Monday, August 5, 2013

Pacino movie films in middle of concert by Chicago

(AP) ? An Al Pacino movie broke out in the middle of a concert by the band Chicago, with thousands of fans serving as extras.

Cameras were wheeled onstage during intermission of the group's show at the Greek Theatre on Friday night to film a scene from Pacino's upcoming movie "Imagine," in which he plays aging rock star Danny Collins.

With coaching from the director, the crowd chanted the name of Pacino's character as the 73-year-old actor walked on stage to sing "Hey Baby Doll" in a black suit. The movie co-stars Michael Caine, Annette Bening and Jennifer Garner.

"This is an improvisation," Pacino told the crowd. "You just came in and got it. That's not easy."

Chicago's band members remained on stage to watch and clap along during the 25-minute filming. After a few takes, the crowd grew restless and there was scattered booing for the real musicians to resume playing.

Earlier in Chicago's set, Joe Mantegna of CBS' "Criminal Minds" joined his hometown band to sing "If You Leave Me Now."

Pacino returned to the stage during Chicago's encore and sang and danced to their hit "25 or 6 to 4."

"For a shy guy from the South Bronx, this has been great," Pacino said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-08-03-US-People-Al-Pacino/id-a4b114a24d19449f8acf0f0b6d3cbba7

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Weight Loss Surgery Information Session at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/events-calendar-penn-medicine/~3/tbWErEAHYGc/

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Rural/Metro Reaches Agreement-in-Principle With Lenders and Bondholders to Reduce Debt by Approximately 50 Percent

Receives Commitment for Infusion of $135 Million in New Equity Capital to Fund Additional Investment in Operations and Renewed Growth

Patients Will Continue to Receive Highest-Quality Services; Operations to Continue as Normal

SCOTTSDALE, AZ--(Marketwired - Aug 4, 2013) - Rural/Metro Corporation, a national provider of private ambulance and fire protection services in 21 states and nearly 700 communities, today announced that it has reached an agreement-in-principle on a comprehensive financial restructuring plan that will strengthen the Company's balance sheet by reducing its funded indebtedness by approximately 50 percent via a conversion of certain debt to equity and cutting its interest expenses in half.

The financial restructuring process will help ensure that Rural/Metro can continue to invest in its business, meet the needs of customers, patients and communities and further improve service. Operations are expected to continue as normal throughout the process.

Scott A. Bartos, Rural/Metro's new President and Chief Executive Officer, said, "This agreement is good news for Rural/Metro and for the clients and communities we serve. We have a solution that keeps our operations moving forward while cutting our debt in half. The significant infusion of new capital by our lenders underscores their confidence in the value of our business, and will help ensure that we have a strong financial footing to resume growth and investment while honoring our agreements and continuing to provide outstanding service and patient care."

Mr. Bartos continued, "We remain committed to serving our clients and communities, maintaining our relationships with vendors and supporting our employees whose hard work and dedication are critical to our success. We expect to move through this process quickly and to be a stronger, more competitive and more profitable organization."

Rural/Metro noted that its capital structure was created under different economic circumstances, and making interest payments on the debt while at the same time investing in operations was more than the Company's earnings could support. Rural/Metro reached the agreement-in-principle on the terms of a prearranged financial restructuring plan with the majority of its senior lenders and approximately two-thirds of its bondholders. To implement the plan, Rural/Metro has elected to file Chapter 11 petitions in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. The Company intends to use the process to significantly reduce its debt, renegotiate unprofitable contracts and free up capital for investments to strengthen its business and further improve patient care. The agreement reached includes a significant cash investment from the Company's bondholders to comprehensively address the Company's capital expenditure needs and ensure the Company continues to provide industry-leading emergency services to its customers. Rural/Metro anticipates completing its restructuring in the fourth quarter of 2013.

In conjunction with the filing, Rural/Metro has received a commitment for $75 million in debtor-in-possession financing ("DIP Financing") from certain of the Company's secured lenders. Following Court approval, this financing, combined with cash generated by the Company's ongoing operations, will provide Rural/Metro with sufficient liquidity to meet its operational and restructuring needs. The Company's bondholders have committed to invest $135 million additional dollars of new equity in the fourth quarter of this year to complete the financial restructuring and position the Company for renewed growth.

Court filings and other documents concerning the restructuring process are available on a dedicated website administered by Rural/Metro's claims agent, Donlin, Recano & Company, Inc., at www.donlinrecano.com/rmc. In addition, you can contact the claims agent directly by calling Rural/Metro's restructuring hotline at 212-771-1128.

Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP and Young Conaway Stargatt & Taylor, LLP are serving as legal counsel, Lazard Fr?res & Co. L.L.C. is serving as investment banker, and Alvarez & Marsal and FTI Consulting, Inc. are serving as financial advisors to Rural/Metro.

About Rural/Metro

Rural/Metro Corporation is a leading national provider of 911-emergency and non-emergency interfacility ambulance services and private fire protection services, operating in 21 states and nearly 700 communities. For more information, visit the Company's website at www.ruralmetro.com.

Source: http://www.istockanalyst.com/article/viewarticle/articleid/6522126

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WASHINGTON -- US State Department says 19 embassies in Mideast, Africa will be c...

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Date for Fall Foliage Parade announced

Summer still has a month left, but they?re already thinking about autumn in Massachusetts.

This year?s Fall Foliage Parade will take place on October 6 at 1 p.m.

The parade will step off at the former Walmart Parking Lot.

For more information, click here, or call or (413) 499-4000.

Source: http://pittsfield.wnyt.com/news/community-spirit/418512-date-fall-foliage-parade-announced

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Power in Community Support

Published July 31st, 2013



Christopher Holland and Wayne Shelton.

The Fathers House reaches out to the community to fundraise for $20,000 in trauma kits for IMPD

By Nicole Davis

The type of Gun Shot Wound Trauma kit which Pastor Christopher Holland of The Father?s House held in his hand can prolong a life for an average of six minutes, allowing first responders time to get to the scene. In an effort to raise $20,000 to supply 200 Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers this kit, The Father?s House has called on the community to help fundraise and show their support for the officers.

?Love is a powerful thing, and everyone deserves to be appreciated,? Holland says. ?You can make a difference in your community if you start somewhere. Our church is not about those four walls. The bible says when there is not vision, the people perish. So if you have a vision to help, you go beyond those four walls, you can touch everyone.?

For five years now the Franklin Township church has hosted an Annual IMPD Roll Call, where several hundred officers from multiple districts can hold their Roll Call at the church. They are treated to a full meal and a gift before they return to work.

?This year as we started talking together as a team and planning there were some things in the media where police officers had been shot and first responders couldn?t get to them,? Holland says. ?That increased what we normally do by several thousand dollars. But it was exciting for us, so we began to reach out to the community.?

Holland said they hope to raise the money by the first of September to prepare for this year?s Roll Call on Sept. 13. The kits, which cost $100 each, contain an Asherman Chest Seal to cover a gunshot wound, a blood coagulant and other first aid supplies.

?This is something every officer should have,? says Wayne Shelton, a detective and member of the church. ?I can?t imagine being out there with a fallen officer with only the shirt off my back to use. So this is a great opportunity for me to partner with The Father?s House and the police department. It says that the community really does support the police. This is something we can do to counteract some to the negative.?

Donations can be made online at TheFathersHouseIndy.com or mailed to IMPD ROLL CALL, The Father?s House, 1600 S. Franklin Road, Indianapolis, IN 46239.

?There are a whole lot of needs in the Police Department right now,? Shelton says. ?That?s why I really like what we?re doing. If we can get this to snowball, we can really have an effect.?


You must be logged in to post a comment.

Source: http://www.ss-times.com/2013/07/31/power-in-community-support/

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Dozens play pickup games in honor of coach Henry Pope

Students turned out in droves to play pickup basketball in honor of recently deceased basketball coach Henry Pope. Players from the boys basketball program at South Whidbey High School, which he coached from 2010 to 2013 and from the girls program he ran for a few years before that, hit the court at Community Park on July 26, the day after Pope died of cardiac arrest. Recent South Whidbey graduate Chase Collins said dozens of people came, as many as 50, to play, watch or just stop by. The above photo shows the group of players who were at the park around 8:45 a.m., though Collins said many more came later. They played pickup games for the first three hours, rotating players in and out. For the last hour they played bump and one, large fun game, including Lewis Pope, Henry Pope?s 13-year-old son. There were people from the middle school, high school, graduates and adults. Pope was 57. - Photo courtesy of Chase Collins

Photo courtesy of Chase Collins

Students turned out in droves to play pickup basketball in honor of recently deceased basketball coach Henry Pope. Players from the boys basketball program at South Whidbey High School, which he coached from 2010 to 2013 and from the girls program he ran for a few years before that, hit the court at Community Park on July 26, the day after Pope died of cardiac arrest. Recent South Whidbey graduate Chase Collins said dozens of people came, as many as 50, to play, watch or just stop by. The above photo shows the group of players who were at the park around 8:45 a.m., though Collins said many more came later. They played pickup games for the first three hours, rotating players in and out. For the last hour they played bump and one, large fun game, including Lewis Pope, Henry Pope?s 13-year-old son. There were people from the middle school, high school, graduates and adults. Pope was 57.


July 30, 2013 ? Updated 3:08 PM?

Around 50 people played basketball for nearly four hours in honor of recently deceased South Whidbey High School coach Henry Pope.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/swrsports/~3/LQCri3UTjJ8/217664811.html

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Both employees and companies benefit from flexible wage systems

Both employees and companies benefit from flexible wage systems [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 3-Aug-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jakob Roland Munch
Jakob.Roland.Munch@econ.ku.dk
45-23-28-22-42
University of Copenhagen

Research from the University of Copenhagen has revealed the effects of a decade of decentralised wage negotiations in the private sector. In an article in the Journal of Labor Economics, researchers conclude that wages have risen for all employees and that companies are now better able to retain key personnel.

"Average wages rise when employees and managers negotiate on an individual basis, without a collective-bargaining agreement dictating fixed rates for all," explains Jakob Roland Munch, professor of economics at the University of Copenhagen.

For the first time, this trend has been followed over a ten-year period and results indicate that the effect on wages has been positive. The research shows that the average increase for Danes employed in the private sector and subject to decentralised wage bargaining is 5% higher than for employees whose wages are calculated on the basis of parameters such as seniority.

"The examples we have unearthed in the private sector show clearly that the average wage rises under decentralised bargaining," says Professor Munch. "We didn't expect such a large difference. Even those at the bottom of the hierarchy win under a flexible system. Many other countries in Europe organise wage negotiations in a similar manner, so they may be interested in and inspired by our results." The other two researchers involved in the project are Professor Christian Mller Dahl of the University of Southern Denmark, and Assistant Professor Daniel le Maire, also from the University of Copenhagen.

Flexible wage systems reward abilities

Among those who benefit the most are those with a long-term higher education and long-term work experience. For this group, wages have risen by 7%, while those with shorter education and little work experience have seen their wages rise by 3%.

A flexible wage system affords better opportunities to reward employees according to their abilities, which means that companies can adapt more easily to market demand.

"Globalisation and technological progress affect companies differently and create a need for restructuring. For example, flexible wage systems make it easier for companies facing growing demand to retain key employees, while employees under threat of outsourcing can end up keeping their jobs at a lower wage," Munch continues.

"One fairly obvious interpretation of the positive effect revealed by our study is that a decentralised system means companies are better placed to cope with changes to market conditions and are therefore more productive.

Our research concerns the private sector, but the principles are transferrable to other sectors," he stresses.

"Our research sends a signal that decentralisation actually makes it possible to identify areas in which more flexible wage bargaining makes units function more efficiently. It is easy to envisage the same effects in parts of the public sector, where wage bargaining is currently relatively centralised," the professor concludes.

###

Read the article here: http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/journals/journal/jole.html

About the research:

The researchers studied wage bargaining in the private sector in Denmark from 1992 to 2001, using data from Statistics Denmark. The data is from 36 areas covered by collective-bargaining agreements.

Contact

Professor of Economics at the University of Copenhagen
Jakob Roland Munch
Email: Jakob.Roland.Munch@econ.ku.dk
Tel.: +45 35 32 30 19
Mobile: +45 23 28 22 42


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Both employees and companies benefit from flexible wage systems [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 3-Aug-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Jakob Roland Munch
Jakob.Roland.Munch@econ.ku.dk
45-23-28-22-42
University of Copenhagen

Research from the University of Copenhagen has revealed the effects of a decade of decentralised wage negotiations in the private sector. In an article in the Journal of Labor Economics, researchers conclude that wages have risen for all employees and that companies are now better able to retain key personnel.

"Average wages rise when employees and managers negotiate on an individual basis, without a collective-bargaining agreement dictating fixed rates for all," explains Jakob Roland Munch, professor of economics at the University of Copenhagen.

For the first time, this trend has been followed over a ten-year period and results indicate that the effect on wages has been positive. The research shows that the average increase for Danes employed in the private sector and subject to decentralised wage bargaining is 5% higher than for employees whose wages are calculated on the basis of parameters such as seniority.

"The examples we have unearthed in the private sector show clearly that the average wage rises under decentralised bargaining," says Professor Munch. "We didn't expect such a large difference. Even those at the bottom of the hierarchy win under a flexible system. Many other countries in Europe organise wage negotiations in a similar manner, so they may be interested in and inspired by our results." The other two researchers involved in the project are Professor Christian Mller Dahl of the University of Southern Denmark, and Assistant Professor Daniel le Maire, also from the University of Copenhagen.

Flexible wage systems reward abilities

Among those who benefit the most are those with a long-term higher education and long-term work experience. For this group, wages have risen by 7%, while those with shorter education and little work experience have seen their wages rise by 3%.

A flexible wage system affords better opportunities to reward employees according to their abilities, which means that companies can adapt more easily to market demand.

"Globalisation and technological progress affect companies differently and create a need for restructuring. For example, flexible wage systems make it easier for companies facing growing demand to retain key employees, while employees under threat of outsourcing can end up keeping their jobs at a lower wage," Munch continues.

"One fairly obvious interpretation of the positive effect revealed by our study is that a decentralised system means companies are better placed to cope with changes to market conditions and are therefore more productive.

Our research concerns the private sector, but the principles are transferrable to other sectors," he stresses.

"Our research sends a signal that decentralisation actually makes it possible to identify areas in which more flexible wage bargaining makes units function more efficiently. It is easy to envisage the same effects in parts of the public sector, where wage bargaining is currently relatively centralised," the professor concludes.

###

Read the article here: http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/journals/journal/jole.html

About the research:

The researchers studied wage bargaining in the private sector in Denmark from 1992 to 2001, using data from Statistics Denmark. The data is from 36 areas covered by collective-bargaining agreements.

Contact

Professor of Economics at the University of Copenhagen
Jakob Roland Munch
Email: Jakob.Roland.Munch@econ.ku.dk
Tel.: +45 35 32 30 19
Mobile: +45 23 28 22 42


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-08/uoc-bea080213.php

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Egyptian government appeals to Mursi supporters to leave camps

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's army-installed government on Saturday promised supporters of ousted President Mohamed Mursi a safe exit from their protest camps and urged them to rejoin the political process.

Interior Ministry spokesman Hany Abdel Latif said the protesters were being manipulated by leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood.

"Your continued sit-ins have no legal or political use. You have a safe exit, you will be politically integrated," Latif said in an announcement on state television.

Thousands of Mursi supporters have gathered in two camps in the capital to demand the reinstatement of Mursi, an Islamist from the Muslim Brotherhood who was overthrown a month ago to the day.

The military had threatened to remove them by force. But on Friday, following appeals form religious leaders as well as foreign governments to avoid a bloodbath, the interim government said it would blockade the camps but not storm them.

"If you think you're upholding the Muslim Brotherhood, your safe exit from the squares will allow the group to return to its role within the democratic political process," Latif said.

"If you think you're protecting yourself by staying with your colleagues, we pledge your safe and secure return to normal life as a free and honest citizen."

Latif said many people wanted to leave but they faced threats from the protest leaders. Anyone involved in crimes, including torture, killing and kidnapping, would face prosecution, he said.

"You are brain-washed, subject to psychological manipulation. You are being used as a political-bargaining chip," he said, directing his comments to the demonstrators.

Mursi became Egypt's first freely elected president in June 2012, 16 months after a popular uprising toppled long-ruling strongman Hosni Mubarak. He was himself ousted on July 3 after weeks of demonstrations against his rule.

Almost 300 people have died in political violence since then, including 80 of his supporters killed by security forces in clashes on July 27. Mursi is now in custody at a secret location.

(Reporting By Tom Finn; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egyptian-government-appeals-mursi-supporters-leave-camps-110117476.html

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China Crowns Asia's Tallest Tower In Shanghai

Work on the main structure of the world's second tallest skyscraper has been completed, as the final beam was placed on the Shanghai Tower.

A crane placed the steel beam 1,900ft above the ground in Shanghai, China's commercial hub, as the building formally overtook Taiwan's Taipei 101 building to become the highest tower in Asia.

Globally it is second only to the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, which stands at 2,723ft.

The Shanghai Tower, which costs an estimated $14.8bn yuan (?1.56bn), will reach over 2,066ft when it is finally finished.

"It's a landmark and it will change the skyline of Shanghai," Xia Jun, of US design firm Gensler said.

His comments came at a media conference following the traditional "topping out" ceremony.

"I don't think the importance of an architecture lies entirely in its height," he added.

The structure stands alongside China's previous tallest building, the 1,614ft Shanghai World Financial Centre - and is due to open next year, by which time it may have been surpassed as the tallest building in China.

Chinese firm Broad Group have announced plans to construct an 2,749ft tower in the central Chinese city of Changsha, which they say will be completed in April.

But reports in state-run media late last month said construction on the tower had been called off, because the building had not gained full local government approval.

Work on the Shanghai tower began in 2008, and its construction was partially backed by Shanghai's city government.

Concerns were raised last year when long cracks began to appear in the ground close to the building, prompting fears that ground around the tower was subsiding.

But Ding Jiemin, an architect who collaborated on the tower's design, played down fears on Saturday.

"These problems were just during construction period, it will not affect the security of the architecture," he said.

China is home to three of the world's 10 tallest buildings, according to research group Emporis -- which did not count the Shanghai Tower.

The Shanghai Tower's final beam was decorated with red ribbons and flags, and carried a banner which read: "Team of hoisting heroes".

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Source: http://web.orange.co.uk/article/news/china_crowns_asia_s_tallest_tower_in_shanghai

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Egypt this is not: Tunisia stays calm as it debates democracy

Tunisia's political camps are locked in a battle over the ruling Islamist party's mandate to lead ? but it remains a war of words only.

By John Thorne,?Correspondent / August 2, 2013

People waving Tunisian flags gather during a protest to demand the ousting of the Islamist-dominated government, outside the Constituent Assembly headquarters in Tunis Wednesday, July 31, 2013.

Anis Mili/Reuters

Enlarge

In Tunisia, even the most bitter disputes have a certain civility. At an ongoing sit-in by rival protesters outside the constituent assembly in Tunis, fiery slogans are offset by singing, and both police and popcorn?vendors?look on.?

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The festive atmosphere belies the fact that?Tunisia's two main?political camps ? ?the ruling Islamist Ennahda party and its allies and a collection of broadly secularist opposition parties ??are locked in a tense, perhaps decisive standoff over the future of Tunisia?s democratic transition.

The murder last week of an opposition leader prompted dozens of opposition politicians to suspend their membership in the?constituent assembly, which is just weeks away from finalizing a new constitution. Now opposition parties want the government, and maybe even the assembly, dissolved.

Both camps distrust each other?and trade accusations of betraying the 2011 revolution that ended five decades of dictatorship.?But, if their rhetoric is to be believed, they?want essentially the same things: democracy, free speech, and respect for human rights.?

The dispute could?set back political progress in a country widely seen as the best hope for Arab democracy. But Tunisians? capacity for restraint has?been their?saving grace in the past, and could?be again.

Losing control

Both Ennahda and its rivals claim deep roots in Tunisia, a Sunni Muslim country that has also been shaped by French colonialism and its secularist first president, Habib Bourguiba. Tunisians have known oppression, but not large-scale bloodshed, and are generally intolerant of violence.

Debate, however, can be fierce. The overthrow of Mr. Bourguiba?s successor, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali,?unleashed a culture war over the role of religion in public life. Ennahda swept elections on a pledge to build democracy while respecting Islam, and leads a coalition government with two secularist?parties.

But today many blame Ennahda for persistent economic malaise,?and?the party?s main rival, the secularist Nidaa Tounes, is?growing in popularity.?Opposition parties accuse Ennahda of coddling the hardline Salafi movement,?some of?whose members have engaged in political violence.?

After the February murder of opposition leader Chokri Belaid, the opposition?demanded that the government step down. The fall of Egypt?s Muslim Brotherhood government last month encouraged Tunisian secularists to renew their call.?

The killing last week of another opposition leader, Mohamed Brahmi, pushed anger to fever pitch. At least 60?members of the 217-seat assembly have suspended their membership in protest, according to Al Bawsala, an NGO that monitors assembly activity,?while rival camps of demonstrators maintain sit-ins outside the assembly building.

What constitutes a democracy?

Mahmoud Ben Romdhane, a member of Nidaa Tounes? executive committee, describes Tunisia as one front in a regional struggle against Islamists looking to exploit the Arab Spring uprisings. He says that in such circumstances, people power is a valid way to bring change.

?Elections are an expression of the people?s will, but not the only expression,? he says. ?Demonstrations, where they are extremely strong, have at least as much power as ballots.?

Sami Triki, a member of Ennahda?s political bureau, says the party is committed to democracy and has made key concessions to the opposition ? notably refraining from trying to cite Islamic sharia in the new constitution and dropping demands for a purely parliamentary system.

He worries that a secularist bent toward French-style?laicit????the strict exclusion of religion from public life?- makes opposition parties hostile to Islam. (Mr.?Ben Romdhane says this is not the case.) And he calls attempts to bring down the government an assault on democratic legitimacy.?While Ennahda is not part of the Muslim Brotherhood, Triki?s?argument mirrors that of many Muslim Brotherhood officials in Egypt.?

?Ennahda has committed mistakes, but not crimes,? he says. ?It?s not logical to change the government every time a country has a problem. And who can dissolve the assembly? It?s elected.?

Room for maneuvering

For Nadia Ch?abane, a representative from the opposition Al Massar party who is boycotting the assembly, Triki?s argument rings hollow. She says both the assembly and government failed to uphold pledges not to exceed one year in power.

?Most of us who have withdrawn were saying we must leave after a year,? she said, holding vigil?on Tuesday?night at the opposition protest. ?The [government parties] always voted against it.?

Yet beneath the political fray, she?says,?Tunisians are cut from a single cloth.

?We all reject corruption and abuse of power, and we?re all Arabs and Muslims, even them?, says?Ibrahim Haddad,?a middle-aged laborer and government supporters, nodding toward the opposition lines. ?We need the assembly to finish the constitution. Of 100 meters, we?ve already come 80.?

Behind the bluster,?some political forces indicate?there is room for compromise. Ennahda is willing to negotiate on a national unity government, says Triki. And according to Ben Romdhane,?Nidaa Tounes could accept the assembly staying in place if its mandate was strictly limited to completing the constitution quickly.

At the opposition protest, a university student named Marouan Ksaybi is scooping popcorn from his cart into paper bags for a line of customers. He supports the protest, and overall he is hopeful.

If Tunisians have a failing, he says, ?it?s that sometimes we don?t understand one another.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/rLiR9CfnmgA/Egypt-this-is-not-Tunisia-stays-calm-as-it-debates-democracy

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[WATCH]: Women's Activist Sends Alarm on Health Issues

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Lenovo ThinkPad X131e 3372 - 11.6" - E2-1800 - Windows 8 Pro 64-bit / Windows 7 Pro 64-bit downgrade - 4 GB RAM - 320 GB HDD $527.99

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Source: http://www.pcm.com/p/Lenovo-Notebook-Computers/product~dpno~9398175~pdp.iabeiad

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A-Rod homers with drug penalties likely Monday

NEW YORK (AP) ? Alex Rodriguez was back with the Trenton Thunder on Friday and hit what might be his last home run in a while.

With a lengthy suspension looming, the New York Yankees star hit a two-run homer to left in the third inning against the Reading Fightin Phils.

Rodriguez is among 14 players facing discipline in Major League Baseball's Biogenesis investigation, and suspensions are expected on Monday ? with Rodriguez facing the longest penalty.

Coming back from hip surgery and a quadriceps injury, A-Rod was hoping to return to the Yankees for the first time since last October.

But he might not get there any time soon because of his alleged connection to the closed anti-aging clinic that's been accused of distributing banned performance-enhancing drugs.

Most targeted players face 50-game bans, including All-Stars Nelson Cruz of Detroit and Jhonny Peralta of Texas.

Many of the players are expected to follow the example set by Milwaukee's Ryan Braun last month and accept penalties without a challenge before an arbitrator. First-time offenders who challenge suspensions can continue to play until their appeals are decided.

"Let's just get it over with," Los Angeles Dodgers manager Don Mattingly said.

The Yankees expect A-Rod to be accused of recruiting other athletes for the clinic, attempting to obstruct MLB's investigation, and not being truthful with MLB in the past.

Baseball has been attempting to gain a suspension through at least 2014 and has threatened a possible lifetime ban, and negotiations over Rodriguez's penalty were likely to go through the weekend, with the 38-year-old resisting such a lengthy stretch on the sidelines.

Baseball's highest-paid player with a $28 million salary, A-Rod has three law firms working for him ? Gordon & Rees; Reed Smith; and Cohen, Weiss & Simon.

Rodriguez seemed to be on the verge of rejoining the Yankees before the leg injury last month. New York assigned him to Trenton for two games and has not said where he'll go afterward.

With the Yankees at San Diego through Sunday, it would appear Rodriguez's first opportunity to rejoin them would be for Monday's series opener at the Chicago White Sox. It was not clear whether Commissioner Bud Selig would attempt to use provisions of baseball's labor contract to prevent Rodriguez from playing until arbitrator Fredric Horowitz rules on appeal.

Lawyers from management and the union plus attorneys for individual players spent Friday working their way through the many issues resulting from mass suspensions.

For instance: Will there be different treatment for minor leaguers depending whether they are on 40-man rosters.

Under the drug rules, 40-man roster players serving a 50-game suspension would have major league games in September count as time served after the minor league seasons end. Seattle catcher Jesus Montero, Mets outfielder Cesar Puello and Baltimore third baseman Danny Valencia might be in that group.

But that time wouldn't count for players not on 40-man rosters, whose suspensions would spill into 2014. Yankees outfielder Fernando Martinez could be in that category.

For many players, the damage to their images already has been inflicted. Rodriguez has faced fan taunting since 2009, when he said he used PEDs while with Texas from 2001-03.

Nike Inc. confirmed Friday that it no longer has a relationship with Braun, the 2011 NL MVP who accepted a 65-game suspension last month that ended the Milwaukee outfielder's season.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rod-homers-drug-penalties-likely-monday-003657874.html

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Is bringing your own food into a movie theater immoral?

Is bringing your own food into a movie theater immoral?

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/8rn1nsgDMlA/is-bringing-your-own-food-into-a-movie-theater-immoral-1006147106

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A-Rod in simulated game, could be Trenton bound

New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez throws the ball during a rehabilitation workout at Steinbrenner Field Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Major League Baseball is threatening to kick A-Rod out of the game for life unless the New York star agrees not to fight a lengthy suspension for his role in the sport's latest drug scandal, according to a person familiar with the discussions. The person spoke to The Associated Press on Wednesday, July 31, 2013 on condition of anonymity because no statements were authorized. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez throws the ball during a rehabilitation workout at Steinbrenner Field Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Major League Baseball is threatening to kick A-Rod out of the game for life unless the New York star agrees not to fight a lengthy suspension for his role in the sport's latest drug scandal, according to a person familiar with the discussions. The person spoke to The Associated Press on Wednesday, July 31, 2013 on condition of anonymity because no statements were authorized. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

In this image made through fencing, New York Yankees third baseman third baseman Alex Rodriguez points during a rehabilitaion workout at Steinbrenner Field Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Major League Baseball is threatening to kick A-Rod out of the game for life unless the New York star agrees not to fight a lengthy suspension for his role in the sport's latest drug scandal, according to a person familiar with the discussions. The person spoke to The Associated Press on Wednesday, July 31, 2013 on condition of anonymity because no statements were authorized. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez arrives to workout at the Yankees minor league complex Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Rodriguez is doing rehabilitation for a quad strain. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez leaves the team's minor league complex after a rehabilitation workout Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Major League Baseball is threatening to kick A-Rod out of the game for life unless the New York star agrees not to fight a lengthy suspension for his role in the sport's latest drug scandal, according to a person familiar with the discussions. The person spoke to The Associated Press on Wednesday, July 31, 2013 on condition of anonymity because no statements were authorized. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez leaves the team's minor league complex after a rehabilitation workout Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013, in Tampa, Fla. Major League Baseball is threatening to kick A-Rod out of the game for life unless the New York star agrees not to fight a lengthy suspension for his role in the sport's latest drug scandal, according to a person familiar with the discussions. The person spoke to The Associated Press on Wednesday, July 31, 2013 on condition of anonymity because no statements were authorized. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) ? Alex Rodriguez played in a simulated game Thursday, probably the last step before the New York Yankees send him on a second minor league injury rehabilitation assignment ? if he's not suspended first.

Because of wet grounds, the Yankees moved Rodriguez's simulated game from their minor league complex across the Dale Mabry highway to Steinbrenner Field, the team's spring training home.

The ballpark was closed to media, who watched from a walkway behind the right-field bullpen. Rodriguez had several at-bats, played third and ran bases during the simulated game. About two dozen media members and five television trucks were on hand ? but no fans.

Coming back from January hip surgery, Rodriguez was .200 (8 for 40) with two homers and eight RBIs in 13 minor league games from July 2-20 for Class A Tampa and Charleston (S.C.), Double-A Trenton and Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. The assignment was cut a day short when he complained of quadriceps tightness, and the Yankees said an MRI in New York on July 21 showed a grade 1 strain.

Rodriguez pushed to be activated later that week, retaining a doctor without giving the Yankees the required notification, and the physician claimed he couldn't detect an injury. During a conference call with Yankees officials on July 25 ? Rodriguez insisted one of his lawyers be on the call ? the sides agreed to a schedule for his return.

New York was expected to assign A-Rod to Trenton for Friday night's game against Reading. While he would be in position to return to the major leagues later in the weekend at San Diego or during a series at the Chicago White Sox that starts Monday, it appears Major League Baseball will suspend the three-time MVP in coming days for ties to Biogenesis of America, a closed Florida anti-aging clinic accused of distributing banned performance-enhancing drugs.

Four years ago Rodriguez admitted using PEDs while with Texas from 2001-03, but he repeatedly has denied using them since.

He appeared ready to talk as he was leaving the minor league complex, waving a group of writers to his car in the parking lot and rolling down the window. However, when A-Rod saw a second group with TV cameras approaching, he said "I'll talk to you guys, but no cameras."

Rodriguez closed the window and kept the car stationary for a moment, then left without saying another word to reporters.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-08-01-BBA-Yankees-Rodriguez/id-6fa81c10a2ad4ce7994ff6a5738870a3

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Taiwan lawmakers brawl over nuclear plant bill

Ruling and opposition lawmakers fight on the legislature floor in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Taiwanese lawmakers exchanged punches and thrown water at each other ahead of an expected vote authorizing a referendum on whether to go ahead with the construction of a fourth power plant. Friday?s fracas pitted the pro-referendum forces of President Ma Ying-jeou?s ruling Nationalist Party against strongly anti-nuclear forces affiliated with the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

Ruling and opposition lawmakers fight on the legislature floor in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Taiwanese lawmakers exchanged punches and thrown water at each other ahead of an expected vote authorizing a referendum on whether to go ahead with the construction of a fourth power plant. Friday?s fracas pitted the pro-referendum forces of President Ma Ying-jeou?s ruling Nationalist Party against strongly anti-nuclear forces affiliated with the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

Ruling and opposition lawmakers are sprayed with water as they fight on the legislature floor in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Taiwanese lawmakers exchanged punches and thrown water at each other ahead of an expected vote authorizing a referendum on whether to go ahead with the construction of a fourth power plant. Friday?s fracas pitted the pro-referendum forces of President Ma Ying-jeou?s ruling Nationalist Party against strongly anti-nuclear forces affiliated with the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

Ruling and opposition lawmakers fight on the legislature floor in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Taiwanese lawmakers exchanged punches and thrown water at each other ahead of an expected vote authorizing a referendum on whether to go ahead with the construction of a fourth power plant. Friday?s fracas pitted the pro-referendum forces of President Ma Ying-jeou?s ruling Nationalist Party against strongly anti-nuclear forces affiliated with the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

Ruling and opposition lawmakers fight each other on the legislature floor in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Taiwanese lawmakers exchanged punches and thrown water at each other ahead of an expected vote authorizing a referendum on whether to go ahead with the construction of a fourth power plant. Friday?s fracas pitted the pro-referendum forces of President Ma Ying-jeou?s ruling Nationalist Party against strongly anti-nuclear forces affiliated with the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

Opposition lawmakers shout during fighting against ruling lawmakers on the legislature floor in Taipei, Taiwan, Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Taiwanese lawmakers exchanged punches and thrown water at each other ahead of an expected vote authorizing a referendum on whether to go ahead with the construction of a fourth power plant. Friday?s fracas pitted the pro-referendum forces of President Ma Ying-jeou?s ruling Nationalist Party against strongly anti-nuclear forces affiliated with the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party. (AP Photo/Wally Santana)

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) ? Taiwanese lawmakers exchanged punches and threw water at each other Friday ahead of an expected vote that would authorize a national referendum on whether to finish building a fourth power plant on this densely populated island of 23 million people.

Nuclear power has long been a contentious issue in Taiwan and became more so following the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan in 2011. While frequent earthquakes have led many Taiwanese to conclude that nuclear power generation constitutes an unacceptable safety risk, economic analyses suggest disruptive power shortages are inevitable if the fourth plant is not completed.

Friday's fracas pitted the pro-referendum forces of President Ma Ying-jeou's ruling Nationalist Party against strongly anti-nuclear forces affiliated with the main opposition Democratic Progressive Party. DPP lawmakers occupied the legislative podium late Thursday night amid vows to disrupt the referendum vote, tentatively scheduled for noon Friday (0400 GMT). With a large Nationalist majority in the 113-seat legislature, the referendum bill is expected to pass easily.

Construction of Taiwan's fourth nuclear power plant began in 1997 but was halted while the DPP was in power between 2000 and 2008. If the referendum is passed it could become operational by 2016.

Physical confrontations broke out early in Friday's session. Associated Press television footage shows some eight people pushing and shoving in one scrum. Two people scuffled on the floor, while others tried to separate them. More than a dozen activists in bright yellow shirts chanted and waved signs on a nearby balcony, and several of them splashed water onto lawmakers below. A few water bottles were thrown into the fray.

Some DPP lawmakers object to the idea of any nuclear referendum at all, while others say that the language in the bill needs to be changed because it is prejudicial. According to the bill under discussion, referendum voters would be asked to vote on whether they agree with the proposition that "the construction of the fourth nuclear power plant should be halted and that it not become operational."

Taiwan began transitioning away from a one-party martial law regime in 1987 and is regarded today as one of Asia's most vibrant democracies. But its political process has been undermined by occasional outbursts of violence in the legislature, much of which appears to be deliberately designed to score points among hardline supporters on either side of the island's longstanding political divide.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-08-01-Taiwan-Nuclear/id-5ee3fa32bdfb466da29eb79993fabbf4

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