told us, 'This may be your job, but guess what? You're going to be doing everything,'" he said. "We had many hats. You go to combat, your job is secondary. Combat is first."

    DeLara did not want to discuss his combat experiences, but they are described in part by a judge in the Board of Veterans' Appeals ruling that approved his PTSD claim.

    In the years after his deployment, DeLara told psychiatrists and others who treated him at various times that two of his friends were killed in an insurgent attack on his convoy, and that he was unable to stop one of them from bleeding to death from a ruptured artery.

    He said that one his commanders was shot in the head in front of him by insurgents, and reported that he had killed an Iraqi youth who had tried to attack his convoy after it was stopped because of a roadside bomb, according to the judge's summary.

    After his return in 2005, DeLara was diagnosed several times with PTSD or its symptoms, according to VA exam records cited by the appeals judge. He drank and used drugs even though he'd abstained from them in the Army. In 2006, he overdosed on prescription drugs.

    DeLara said he lived for a time in a shelter for troubled vets. He and his wife eventually divorced, but he credits her for helping him fight for his claim when he might have given up.

    They first applied for a PTSD benefit in 2006, DeLara said. A denial came the next year because his separation document, called a DD-214, did not list any dates of overseas deployment, he said.

    "They couldn't find it. Well my ex-wife, she being as persistent as she is, we started pulling all the stuff" to send to the VA, he said. DeLara dug out the movement order sending his unit to Iraq and the brigade roster with his name on it. He added descriptions of his combat experiences. "Basically what it was, I needed to provide proof," he said.

    But he was denied again, this time because the VA said his symptoms were of bipolar disorder, not PTSD. DeLara said he appealed but got a letter saying there was insufficient evidence that he'd experienced combat stress. The VA told him that it had "no records, none whatsoever" of his time in combat, DeLara said.

    "We basically put the whole packet together from scratch again," DeLara said. This time, he tracked down his former company commander, who was incensed about the VA denials and provided a letter confirming an incident in which DeLara came under enemy fire. Still, two years went by before DeLara received word that his appeal was set for a hearing in January 2011.

    Although the judge found in his favor, the ruling notes that, in June 2008, the center responsible for locating his records "made a formal finding of a lack of information to corroborate a stressor for service connection for PTSD." The center even looked a second time but still came up empty-handed.

    DeLara said he still can't believe it. "I had dates and everything" in the supporting material he and his ex-wife sent to the VA, he said. "The simple fact is that nobody filled out after-action reports," DeLara said. "There was no record of it."

    Asked how often a search for unit records comes up empty, officials at the VA said they didn't know ? the agency doesn't track that statistic. A VA spokesperson said missing field records are not a major factor delaying veterans' claims, however. And some veterans' advocates agree.

    "As long as an officer or a buddy who witnessed the event is willing to sign a notarized statement, that's good," said John Waterbrook, who advises vets on disability issues in Walla Walla, Wash.

    In 2009, as DeLara was refiling his case, veterans' groups complained to Congress that soldiers serving as clerks or mechanics unfairly faced a higher burden of proof for PTSD than those with an obvious combat role, even though they faced the same dangers in wars with no front lines.

    The VA relaxed its rules the next year, so that a vet's account of combat stress is proof enough if a VA medical examiner agrees. But while the change helps, it hasn't sped up claims or made field records less valuable, said Richard Dumancas, the American Legion's deputy director of claims.

    Field records can come into play for other injuries. Take the case of Chief Warrant Officer 3 Lorenzo Campbell, a 53-year-old soldier with the Washington Guard who filed a disability claim resulting from a 2004 injury in Iraq.

    During a rocket attack, Campbell banged his knee on a concrete bumper after jumping out of a Humvee to find cover. He saw a doctor, but there was no record in his medical files. His knee gradually deteriorated, and he now wears a brace and is unable to run.

    Campbell said he tried to get records of the rocket attack from the state Guard but was told they were classified and left on computers in Iraq. He said he offered a letter from another soldier testifying to the incident and swore out a statement himself, but it didn't suffice.

    "I tried to keep fighting it," he said. "They kept writing me saying they need more information, they need more information."

    Campbell said his disability claim took four years to be approved ? a delay that could have been shortened had the records been available. "If you have no records," he said, "you can be fighting for five or six years and still not prevail."

    Tradition eroded, warnings brushed aside
    Military recordkeeping has been the cornerstone of the nation's war history for centuries. From the founding of the republic through the Vietnam War, recordkeeping was a disciplined part of military life, one that ensured that detailed accounts of the fighting were available to historians and veterans alike.

    The records can hold untold stories that can surface decades after a conflict.

    The massacre of civilians by U.S. forces at No Gun Ri, South Korea, in July 1950 came to full national attention only in 1999, nearly 50 years after the fact. Journalists at The Associated Press, working in part with military field records, uncovered the extent of the tragedy. Later, other reporters used the records to show that one purported witness wasn't really present.

    By the Gulf War, however, what had been a long tradition of keeping accurate, comprehensive field records had begun to erode. Old-style paper recordkeeping was giving way to computers. And Army clerks had been reduced in number, leaving officers to take care of records work.

    According to the Army's "Commander's Guide to Operational Records and Data Collection," published in 2009, the problem became evident months after the end of Desert Storm, when vets began reporting fatigue, skin disease, weight loss and other unexplained health conditions.

    "When the Army began investigating this rash of symptoms, its first thought was to try and establish a pattern of those affected: What units were they in? Where were they located? What operations were they engaged in?" the guide says. "The answers provided by investigators were: 'We don't know. We didn't keep our records.'"

    Afterward, the Army created Raho's records agency and a central records system. As the war on terror began, however, inspections and penalties for recordkeeping at the command level had largely fallen by the wayside, according to Army documents and interviews with officers who helped search for Gulf War records.

    Robert Wright, a retired Army historian, said training broke down. "They fight as they train, and they never were trained," he said.

    On March 28, 2003, then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz ordered retention of all records in the Iraq war. Military records, he wrote, "are of enduring significance for U.S. and world history and have been indispensable for rendering complete, accurate and objective accountings of the government's activities to the American people."

    But in the combat zones, there were other priorities.

    Kelly Howard served as operations officer to Army Gen. George W. Casey Jr., who was in charge of the Iraq war from 2004 to 2007. Her primary job was archiving Casey's papers, a task that had been ignored until her arrival in 2006. Casey stored them in a foot locker, among other places.

    "The reason so many things got lost ... is because so many people at higher levels weren't requiring it," Howard said, referring to systematic recordkeeping. "You do what your boss wants you to do. It's not that anyone said, 'No, I don't care about that.' It's just so many other things were important."

    Alarms mounted at about the same time as DeLara finished his Baghdad tour.

    In 2005, the Army's Historical Advisory Committee learned that Raho's agency had not "received any records from units deployed in Afghanistan & Iraq."

    This came as a shock. Members of the group include a mix of civilian historians and officials from the Army War College and Center of Military History.

    "So we go through the whole meeting," said Richard Davis, senior historian at the National Museum of the U.S. Army. "So I ask the records manager point blank. I said, 'How many records have been retired from overseas by U.S. Army units?' And the answer was zero.

    "By late October the records management people here in Washington had received not a single document from Afghanistan or Iraq," Davis said. "At that point all the historians looked at each other and said 'Holy @!$%#! '"

    Minutes from the committee's 2006 meeting quote Raho as saying, "Our problems are that the training for Army personnel is incomplete, the responses are uneven, and the records themselves are either incomplete or nonexistent."

    Another member suggested writing a book. "As an institutional history, I think it's a great idea," responded historian Pennington, then the committee's chairwoman. "'Losing History': It's a topic that merits visibility and study."

    The committee included regular warnings about a broken recordkeeping system in its annual reports to the secretary of the Army.

    The 2006 report to Secretary Francis J. Harvey said Raho had described "major problems" in records collection, including "the lack of centralized control of data collection, the destruction of records without evaluation, and inadequate communications between Army units and records collection personnel."

    Raho, the report said, "observed that 17 to 23 percent of all Iraq/Afghanistan War veterans will suffer from various forms of PTSD. ... Without strong and immediate action to remedy present shortcomings, the Army's ability to substantiate veteran disability claims will be degraded seriously, with potentially highly troublesome and expensive consequences."

    In its 2008 report, the committee said: "Units are losing their own history. This will create a snowball effect, resulting in problems with awards and heritage activities in the future."

    Pennington signed the report, adding a personal comment: "After six years of service on DAHAC, and now as its chair, I am frankly discouraged by the frequency with which DAHAC has expressed some of the same concerns, and how little progress has been made on some issues."

    Then-Secretary Geren's office responded with a thank-you letter under his signature. But Geren said in an interview that he was not personally informed about missing records, despite his March 31, 2009, letter. "I'm confident it was not brought to my attention."

    When McHugh, the current secretary, arrived in 2009, he received a committee report reiterating that the system was broken and pleading for resources to fix it. "This has been requested every year since 1997," the report said.

    "It's probably the most serious problem historians have ever had," Pennington said in an interview. "I honestly don't know how we're going to be writing records-based history in 20 to 30 years." Typically, field records remain classified for two to three decades after a war, then are transferred to the National Archives.

    Although committee members felt unheard, wheels had slowly begun moving in the Army. In 2007, Raho's agency and the Center of Military History launched the outreach project that discovered the historians were right: Scores of units did not have the records they should.

    Because Raho did not have enough staff, the Center of Military History provided detachments for the search. For more than two years they collected field reports, turning up about 5.5 terabytes' worth.

    Some additional records have dribbled in since: Dalessandro, the center's director, said one brigade of the 1st Armored Division handed over field records from its 2007 Iraq deployment. It's possible that more might be found from other units, but historians say the chances fade with each year.

    Burn pits: the new Agent Orange?
    The demand for the field records isn't likely to abate as members of Congress ratchet up pressure to investigate exposure to burn pits.

    Veterans' groups say the long-term health impacts could be similar to those of herbicides in Vietnam. Rep. Michael Michaud of Maine, ranking Democrat on the House Veterans' Affairs Subcommittee on Health, said missing field records "could have consequences for veterans for years to come."

    In September, the House passed the Open Burn Pit Registry Act to track veterans with symptoms and find out where they were exposed and for how long. A similar measure is pending in the Senate. The VA currently runs registries for Agent Orange and Gulf War Syndrome, and last year the Institute of Medicine said more research is needed.

    Some veterans' advocates say field records could provide critical.

    "It's going to be very hard to connect individuals without the field records," said Dan Sullivan, director of the Sgt. Thomas Sullivan Center, a nonprofit named after his brother, an Iraq vet who died from mysterious health complications.

    "It would strike me that they are very important."

    Are you a veteran who can't obtain your military field records? Tell us your story.?

    Versions of this story will be published by?The Seattle Times?and?Stars and Stripes.

    Peter Sleeth is a veteran investigative reporter who covered the Iraq war for The Oregonian and helped the paper win a Pulitzer Prize in 2007? for breaking news. Now freelancing, his most recent piece for the Oregon Historical Quarterly is a profile of progressive-era activist Tom Burns.

    Hal Bernton has been a staff reporter for The Seattle Times since 2000. He has covered military and veterans affairs, reporting from Iraq in 2003 and from Afghanistan in 2009 and this fall. Among other things, Bernton has reported on veterans' health issues, post-traumatic stress and, recently, improvised explosive devices.

    ProPublica's Marshall Allen, Liz Day and Kirsten Berg contributed to this story.

    More from Open Channel:

    Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/11/15090122-lost-to-history-missing-war-records-block-benefits-for-iraq-afghanistan-vets

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    Hillary's Next Move

    The New York Times:

    It was a few weeks before the election. Clinton was flying back from an overnight trip to Peru, talking -- without any great enthusiasm -- about the topic that would begin to obsess the American political world as soon as the presidential ballots had been counted: Will Hillary run in 2016?

    Read the whole story at The New York Times

    "; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/10/hillarys-next-move_n_2110743.html

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    Fantasy Roleplay Interest Check: Reflections of the Sword

    Hello and welcome to Reflections of the Sword! I hope to turn this into a real story someday (I'm an aspiring g-novelist), I have this in my mind already but I thought it might be fun as a roleplay too.

    Here is the picture that prompted this story idea:

    Image

    Hello and welcome to Reflections of the Sword...a fantasy roleplay based off of a picture I drew.

    This story is about good vs bad, and morals. Any character that can fight or cannot fight can be part of this roleplay. We can discuss in the OOC. Different races are welcome, such as dwarves, elves, etc.

    Picture Description:

    An abandoned sanctuary...a bird is there.

    Warriors or warriors in training...in an old sanctuary, where there seems to be a bird bath still in use. A bird flies there, and does not move as she is about to touch it. Is it a sign? The bird flies off in this peaceful scene and she watches it glide high into the sky. Just then something is about to approach...I was thinking of monsters...Something like Claymore maybe. Did you have any ideas?

    Good vs bad. We form a party, and fight monsters together. These monsters are morphed humans or animals who have been turned into 'monsters' by a chemical released in the air. Like a plant or some mutation or something. Sad. But true.

    Any questions? Go ahead and feel free to ask. We can create our own little story here.

    Character sheets are as follows:

    Name:
    Age:
    Gender:
    Occupation:
    Race:
    Physical Appearance:
    Personality:
    History:
    Equipment:
    Anything else you'd like to add:

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/t8eavbCu6IU/viewtopic.php

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    Priceline negotiates $1.8 billion Kayak deal

    (AP) ? The Priceline Negotiator lives after all. The company has struck a deal to buy Kayak Software Corp. for $1.8 billion in a move to expand its online travel business.

    The cash-and-stock deal values Kayak at $40 a share, a 29 percent premium over its closing price Thursday. Shares of Kayak ? which just went public in July ? soared in after-hours trading.

    Kayak allows users to compare hundreds of travel sites when looking for flights, hotels and rental cars. It sends the consumer to other websites to complete their purchases and earns fees on those referrals, although some bookings can be made directly on Kayak's website and mobile applications. It also sells advertising.

    Kayak was created by the same executives who helped launch other travel sites including Expedia, Travelocity and Orbitz. The Norwalk, Conn., company went public in July after delaying its offering more than a year while it waited for the market to strengthen.

    The strategy of waiting seemed to work ? the shares jumped 28 percent on the first day of trading and recently peaked at $37. But Priceline.com Inc. will pay 57 percent more than Kayak's IPO price. The deal includes about $500 million in cash and $1.3 billion in stock and assumed options.

    The deal needs the approval of Kayak's shareholders and of regulators. It is expected to close in the first quarter of next year.

    Priceline said that Kayak will continue to operate independently as a Priceline Group company.

    "Kayak has built a strong brand in online travel research and their track record of profitable growth" shows the company's "popularity with consumers and value to advertisers," said Priceline CEO Jeffery H. Boyd.

    Kayak also reported Thursday that third-quarter earnings jumped on higher sales.

    Net income rose to $7.2 million, or 19 cents per share, from $4 million, or 18 cents per share, a year earlier. The company said it would have earned 26 cents per share excluding stock-based compensation and certain other costs. Analysts surveyed by FactSet expected 19 cents per share.

    Revenue rose 29 percent to $78.6 million, topping analysts' $77.4 million forecast.

    On Thursday, Kayak shares dropped 50 cents, or 1.6 percent, to end regular trading at $31.04. After news of the deal was announced, they jumped $8.32, or 27 percent, to $39.36 in after-hours trading.

    Priceline shares closed at $627.87, down $6.74 or 1 percent. In after-hours trading, they dropped $13.87, or 2.2 percent, to $614. Shares of rival Expedia Inc. fell 4 percent after-hours on the news but Orbitz Worldwide Inc. surged 13 percent to $2.39.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2012-11-08-US-Priceline-Kayak/id-ab8dc965bd664deeaacb2b9b27389ff9

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    3094 real estate brokers working in the Dubai real estate market ...

    "The real estate brokers plays prominent role in the market and considered as consultant for investors," said Yousef Al Hashmi, director of RERA's Real Estate Licensing Department.

    In terms of brokers' nationalities, UAE nationals dominated this profession with 620 brokers, while Indians ranked second with 438 brokers, whilst Pakistanis came third with 428 brokers. British came 4th with 304 brokers, while the 5th rank went to Egyptians with 160 brokers. At the bottom of the top 10 list came the Filipinos with 59 brokers.

    Al Hashmi called on UAE nationals to maintain their prominent presence in this profession due to their experience and knowledge about the UAE's real estate market.

    He stressed on RERA's success in controlling and organizing this profession and brokerage firms; emphasizing that it is not possible for individuals or companies to undertake brokerage activities without registration in the brokers register in Dubai created by LD in accordance with By law No 85 of 2006.

    Source: http://www.ameinfo.com/3094-real-estate-brokers-dubai-real-318408

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