Sunday, September 30, 2012

California's Prop 38 income tax measure headed for defeat, poll shows

Pollsters and political experts are starting to all but write off Proposition 38, the income tax hike measure on the November ballot, putting the focus on whether the campaign's wealthy backer will now set her sights on defeating Gov. Jerry Brown's competing measure.

A USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll released Friday shows that just 34 percent of registered voters plan to vote for Proposition 38, while 52 percent oppose it. Analysts said they can't remember a state measure coming back from that large a deficit with only several weeks to go before an election -- particularly one asking most Californians to raise their own taxes.

"You never say never, especially in such a volatile political environment," said poll director Dan Schnur, director of USC's Unruh Institute of Politics. "But there's no historical precedent for an initiative making up this much ground in weeks before an election."

With the future of California schools at stake and tens of millions of dollars in campaign cash in play, the poll results are sure to ramp up a rivalry between those touting the two high-profile tax measures on the Nov. 6 ballot.

Funded by civil rights attorney Molly Munger, Proposition 38 would increase income taxes by 0.4 to 2.2 percent, depending on how much you make, to fund K-12 and early-childhood education.

It must receive more votes than Brown's competing Proposition 30. That measure would increase the sales tax by a quarter of a

cent and raise income taxes on people making at least $250,000 a year to fund schools and help balance the general-fund budget.

The new poll shows 54 percent of respondents endorsing Proposition 30, with 37 percent opposed.

With Proposition 38 struggling, observers are waiting to see if Munger, who has already contributed nearly $30 million toward her campaign, will shift strategies.

Will she continue to funnel millions of dollars into her campaign, or will she instead start spending huge money on attack ads to defeat Brown's measure? Or will she simply throw in the towel and back Proposition 30 over her measure?

"The fear is that (she) will bring down Prop. 30 without doing anything to (help) Prop. 38," said state Sen. Ted Lieu, D-Torrance, a Proposition 30 supporter. "That is a slow-motion train wreck that does not need to happen."

Munger and Brown feuded this summer over who's tax measure was better. Brown tried to get Munger to drop her initiative, saying it would decrease the likelihood that either one would pass. But Munger didn't budge.

Proposition 38's first television ad this week took a shot at the governor and his measure by blaming "Sacramento politicians" for the state's education crisis and implying that Proposition 30 was not the way to solve it. But Munger has yet to fund a direct attack against Brown's initiative.

Nathan Ballard, campaign spokesman for Proposition 38, said the campaign will spend its remaining money on pushing the measure, not bringing down Proposition 30.

"This campaign has only just begun and it would be absurd to count us out," said Ballard, noting the first statewide ad hadn't even started running when the USC/Los Angeles Times poll was in the field. "Our research says that we can win."

Still, when pollsters gave voters arguments in favor of Proposition 38, the results barely changed. And unions have contributed enough money to bankroll a formidable TV campaign backing Proposition 30. The campaign now has $22 million at its disposal.

Munger could be the biggest wild card available to sink Proposition 30, as the anti-tax groups trying to defeat the measure have only raised about $1.2 million. Proposition 30 campaign officials say the only way Munger could defeat Brown's initiative is to run direct attack ads against it.

"But I have faith that's not going to happen," said Ace Smith, Proposition 30's campaign manager.

The poll also showed that 51 percent of voters are likely to support Proposition 39, which would cut off about $1 billion worth of tax loopholes for out-of-state businesses. Only 29 percent are opposed.

The poll of 1,504 registered voters was conducted from Sept. 17 through Sept. 23. The margin of error is plus or minus 2.9 percentage points.

Contact Mike Rosenberg at 408-920-5705. Follow him at twitter.com/rosenberg17.

RESULTS of NEW USC/L.A Times poll
Proposition 30
Measure would raise state sales tax and income taxes on the rich.
Yes: 55%
No: 36%
Unsure: 8%

Proposition 38
Measure would raise income taxes for most Californians to provide billions more to schools.
Yes: 34%
No: 52%
Unsure: 13%

Proposition 39
Measure would end out-of-state business tax loopholes
Yes: 51%
No: 29%
Unsure: 19%
A USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll of 1,504 registered voters was conducted from Sept. 17 through Sept. 23. The margin of error is +/- 2.9 percent.

Source: http://www.insidebayarea.com/timesstar/localnews/ci_21656840/californias-prop-38-income-tax-measure-headed-defeat?source=rss

ufc on fox evans vs davis fast times at ridgemont high fast times at ridgemont high soylent green phil davis george st pierre

Utah State football: Kerwynn Williams has career night against hometown team UNLV

Utah State Aggies running back Kerwynn Williams (25) suits up prior to the UNLV game in Logan Saturday, Sept. 29, 2012.

Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

LOGAN ? Utah State running back Kerwynn Williams said it didn't matter to him that the opponent the Aggies beat up on Saturday night was from his hometown.

The only thing that did matter, said the senior running back, was that UNLV stood in the way of Utah State's first 4-1 start since 1978.

"I don't think that put any more spice on it," said the Las Vegas native, who had a career-best performance in Utah State's 35-13 win over UNLV. "I feel like if it were any other team, I came out with the same intensity and played as hard as I do, any other game. It doesn't add anything to it. But I was excited for the way it turned out tonight."

And his teammates, coaches and the 24,226 fans were excited about his performance against the Rebels. Williams earned 113 yards rushing, 147 yards receiving and a touchdown in the win. His receiving yards were the most by a non-receiver since 1959. He's also the first running back since Robert Turbin did it in 2009 to earn 100 yards receiving and 100 yards rushing.

He was humble about his accomplishments Saturday night, which earned him the game ball.

"I'm definitely excited about that," he said. "But once again, I can't take full credit for it."

He praised sophomore quarterback Chuckie Keeton for making "some great reads tonight, which allowed me to get the ball like I did."

He also praised his offensive line and the team's offensive coordinator for doing a "great job of mixing it up."

Williams was coming off a career performance and WAC Offensive Player of the Week honors in USU's victory over Colorado State last weekend. His 200-yard performance in that game earned him the game ball, which he didn't keep.

"He turned, sat right here and gave it to the offensive line," said USU head coach Gary Andersen. "Hopefully he'll see fit to keep this one."

Keeton said he wasn't surprised with Williams' performance.

"He was a wideout two years ago," said Keeton. "He always talks about having the stickies (meaning he can catch). ? He definitely showed how well he can catch the ball, and his ability to get open and make yards after the catch."

For Williams, what made Saturday's win special wasn't that it came against a program that didn't even offer the highly regarded honor student a scholarship, but that it came the week before the team meets BYU. He, his coaches and teammates, hope they can utilize the momentum that's been building in Logan to find success in Provo next Friday.

Twitter: adonsports

email: adonaldson@desnews.com

Source: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/865563459/Utah-State-football-Kerwynn-Williams-has-career-night-against-hometown-team-UNLV.html

ipad 2 cases movie times serene branson matthew mcconaughey to catch a predator davenport chris hansen

Chez Cayenne: The Bye and Bye (a copycat drink recipe)

The Bye and Bye is a cute little tavern in Portland, Oregon with a short menu of delicious vegan food. We ate there this summer when we were visiting family.

To go with my meatball sandwich, I ordered the house signature drink, the Bye and Bye.? The bartender filled a mason jar with ice, added a couple of shots of liquor, some juice, and a squirt of something from the soda gun. I loved it. The drink is fruity, but not cloyingly sweet. When I finished it, I decided that I wanted to make them at home.

When I got home, I couldn't find a recipe for a Bye and Bye, so I had to get creative. The menu said it contained peach infused bourbon and vodka. I don't have flavor-infused liquors, usually, and didn't want to buy any, so I used regular bourbon and vodka and some peach schnapps. Then I had to figure out the juice. I tasted cranberry juice and guessed that the soda was ginger ale.

I mixed it all up, and it tasted right, but the color wasn't pink enough. I tried adding some pomegranate molasses. Whoops, my drink was now brown. I thought about using some grenadine, but then I remembered that we used to make pink lemonade with grape juice when I was a kid, so I added some grape juice concentrate. Pinkness was achieved.

I've been drinking these on weekends ever since. This is a great drink anytime, but it's especially nice right now as the last heavy days of late summer ease into the crispness of fall.

Disclaimer: I only had one of these and I'm working from memory, so I might not have the juice ingredients exactly right (the liberties I took with the liquor was on purpose), and the color of mine is a little deeper than the original, as I recall. The flavor is spot on, I believe. But if you've had this drink and have any suggestions as to how I can make it closer to the original, leave me a comment!

A Pitcher of Bye and Byes

1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons vodka (3 ounces)

1/4 cup bourbon (2 ounces)

1/4 cup peach liqueur (2 ounces)

1 cup ginger ale

2 cups cranberry juice

2 tablespoons? purple grape juice concentrate (or 1/2 cup grape juice)

Mix all ingredients in a 1 quart pitcher. Pour over ice into 4 juice glasses or 2 large mason jars.

Makes 2 tavern-sized drinks or 4 regular ones.

Source: http://chezcayenne.blogspot.com/2012/09/the-bye-and-bye-copycat-drink-recipe.html

beezow doo doo zopittybop bop bop cordova demaryius thomas transtar 316 william daley truffles

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Spain debt rises on aid to banks, regions, finance cost

MADRID (Reuters) - Spain's debt levels are set to rise next year, piling pressure on the government to apply for aid as it pours funds in to cash-strapped regions, an ailing banking system and rising refinancing costs, its budget showed on Saturday.

Spain's debt as a ratio of gross domestic product will reach 90.5 percent by end 2013, according to the document presented to parliament for approval, almost three times that registered before the property bubble burst in 2008.

The budget aims to make savings of around 13 billion euros ($16.7 billion) next year, largely by deepening already unpopular cuts in public sector wages, education, health and social services, fuelling anti-austerity protests.

"This is an austerity budget, but will serve to help us get over this long economic crisis and once again show that Spain is a trustworthy partner within Europe," Treasury Minister Cristobal Montoro told journalists after delivering the budget.

Spain is at the center of the euro zone debt crisis as nervous investors demand ever higher premiums to hold Spanish debt on concerns the government cannot control its finances in the midst of a deepening recession.

Calls by wealthy northeastern region Catalonia for independence and the rising number of demonstrations on the streets of major cities have stoked doubts Spain can fix its problems without help.

Thousands of protesters gathered on Saturday in Madrid's Neptune plaza, between the Prado Museum and Parliament, for a third time this week to vent anger at politicians they accuse of pillaging the welfare state to bail out badly-run banks.

"This has to change. We have to show them we are not an anti-system minority but represent Spain's discontent and we are many. You only have to see the unemployment rate to see that," said state school teacher, Montse, 44, who was at the march with her unemployed husband and 11-year-old daughter.

Unemployment in Spain is more than double the European Union average, with half of all working-age under-26s unable to find jobs and shattered businesses laying off employees they cannot afford to pay.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has delayed any plea for aid, which would kick-start a European Central Bank plan to buy debt and ease financing costs, though this week has passed reforms and the budget plan in what many see is an effort to pre-empt the likely terms of a bailout.

Rajoy, who said he is considering the conditions behind any aid request, is widely expected to wait until after regional elections in Galicia and the Basque Country before taking any decision.

RISING BORROWING NEEDS

The budget details spending cuts of 3.1 percent in health, 14.4 percent in education and 6.3 percent in unemployment benefits, as the recession, which began in the first quarter, drags on.

Spain will also slash state funding to commerce, tourism and small, and medium-sized companies by 18.8 percent and infrastructure by 13.5 percent.

The government will increase its reliance on international markets for funding next year, with gross debt issuance requirements of 207.2 billion euros, after budgeting in 2012 for gross issuance of 186.1 billion euros.

The cost of financing its debt, as benchmark 10-year bond yields rise to near unsustainable levels of above 6 percent, is expected to increase to 38.6 billion euros, or 3.6 percent of GDP, in 2013, the budget showed.

The Treasury must pay debt redemptions of 159.2 billion euros in 2013, up slightly from 153.2 billion euros in 2012.

The increase in the debt-to-GDP ratio was due the economic crisis and the effect of state instruments on public accounts, the Treasury said in the document.

The instruments include the power deficit bond programme, FADE, the service provider fund for regional governments, Spain's part in aid granted to Ireland, Greece and Portugal and the recapitalization loan for the country's banks, it said.

Brussels on Thursday said the budget was a large step in the right direction. But many economists expressed doubt Spain's conservatives would be able to raise the cash the budget demanded as pension and debt-servicing costs rise.

"My general view is that this is an optimistic budget, in the sense that predictions for the contraction in 2013 are very optimistic," said Xavier Vives, economist at business school IESE, adding he expected the plans to be revised as with every other budget over the last four years.

The budget is based on the assumption GDP will shrink by 0.5 percent in 2013 year-on-year, though most economists expect a deeper slump.

DEFICIT JUMP

Spain will meet its 2012 public deficit target as dictated by European guidelines, Montoro said, but the shortfall will jump by more than one percentage point if aid to its struggling banks were taken in to account.

The Spanish deficit this year would be 6.3 percent of GDP, not including these payments to its banks, he said, but would rise to 9.4 percent of GDP last year and 7.4 percent of GDP this year if the aid was considered.

"Everything within the deficit derived from financial operations aren't included ... they're considered one-offs," Montoro said.

Spain has asked for up to 100 billion euros for its crisis-hit banks, though the debate among Spain's European partners rages over whether that money would go directly to its lenders or first via public coffers.

On Friday, an independent report showed Spanish banks will need up to 59.3 billion euros in extra capital to ride out the economic downturn.

The budget details on Saturday showed Spain's debt ratio included 30 billion euros of the planned 100-billion-euro aid request for the country's banks.

($1 = 0.7773 euros)

(Additional reporting Carlos Ruano, Nigel Davies and Paul Day; Writing by Paul Day; Editing by James Jukwey and Sophie Hares)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/spain-sees-2012-deficit-target-jump-bank-aid-133205263--business.html

immaculate conception rule 5 draft lindsay lohan playboy cover lindsay lohan playboy cover shooting at virginia tech shooting at virginia tech harry morgan

Air Review Performs Live In Fort Worth ? CBS Dallas / Fort Worth

FORT WORTH (CBSDFW.COM) - The Fort Worth Music Festival is taking place this weekend. The event features more than 20 acts, including Dallas band Air Review. The guys have a new album called ?America?s Son? scheduled for release early next year. The guys joined CBS 11 News live in the studio early Friday morning for a special preview performance. Check them out below!

Also Check Out:

Source: http://dfw.cbslocal.com/2012/09/28/air-review-performs-live-in-fort-worth/

klimt bastille day breaking bad breaking bad food network star jeremy lin Sage Stallone

United Airlines gets 1st 787

U.S. travelers are going to be seeing a lot more of the 787, the lightweight jet built to reduce flier fatigue and airline fuel bills.

United this week became the first U.S. airline to get the newest Boeing plane. Flights between United hubs, including Houston and Chicago, begin Nov. 4. United joins All Nippon Airways, which starts U.S. flights on Monday, and Japan Airlines, which already flies the 787 from Boston to Tokyo.

After years of delays, Boeing Co. has begun delivering a handful of 787s every month. With more than 800 sold to airlines around the world, it will eventually be a plane that travelers encounter regularly. The 787 seats 219 passengers ? making it relatively small for a long-range plane but ideal on routes where it's tough to fill a larger 777.

Boeing claims the Dreamliner will be 20 percent more fuel efficient than comparable jets. And it promises a better travel experience, with more space, better lighting and carefully calibrated air pressure that should lead to fewer flier headaches.

United will fly its new plane from Seattle to Houston on Friday to begin getting it ready for passenger flights.

Here's what U.S. travelers should know about the 787:

WHO FLIES IT IN THE U.S.:

A small but growing number of airlines.

Japan Airlines currently flies 787s from Boston to Tokyo, and plans to add San Diego-Tokyo on December 2.

Japan's All Nippon Airways was the first airline to get a 787 a year ago, and starts flights Monday between Seattle and Tokyo's Narita airport. Flights between Narita and San Jose, Calif. begin in January.

United Airlines expects to get five 787s this year. Passengers will first see the 787 on flights between United's U.S. hubs. Then, on Jan. 3, United begins flights from Los Angeles to Tokyo. On March 31, it starts new flights from Denver to Tokyo Narita.

Among U.S. airlines, United Continental Holdings Inc. is going to have the 787 to itself for several years. Delta Air Lines Inc. has pushed its deliveries back to 2020, spokesman Anthony Black said. Around the industry, there's widespread skepticism about whether it will ever take the planes at all.

American Airlines has a commitment ? but not a signed, firm order ? for 42 of the planes, slated to begin arriving in the second half of 2014.

Chilean airline LAN plans to fly 787s from Los Angeles to Lima, Peru, but doesn't have a firm date yet.

WHAT YOU'LL NOTICE INSIDE:

Bigger windows and better air.

The 787's bigger windows let in more light, and its ceiling is 15 inches higher than in United's 767s. The air is less dry than on other planes, and the cabin is pressurized to a lower altitude. That will make the air inside feel closer to the air on the ground.

Ray Neidl, an airline analyst for Maxim Group, said he thinks this will be the first plane since the 40-year-old 747 that passengers will go out of their way to fly on.

"People are going to feel a lot more comfortable at the end of a long trip than they would feel on a normal airplane," giving them a reason to seek it out, he said.

United's 787 seats 219 passengers, including 70 in what it calls "Economy Plus." That's a sort of high-end coach seat that has three more inches of legroom, and other perks.

That's a significant number of Economy Plus seats, said Tim Winship who runs frequentflier.com. But considering the long flights the 787 will be making, United appears to be betting that passengers will pay up (or use frequent flier miles) to get those seats.

For most passengers, 787 or 777 are just numbers. All that really matters is their personal space on board. And the best measure of that space is the seat pitch, or the distance between seats.

By the standard, United's 787 lands in the middle of the pack. United's pitch will be 32 inches in coach, which is roughly comparable to planes that travelers might encounter on other airlines. United and American's 777s have 31 inches of pitch, according to seatguru.com, although American's 767s have 33 to 34 inches. Delta's 767s have 31 to 32 inches, according to the website.

The 32 inches on United's 787 is "pretty much the standard for entry-level coach seating," Winship said. "It's certainly not enough to surprise or delight long-haul flyers."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/united-airlines-gets-1st-787-223247591--finance.html

faith hill autism adrienne rich cesar chavez day raspberry ketone ron burgundy millennial media

Friday, September 28, 2012

Argument preview: Defining a houseboat ? a house or a boat ...

The Supreme Court at 11 a.m. on Monday will hold one hour of oral argument on how to define a ?vessel? for purposes of moving a dispute over a floating structure?into the special court that handles maritime commerce.?? Arguing first in the case of Lozman v. Riviera Beach, Fla. will be Stanford law professor Jeffrey L. Fisher, representing the owner of a houseboat that was at the center of the dispute,?Fane Lozman.??Fisher will have twenty minutes of time.? Partly supporting Lozman, Curtis E. Gannon, an Assistant to the U.S. Solicitor General, will argue for the federal government as an amicus, with ten minutes of time.? The Florida city will be represented by David C. Frederick of the Washington office of Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Evans & Figel, with thirty minutes of time.

?????????

Background

The dispute in this case, in its basic facts, hardly seems like the stuff of a significant Supreme Court case.? It involves a rather ordinary running feud between a quite cantankerous local citizen and a city government, with each side highly suspicious of the other?s motives, and seemingly determined to fight out each phase of their spat until the bitter end; something, perhaps, that ?Judge Judy? could easily handle.?? And the central object in the case was (until it was destroyed by the city) a plywood floating vessel that Fane Lozman made his home; in court papers, it gets this formal designation: ?that certain unnamed gray, two story vessel approximately fifty-seven feet in length, her engines, tackle, apparel, furniture, equipment, and all other necessaries, appertaining and belonging in rem.?? The ?in rem? means that the city of Riviera Beach?s lawsuit is against the vessel itself, not against its owner, Lozman.

Still, the case does rank as worthy of the Supreme Court because there is a significant legal principle at stake.??The case will require the Court to spell out when a floating structure qualifies, legally, as a ?vessel,? such that a dispute in which it is involved must be resolved in admiralty court under special rules of maritime law.?? The case has attracted the interest of the federal government, as well as of groups whose members?make their living in marine industries, plus lawyers in the specialized field of maritime law, owners of houseboats, and even the operators of riverboat casinos.?? They all will be affected by how the Court defines ?vessel.?

There would have been no case, though, if Fane Lozman and the city of Riviera Beach had worked out their differences on whether Lozman was paying what he supposedly owed for using city utilities in his floating home, and if Lozman had not suspected that the city was acting lawlessly in trying to sneak through a plan to redevelop the marina where his home was tied up at?a dock.?? The feud has made for ongoing, lively coverage in local newspapers, with Lozman sometimes portrayed as the?Biblical?David to the city?s Goliath.

Lozman, whom the city?s lawyers have sought to belittle by suggesting that he is a millionaire quibbling over a few thousand dollars, bought his floating home in 2002.? A residence seemed to be its only practical use: it was not made to?navigate in waterways, because it had no bilge pumps, no steering mechanism, no navigation aids, no lifeboats or other rescue equipment, no propulsion, and a square bow that did not make for smooth plowing through waves.?? It had no Coast Guard hull number, so it could not be registered for operation as a boat.?? Lozman lived in it for three years at dockside in North Bay Village in Florida.? It was damaged in Hurricane Wilma in 2005, and Lozman decided to move it to Riviera Beach.?? It was towed there, and he then tied it up at a marina run by the city.? It had power and sewer lines reaching to the dock, and connections for cable TV and Internet access.?? He signed a lease in March 2006 with the city, intending to live in the structure indefinitely.

Trouble with the city began soon, after he had filed a lawsuit against the city, claiming it was attempting to sell the marina to private developers, but in doing so had violated the state?s open meetings law.? His lawsuit also contended that the city was abusing its power to seize private property for public use.? The city?s redevelopment plan fell through.?? On the premise that his dog ? a small?dachshund ??was not muzzled, the city ordered him evicted from its marina.? The city also claimed he was using unlicensed workmen to do work on the houseboat.?? The jury in his lawsuit ruled for him, and included in its ruling a finding that he had been the target of improper retaliation for speaking out against city policies.? The next move was the city?s, adopting a new marina docking agreement with more stringent conditions.?? Among the new conditions was a requirement that any vessel in the marina be fitted so that it could be moved in an emergency;?Lozman would have to leave the marina unless he complied, the city said.?? Lozman refused to sign.

The city then filed a claim against Lozman in admiralty court.? The reason: a federal law provides that anyone who provides ?necessaries? to a ?vessel? establishes the right to collect what is owed for those materials or services, and a right to sue in admiralty court directly against the vessel (the ?res?) to enforce the lien covering the amount due.?? The city contended that Lozman owed $3,039.88?in unpaid dockage fees.?? When a maritime lien is submitted for collection, the floating object to which the lien attaches is ?arrested? by a U.S. marshal and is taken into what amounts to custody.? That is what happened to Lozman?s houseboat.

A judge ruled for the city, and ordered the houseboat sold at an auction.? Someone acting for Lozman put in a bid, but the city topped it with a bid of $4,100.? It thus took possession of the houseboat.? City officials later said they tried to sell it or give it away, but, when such efforts failed, the city destroyed it.?? City officials now claim, through their lawyers, that they spent more than $32,000 in moving and maintaining the houseboat after it was ?arrested.?? In fact, the city?s lawyers have told the Supreme Court that, after the case is over, they may sue Lozman to recover some of the money they spent after they took over the houseboat.?? In the meantime, the city has posted in federal court a $25,000 bond in case Lozman ultimately wins.

(After the Supreme Court had agreed to hear Lozman?s appeal, claiming that the case should never have gone into admiralty court because, he argued, his houseboat was not a ?vessel? under maritime law, the Supreme Court noticed that the vessel had been sold and later destroyed.? It asked all of the lawyers involved in the case whether that made the dispute a dead one; all of the lawyers filed new briefs arguing that, under traditional maritime law principles, the fate of?a floating structure did not ?moot? a controversy over it, especially when money had been put up as a substitute for the structure.? Whether the Court will accept that argument is up to the Justices; if they don?t, the case could end without a ruling.)

The ruling against Lozman in the admiralty court was upheld by the Eleventh Circuit Court.? It ruled that the houseboat was, legally, a ?vessel? under maritime law.? It relied on an opinion it had issued in 2008, which held in a floating casino case that a watercraft capable of being towed on the water without sinking was capable of maritime transport, even if it could not propel itself, and thus qualified as a vessel.

Petition for Certiorari

Lozman?s lawyers filed a petition for review in November of last year, raising the single issue of whether a floating structure indefinitely tied to a dock but not intended for use in marine commerce was a vessel, which would make?it eligible for its fate to be resolved under maritime law in admiralty court.? The petition made two arguments: first, that the lower federal and state courts?had reached conflicting results on the definition of a ?vessel,? and, second, that the legal dispute was over ?a pivotal question of federal maritime law.?

On the conflict issue, Lozman?s counsel contended that the Eleventh Circuit?s sole focus on whether a floating structure could be towed without sinking was contradicted by rulings of the Fifth and Seventh Circuits, both of which have focused upon the owner?s intended and actual use of such a structure.?? If the Eleventh Circuit view prevailed, the petition argued, it would mean that ?a wooden garage door? in the water could qualify as a vessel ? a suggestion that Justice Stephen G. Breyer had put forth during oral argument in another case in?2005.? This case,?the petition said, should be granted to ?put an end to this overly expansive test.?

On the impact of the dispute, the petition said the outcome of the case could affect ?innumerable private and commercial owners of such structures,? and could affect ?the regulatory ability of state and local governments across the country.?

Lozman?s petition drew the support of the Maritime Law Association of the U.S., which argued that the conflicting interpretations of the word ?vessel? in maritime law ?creates substantial uncertainty for maritime entities, and those who advise them, about what standards and rules apply to floating structures.?? Litigation will be prolonged if that is not resolved in a uniform way, the association contended.

The city of Riviera Beach opposed Supreme Court review, arguing that the dispute was limited to the specific facts and circumstances of the controversy between Lozman and the city as the marina operator.? Even Lozman had conceded, the opposition brief argued, that the case turned on the specific facts about how his structure was linked to the shore at the marina.? Thus, the city contended, the case was a poor vehicle for confronting the legal definition of ?vessel.?? Moreover, it accused Lozman?s lawyers of misstating the facts in an attempt to try to make the case seem broader than it actually was.

The Court granted review of the case on February 21, after just one look at it at Conference.? The Justices probably were satisfied that there was, indeed, a conflict among the lower courts on an issue of some consequence to maritime law.

Briefs on the Merits

Lozman?s brief on the merits is a combination of reliance on the words of the federal law defining ?vessel? and on the pragmatic issue of how a floating structure is intended to be used.? Under federal law, a vessel is defined as ?every description of watercraft or other artificial contrivance used, or capable of being used, as a means of transportation on water.?? That definition, the brief argued, puts the focus both on the function ? transportation on water ? and the actual use.? Lozman?s home, it added, ?was not designed or used to move people or goods over water.?? A theme that runs throughout the brief is that a structure like Lozman?s houseboat is, in essence, an extension of the land, not a watercraft.

The brief sought to draw a distinction between a ?houseboat? and a ?floating home.??? The former does provide living accommodations, but also is intended to be moved over water under its own power, while the latter is used as a residence, and nothing more, according to the brief.? The document also stressed that the two kinds of floating living arrangements are financed differently and taxed differently when sold.? Describing in detail the physical structure of his floating home, Lozman?s brief noted that it had French doors on four sides and was only a few feet above the water and thus potentially subject to being swamped when moved.

On the legal side of the dispute, Lozman?s lawyers argued that Supreme Court precedents dating back to the nineteenth century hold that the purpose of a structure determined whether it is capable of serving as a means of transportation over water.? A floating home?does not fall within the description of vessels in?those precedents, the brief argued, because it performs its function ?by sitting still.?

The brief also argued that the special principles and benefits of maritime law, geared to the needs of actual maritime commerce involving moving vessels carrying goods or people, are ill-suited to governing disputes over floating structures that are more or less permanently moored to a dock and serving purposes other than maritime commerce.

The city of Riviera Beach, in its brief on the merits, argued that the proper test ? one that it said the Eleventh Circuit had correctly applied in this case ? is one of ?practical capability.??? It noted that Lozman?s houseboat had been towed over water for ?hundreds of miles,? and thus was capable of being transported.? It also noted that the houseboat was capable of, and did, leave the marina in ?a matter of minutes.?? Its links to the dock, the brief asserted, were ?so flimsy? that they could not be an impediment to transporting it to another location in another waterway.? Lozman had no legal right to remain indefinitely at a docket in the marina, so his attempt to claim it as an extension of the land was incorrect, the brief said.

Arguing that the key Supreme Court precedent in 2005, Stewart v. Dutra Construction Co., embraced the definition of vessel according to its ?practical possibility,? the city?s brief said it is important ? since the definition of vessel is related to court authority to resolve disputes over vessels ? to have a simple jurisdictional rule that is easy to apply.? It contended?that ?a practical-capability test is easy to apply.?? In?most cases, it added, ?a watercraft that can float, carry objects, and be towed over water will qualify as?a ?vessel.??

By contrast, it asserted, using Lozman?s test of the owner?s purpose ?would spawn confusion and gamesmanship.?? That test would turn on what each owner subjectively intended for the floating structure, and thus would enable?an owner ?to maneuver his craft in and out of vessel status.?

The Obama Administration has joined in the case, mostly but not entirely on Lozman?s side.? The federal interest in the case, the government?s merits brief said, is engaged because the definition of ?vessel? affects the working rights of those who labor aboard watercraft, and because the government has an obligation to inspect many types of floating structures and in working to promote ?a viable and health maritime transportation industry.?

The government contended that ?the mere ability to float and be towed across water? is not enough to establish a structure as ?a vessel? under maritime law.? Thus, it partially endorsed the ?purpose or function? test that Lozman put forth.?? But the federal brief parts company with Lozman?s contention that the owner?s intent should be of major influence.? In that regard, it suggested that the use of ?objective criteria? to determine whether a structure is a vessel would assist in determining a structure?s ?practical capability.??? Among the ?objective criteria? that it argued should be applied were whether the structure has ?practical access to navigable water,? how it is tied up to the shore, whether it can withstand the hazards of navigating, and whether it can leave a mooring within a matter of a few hours.? The Circuit Court was wrong, it contended, in denying the relevance of virtually all of those criteria.

The federal brief did not urge the Court to rule in Lozman?s favor explicitly.? It called for the Court to vacate the Eleventh Circuit ruling, and send the case back to determine the status of Lozman?s structure using the tests the federal argument suggested.

Analysis

Although the briefing in this case appears to suggest that the Court in the end needs to adopt one legal test or another, the Justices may well find that the outcome turns on the meaning of three words in the federal law that defines ?vessel.?? Those words are ?means of transportation.? That would seem to put the focus squarely upon the mobility of a floating structure.?? That would appear to be more a matter of function than of human intention, and could be informed by what actual navigation requires.?? It would not take an expert in naval architecture to determine what the rigors of the sea demand of a vessel.

While Lozman would get at the question in significant part?by focusing on the owner?s intent, supported by the nature of the physical link to the shore, and while the city of Riviera Beach would get at the question by focusing on towability, neither seems to get really?close to the transportation issue.? The federal government?s multi-factor proposal might well be closer to the status of transportability.? The government approach would clearly rule out the ?floating garage door? that Lozman fears might qualify as a ?vessel? if towability is the standard.?It also would tend, it seems, to support the idea that a houseboat ? or, if one prefers, a floating home ? ordinarily should look and act more like a boat before it can be treated as a ?vessel.?

As a?legal matter,?the case probably turns more on a simple question of statutory interpretation, and not on the Court?s past precedents, which seem to point in a variety?of different directions.

This case in plain English:

It is a very long tradition that legal controversies over boats and their role in transporting people and goods are better decided in a specialized court that focuses only on those issues.?? It is called an admiralty court and it makes its decisions according to maritime law ? essentially, legal standards that govern the business of transportation by sea.??Admiralty law?actually dates back before Roman times, but also is very modern in the sense that it deals with such things as liability for oil spills, for example.? Many such disputes involve the rights of sailors, or others who work abroad floating structures.

In the Florida case now before the Supreme Court, the issue turns on when a dispute over a floating structure can be filed and decided in an admiralty court.? Such a case?must involve a ?vessel,? but the federal law that defines ?vessel? is not very precise.?? It focuses on a structure that can work as a ?means of transportation.??? The Supreme Court has spent generations of time and effort trying to sort out what a ?vessel? is, in legal terms.?? Is a barge a ?vessel??? Is an oil platform with a fixed position in the ocean a ?vessel??? And now the Court is faced with deciding whether a houseboat, or a ?floating home,? is a ?vessel.?

Many houseboats, of course, have engines and are built in such a way that they can move about over water, carrying occupants in a way that is quite similar to?motor homes operating?on the highway.???There is no doubt that such a powered and moving conveyance qualifies legally as a ?vessel.?? But not every floating home is actually a boat, in the sense of having?an engine, a steering mechanism such?as a rudder, or electronic or manual devices that help trace the location of the structure on the water the way a modern GPS does for a car or truck.?? The houseboat?that was in the center of the Florida case has none of those hallmarks of a boat.? If it moved at all, it could do so only if it was towed, as it was several times.? Is that enough to make it?a ?vessel,? legally speaking?? In addition, that particular structure was tied up to a dock, and the owner?intended to leave it there and live in it as his home.? Is that intention enough to prove that it is not a??vessel??

This particular houseboat was?surrounded by controversy because it was tied up in a marina run by the city of Riviera Beach, Fla., and the city contended that the owner did not pay the full fees for keeping it there.?? So the city sued the boat?itself ? that is one of the peculiar facets of maritime law, the boat is treated as if it had its own legal personality ? and asked the admiralty court to rule that the owner had to pay up, or else forfeit the houseboat to the city.?? The court ruled for the city, ordered the boat sold at auction, with the result that the city bid for it, and won ownership.? After failing to sell it or give it away, it destroyed the houseboat.? The controversy goes on ? and this is another peculiar thing about maritime law ? because the destruction of the floating structure does not put an end to the case, if there is anything left legally to decide.?? Here, there is something left to decide: who gets some or all of the $25,000 in?funds that the city?paid into a court account, in case it should ultimately lose the case in a court decision?that the houseboat was not?a ?vessel? after all, so the dispute should not have gone to admiralty court in the first place.

The owner of the now-destroyed houseboat may yet get some of that deposited amount, if he wins.

[Disclosure:? Goldstein & Russell, P.C., whose attorneys work for or contribute to this blog in various capacities, serves as co-counsel to the petitioner in this case.? The author of this post operates independently of the law firm.]

?

?

?

?

?

?

?

?

Posted in Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, Florida, Analysis, Featured, Merits Cases, Plain English / Cases Made Simple

Recommended Citation: Lyle Denniston, Argument preview: Defining a houseboat ? a house or a boat?, SCOTUSblog (Sep. 28, 2012, 12:07 AM), http://www.scotusblog.com/2012/09/argument-preview-defining-a-houseboat-a-house-or-a-boat/

Source: http://www.scotusblog.com/2012/09/argument-preview-defining-a-houseboat-a-house-or-a-boat/

whitney houston national anthem dolly parton i will always love you beverly hilton hotel whitney houston found dead i will always love you whitney houston 2012 grammy awards powerball results

U.N. rights body condemns Syria, extends war crimes inquiry

GENEVA (Reuters) - The United Nations human rights council on Friday extended the mandate of its investigation into war crimes in Syria by another six months.

It also condemned widespread violations by Syrian government forces in the 18-month-old conflict.

The 47-member Geneva forum adopted a resolution submitted by Arab states by a vote of 41 states in favor, with three states - China, Cuba and Russia - against and three abstentions.

Syria's ambassador Faysal Khabbaz Hamoui rejected the text as "highly-politicized and selective" and accused Islamic "terrorists" of fueling the violence in his country.

Since it was set up a year ago, the independent inquiry led by Brazilian Paulo Pinheiro has interviewed more than 1,100 victims, refugees and defectors but has been denied access to Syria.

"The work of the commission of inquiry is important because as they continue to document the names of individuals responsible for these crimes and violations, they help ensure that this will not be a case where impunity prevails, but rather that those responsible for crimes against the Syrian people will face justice and accountability," U.S. ambassador Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe told the talks.

Switzerland has proposed that Carla del Ponte, a former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, join the inquiry as a commissioner and an announcement was expected by the end of the day, diplomats said.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-n-rights-body-condemns-syria-extends-war-100415404.html

ladainian tomlinson mark wahlberg pipa keystone xl sopa bill sopa and pipa piracy

Mission Wealth Management, LLC Hosts Workshop to Help Clients ...

Santa Barbara, CA (PRWEB) September 26, 2012

Mission Prosperity Control, LLC joined forces with The Philanthropic Initiative (TPI) to assist teach clientele on the rewards of a well-considered out giving prepare. They put on a workshop led by Seth Streeter, President of Mission Prosperity Control, and Peter Karoff, Chairman and Founder of TPI, which took place on September thirteen, 2012 at the Santa Barbara Foundation.

The workshop opened by encouraging each and every visitor to set the oxygen mask on on your own just before making a supplying strategy. As soon as a person has confirmed that they have adequate belongings and methods to remain monetarily independent for the remainder of their life time, they could desire to produce an productive plan for supplying to other folks, whether to loved ones members or non-earnings organizations, instead than have it be still left for the government. However, figuring out when to give (for the duration of life span? at dying?), who to give to (children? grandchildren? non-earnings?) and how to give (cash? inventory? property?) can really feel overwhelming.

thirteen

Several individuals get a responsive strategy to their giving. They may possibly give funds to a family members member when they ask for it, or send a examine to a non-income on December 28 because of a persuasive letter they received or a fancy gala they attended, but seldom does this sort of passive strategy guide to thoughtful and satisfying supplying.

Solution: Appear at your present supplying allocation to see if it matches your intent. Are your contributions aligned with your values and are the recipients getting percentages matching your priorities?

Not astonishingly, faith is the amount a single recipient accounting for 33% of all donations, with education and human services coming in at 2nd and 3rd.

thirteen

Although seventy three% of charitable offering in the United States is carried out by people (vs. businesses or foundations), a lot of people do not truly feel certified to do because of diligence on a charitable firm, yet highly feel that they want their dollars to be used successfully and with the most effect possible.thirteen

Resolution: There are methods out there to aid you. For illustration, group foundations, like the Santa Barbara Basis, are excellent sources for donors. There are companies like TPI (The Philanthropic Initiative) that focus in assisting donors and households style and design personalised providing tactics that satisfy their charitable objectives. These groups offer a wide selection of supplying choices and can support you locate exceptional organizations to which you can give. They can also assist you target on a broad spectrum of corporations within a neighborhood, or on a certain issue, this kind of as homelessness.

thirteen

With regard to family offering, a lot of People in america who are first era prosperity, in other phrases have worked difficult to generate it by themselves, concern that by passing alongside too significantly to their youngsters or grandkids they could disincentivize their heirs to operate challenging or manage their income prudently.

WHAT ABOUT INHERITORS? For those with inherited prosperity, they typically want to support out long term generations as they were assisted. However, they could have the very same reservations as individuals with very first era wealth. Many are unsure about the greatest way to method the issue with family.

Answer: What did your mothers and fathers do? Did you like their approach? Did your parents offer you with transparency with regards to your inheritance, or did your inheritance hit you like a meteor. What would you alter in your approach to gifting to family? Only 44% of Americans more than age 67 have completely disclosed their fiscal situations to their youngsters. Nonetheless, you might uncover it useful to keep a meeting with your young children/grandkids to discuss your economic predicament. You dont have to begin by sharing actual greenback quantities, but you could provide up stocks, rental property, and so forth. and start off planning your loved ones for your legacy.

thirteen

Workshop individuals ended up in a position to share their personal issues and objectives with regards to their offering, and begin establishing their personal individual providing strategy. By making intention, consciousness, and an open up dialogue, several found that sharing household prosperity can be a good and gratifying expertise and not just an obligation. Most also shared a wish to help foreseeable future generations, like grandchildren, discover excellent funds practices at a younger age, and find out about the advantages of giving back again so that they can keep the legacy going.

thirteen

About The Philanthropic Initiative (TPI)thirteen

The Philanthropic Initiative is an ally and advisor to bold and imaginative family, basis and corporate donors doing work to understand deep social impact. For 21 many years, TPI has invested in the advancement of strategic philanthropy around the world. For much more info about The Philanthropic Initiative, you should go to http://www.tpi.org.

About Mission Prosperity Control

Mission Wealth Administration was launched on a eyesight to empower affluent people to go after their monetary desires. Striving to provide some thing distinct from what other monetary services corporations were offering, Mission Prosperity Managements founding rules incorporated objective suggestions, proactive financial arranging, and coordination with other expert advisors, like accountants, attorneys, and bankers. Mission Wealth Administration does not offer any inner merchandise therefore, the recommendations they make are only in the clientele finest pursuits. Their consumer-centric organizing process acknowledges clients and their wants to assist keep them on track and supply confidence in their financial commitment selections. Mission Wealth Managements crew coordinates with expert advisors to guarantee effective integration of all monetary selections. These days Mission Prosperity Administration helps hundreds of families perform towards obtaining their economic desires by controlling their prosperity. For far more details on Mission Prosperity Management, please check out http://www.missionwealth.com.

thirteen

Securities provided via Nationwide Planning Corporation (NPC) member FINRA, SIPC. Advisory solutions presented by means of Mission Prosperity Management, LLC (MWM), a Registered Financial commitment Advisor. NPC, MWM, Santa Barbara Foundation, The Philanthropic Initiative, and Peter Karoff are different and unrelated entities.


thirteen
thirteen

Related posts:

  1. Melbourne Florida Facial Plastic Surgeon, Dr. Ross A. Clevens Joins a Team of Medical Professionals for Charitable Tanzania Mission Trip
  2. IICF Week of Giving Adds Personal Giving to Volunteerism Tradition
  3. Author Susan Eisen Speaks About Inheritance Issues On Panel At The El Paso Federal Bar Association Event On Charitable Giving
  4. Survey Shows the Nations Wealthy is More Interested in Charitable Giving than Leaving Money to Their Kids
  5. Washington Wealth Management Welcomes 22 Year Veteran

Source: http://www.hugohosting.com/mission-wealth-management-llc-hosts-workshop-to-help-clients-overcome-personal-challenges-relating-to-family-and-charitable-giving.html

cadillac ats bain capital marines urinating haley barbour olivier martinez peoples choice awards 2012 ford recalls

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Nicholas Ruth, Teen Cancer Survivor, Wins Mega Millions Lottery ...

Nicholas Ruth might not have hit the jackpot, but he's got more than enough cash to spread around. And the Maryland teenager intends to give back to a few good causes.

The 19-year-old, a cancer survivor who was diagnosed with leukemia in 2005, matched five of the six numbers in the state's Mega Millions lottery, earning himself a second-tier prize of $250,000. After taxes, Ruth will have about $165,000 to spend.

Besides paying off his car and putting some cash aside to buy a house, he plans to donate to various organizations that helped him when he was sick, including the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Believe in Tomorrow, and the Make-A-Wish Foundation, which sent him on a cruise.

?People keep saying I deserve it and what I went through, but there?s people far off worse than what I went through that can use the money more than me and I?m just glad I can help them out,? Ruth told WNCN.

Ruth has been cancer-free for 4 years and hopes to be a police officer one day. He picked up his winnings Monday with his mother and aunt, the Washington Post reports.

"[Nick is] a nice young man. He's a hard worker, and he's a cancer survivor willing to give back, so he's really an exceptional winner, and we're thrilled that he won," Erica Palmisano, a Maryland Lottery spokeswoman, told NBC News.

WBAL reports that Ruth's win was the culmination of a routine that he kept up for more than a year, purchasing Mega Millions tickets every Friday from a 7-Eleven near his work. Although he wasn't scheduled to work last Friday, he went ahead and bought his ticket anyway.

Also on HuffPost:

"; 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/2012/09/26/nicholas-ruth-teen-cancer-survivor-mega-millions-lottery-video_n_1916132.html

metta world peace ron artest gladys knight private practice deion sanders creutzfeldt jakob disease the lone ranger

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Fox Broadcast app now available to Xbox Live customers with Dish and FiOS subscriptions

FOX Broadcast app now available to Xbox Live customer with Dish and FiOS subscriptions

Xbox Live frontman Larry Hryb (aka Major Nelson) took to his blog on Tuesday to announce that Dish and Verizon FiOS customers can now download the Fox Broadcast app for Xbox 360 to stream next-day Fox programming. In order to use this free app, you'll need a paid Xbox Live Gold subscription. In addition to keeping you up to date with recent episodes of Fringe and Family Guy, this new app also includes access to legacy series such as House and 24. Like most things Xbox, the Fox Broadcasting app features Kinect integration, because everything is "better with Kinect," right?

Filed under: , ,

Fox Broadcast app now available to Xbox Live customers with Dish and FiOS subscriptions originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Sep 2012 21:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMajor Nelson  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/iHJZz3jaYJo/

nfl schedule revolution rosh hashanah rosh hashanah WWE dallas cowboys notre dame football

O2 UK to sell upcoming HTC flagship phone without charger

Android Central

If you're anything like us, you'll have plenty of wall chargers left over from devices you've long since parted company with. Observe above, the battered husk of our two and a half year-old HTC Desire charger, still in service today. Knowing that many older chargers are still in use, O2 UK and HTC have decided to take a radical step to cut down on waste, and presumably save a bit of cash at the same time. 

The two are to offer an upcoming, unnamed HTC flagship device with a microUSB cable, but no charger, in an effort to improve their green credentials. The operator claims that 70 percent of all phone buyers already have a "relevant charger" at home. And according to a report on UK tech site Pocket-Lint this morning, O2 and HTC are serious about this latest endeavor.

"I have a simple vision for O2: we want to take chargers out of boxes full stop," said Ronan Dunne, CEO of O2. "Right now, O2 with HTC has to go it alone on this matter - we both believe in it passionately enough that we can’t wait for the industry as a whole to join us in this crusade. That said, we hope that we will be able to pave the way for others to follow us as this has to be a collective effort if we are to achieve the bigger aim of eliminating chargers sold with every new phone in the UK."

We're all for cutting down on unnecessary waste, but from our perspective, the most interesting thing about this story is that it tacitly confirms that we're due a new HTC flagship in the weeks ahead, and that O2 will offer it. The fact that the device itself is unnamed suggests it's yet to be announced -- possibilities include the rumored One X+ and One X 5. We'll be watching with interest to see what devices emerge from HTC and O2 as 2012 draws to a close.

Source: Pocket-Lint



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/cNZ7z8V88Ew/story01.htm

new orleans jazz fest new orleans jazz fest louis ck michelle duggar heisman cp3 lakers news

Verizon Joins Lockheed Martin Cybersecurity Alliance

'},"otherParams":{"t_e":1,".intl":"US"},"events":{"fetch":{lv:2,"sp":"97570179","ps":"LREC,MON","npv":true,"bg":"#FFFFFF","em":escape('{"site-attribute":"_id=\'69e62c73-4712-3bc5-a5a5-ac73e83debb1\' sensitivity=\'0\' rs=\'lmsid:a0770000009lqt4AAA\' ctype=\'fn_news;News\' ctopid=\'2299500\' can_suppress_ugc=\'1\' content=\'no_expandable;ajax_cert_expandable;\' ADSSA"}'),"em_orig":escape('{"site-attribute":"_id=\'69e62c73-4712-3bc5-a5a5-ac73e83debb1\' sensitivity=\'0\' rs=\'lmsid:a0770000009lqt4AAA\' ctype=\'fn_news;News\' ctopid=\'2299500\' can_suppress_ugc=\'1\' content=\'no_expandable;ajax_cert_expandable;\' ADSSA"}')}}};var _createNodes=function(){var nIds=_conf.nodeIds;for(var i in nIds){var nId=nIds[i];var dId=_conf.destinationMap[nIds[i].replace("yom-","")];n=Y.one("#"+nId);if(n)var center=n.one("center");var node=Y.one("#"+dId);var nodeHTML;if(center && !node){nodeHTML=_conf.nodes[nId];center.insert(nodeHTML);};};};var _prepareNodes=function(){var nIds=_conf.nodeIds;for(var i in nIds){var nId=nIds[i];var dId=_conf.destinationMap[nIds[i].replace("yom-ad-","")];n=Y.one("#"+nId);if(n)var center=n.one("center");var node=Y.one("#"+dId);if(center && node){center.set("innerHTML","");center.insert(node);node.setStyle("display","block");};};};var _darla;var _config=function(){if(YAHOO.ads.darla){_darla = YAHOO.ads.darla;_createNodes();};};var _fetch=function(spaceid,adssa,ps){ if (typeof(ps)!='undefined') _conf.events.fetch.ps = ps;if(typeof spaceid != "undefined") _conf.events.fetch.sp=spaceid;adssa = (typeof adssa != "undefined" && adssa != null) ? escape(adssa.replace(/\"/g, "'")) : "";_conf.events.fetch.em=_conf.events.fetch.em_orig.replace("ADSSA", adssa);if(_darla){_prepareNodes();_darla.setConfig(_conf);_darla.event("fetch");};};Y.on("domready", function(){_config();});;var that={"fetch":_fetch,"getNodes":_conf.nodes,"getConf":_conf};return that;}();/* Backwards compatibility - Assigning the latest instance to the main fetch function */YUI.PhotoAdsDarla.fetch=YUI.PhotoAdsDarla.photoslightboxdarla.fetch; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {YAHOO.namespace('Media.Social').Lightbox = {}; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.Media.Article.init(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.AuthorBadge(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.Branding(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.on("load", function () { YUI.namespace("Media.SocialButtons"); var instances = YUI.Media.SocialButtons.instances || [], globalConf = YAHOO.Media.SocialButtons.conf || {}, vplContainers = []; Y.all(".ymsb").each(function (node) { var id = node.get("id"), conf = YAHOO.Media.SocialButtons.configs[id], instance; if (conf) { instance = new Y.SocialButtons({ srcNode: node, config: Y.merge(globalConf, conf.config || {}), contentMetadata: conf.content || {}, tracking: conf.tracking || {} }); vplContainers.push( { selector: "#" + id, callback: function(node) { instance.render(); instance = conf = id = null; } }); if (conf.config && conf.config.dynamic) { instances.push(instance); } } }); Y.Global.Media.ViewportLoader.addContainers(vplContainers); YUI.Media.SocialButtons.instances = instances; }); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {if(Y.Photos && Y.Photos.LightboxModule) { var lightbox51249853455487d88917794d847a8414 = new Y.Photos.LightboxModule('{"spaceid":"97570179","ult_pt":"story-lightbox","darla_id":"","images_total":0,"xhr_url":"/_xhr/related-article/lightbox/?id=69e62c73-4712-3bc5-a5a5-ac73e83debb1","xhr_count":20,"autoplay_if_first_item_is_video":true}',[],{"spaceid":"97570179","total":1,"photoby":"Photo By","xhrtype":"slideshow","slideshow_id":null,"slideshow_title":null,"slideshow_title_baked_html":null,"slideshow_desc":null,"slideshow_rev":null,"slideshow_plink_vita":null,"photos":[{"type":"image","url":"http:\/\/l.yimg.com\/bt\/api\/res\/1.2\/fZvJinXnt5wwZ2IR9K0TUg--\/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD00MjU7cT04NTt3PTY0MA--\/http:\/\/media.zenfs.com\/en_us\/News\/mashable\/malware_640.jpg","width":640,"height":425,"uuid":"fc9f3bc7-b4fa-3322-9dc6-1b44d4d7b2d0","caption":"Cybersecurity","captionBakedHtml":"

Cybersecurity","date":"Tue, Sep 25, 2012 9:02 AM EDT","credit":null,"byline":null,"provider":"Mashable","photo_title":"Verizon Joins Lockheed Martin Cybersecurity Alliance","pivot_alias_id":"verizon-joins-lockheed-martin-cybersecurity-alliance-photo-090014248","plink":"\/photos\/verizon-joins-lockheed-martin-cybersecurity-alliance-photo-090014248.html","plink_vita":"http:\/\/news.yahoo.com\/photos\/verizon-joins-lockheed-martin-cybersecurity-alliance-photo-090014248.html","srchtrm":"Verizon Joins Lockheed Martin Cybersecurity Alliance","revsp":"","rev":"36d4f260-0711-11e2-babf-9e15c7034790","surl":"http:\/\/l.yimg.com\/bt\/api\/res\/1.2\/bhJYK48WxVqarZ3C2yKKFQ--\/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9aW5zZXQ7aD01NjtxPTg1O3c9ODQ-\/http:\/\/media.zenfs.com\/en_us\/News\/mashable\/malware_640.jpg","swidth":84,"sheight":56}]}); } if(Y.Photos && Y.Photos.LightboxModule) { if (lightbox51249853455487d88917794d847a8414.checksupport() !== false) { var lightbox_div = Y.one('.lightbox8128e14886b053fec5607d7f130e8866'); if (lightbox_div !== null) { lightbox_div.on('click', function(e) { e.preventDefault(); lightbox51249853455487d88917794d847a8414.slideShow(e, 'fc9f3bc7-b4fa-3322-9dc6-1b44d4d7b2d0'); }); } } } }); Y.later(10, this, function() {YUI.namespace("Media.Article.Lead"); YUI.Media.Article.Lead.config = { playerUrl : 'http://d.yimg.com/nl/ynews/site/player.swf', autoPlay : 0 }; }); Y.later(10, this, function() {new Y.Media.RelatedArticle({count:"2",start:"1", mod_total:"10", total:"1", content_id:"69e62c73-4712-3bc5-a5a5-ac73e83debb1", spaceid:"97570179", related_count:"-1" }); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {(function(d){ d.getElementsByTagName('head')[0].appendChild(d.createElement('script')).src='http://d.yimg.com/oq/js/csc_news-en-US-core.js'; })(document); }); Y.later(10, this, function() { if(!("Media" in YAHOO)){YAHOO.Media = {};} if(!("ugcrate" in YAHOO.Media)){YAHOO.Media.ugcrate = {};} if(!("Media" in Y)){Y.namespace("Media");} YAHOO.Media.ugcrate.ratings_3ce3d43ee8b8ab3fa1a91f765c357984 = new Y.Media.UgcRate({"context_id":"09a9faf4-1bcc-43ad-ac6a-bd9f23f9f173","sCrumb":"","containerId":"yom-sentimentrate-3ce3d43ee8b8ab3fa1a91f765c357984","rateDimensions":"d1","appLang":"en-US","sUltSId":"97570179","sUltProperty":"news-en-US","sUltCampaign":"","sUltPlatform":"ugcwidgets","sUltIntl":"US","sUltLang":"en-US","selfPageUrl":"http:\/\/news.yahoo.com\/verizon-joins-lockheed-martin-cybersecurity-alliance-090014479.html?_esi=0","artContentId":"69e62c73-4712-3bc5-a5a5-ac73e83debb1","sUltQstnTxt":"How confident are you that your privacy is being protected when you browse the internet?","artContentTitle":"Verizon Joins Lockheed Martin Cybersecurity Alliance","artContentDesc":"Verizon Tuesday joins defense contractor Lockheed Martin\\'s Cyber Security Alliance, becoming the first telecom company to enter the private partnership that includes tech giants like Microsoft, Symantec and Dell, among others. ","sUltBucketId":"test1","sUltSection":"sentirating","sUltBeaconUrl":"","sUltRecordPageviews":"1","sUltBeaconEnable":"1","serviceUrl":"\/_xhr","publisherContextId":"","propertyId":"2fcd79b5-b3a3-333e-b98e-722536a6698f","configurationId":"435db9ee-c55e-3766-b20d-c8ad3ff889d1","graphId":"","labelLeft":"Not at all confident","labelRight":"Completely confident","labelMiddle":"","itemimg":"http:\/\/l.yimg.com\/a\/i\/ww\/met\/yahoo_logo_us_061509.png","selfURI":"","aggregateRatingCount":"1557","aggregateReviewCount":"0","leftBlocksNum":"1472","rightBlocksNum":"85","leftBlocksPerCent":"95","rightBlocksPerCent":"5","ugcrate_apihost":"api01-us.ugcl.yahoo.com:4080","publisher_id":"news-en-US","yca_cert":"yahoo.ugccloud.app.trusted_proxies","timeout_write":"5000","through_proxy":"false","optionStats":"{\"s1\":1196,\"s2\":111,\"s3\":55,\"s4\":55,\"s5\":55,\"s6\":85,\"s7\":0,\"s8\":0,\"s9\":0,\"s10\":0}","l10N":"{\"FIRST_TO_READ\":\"You are first to read this. Share your feelings and start a conversation.\",\"SHARE_YOUR_FEELINGS\":\"You too can share your feelings and start a conversation!\",\"HOW_YOUR_FRIENDS_THINK\":\"Thank you for sharing your feeling on this article!\",\"PRE_SHARE_MSG\":\"Your Facebook friends on Yahoo! can see how you responded to this question. To share your response on Facebook, click on the Facebook share option.\",\"START_THE_CONVERSATION\":\"Start the Conversation\",\"THANKS_FOR_SHARING\":\"Sure, that's how you feel... But what do your friends think?\",\"POLL_HEADER\":\"SOCIAL SENTIMENT\",\"SERVER_ERROR\":\"Oops there seems to be some error, please try again later\",\"LOADING\":\"Loading...\",\"SHARE_AFTER_COMMENT\":\"Your response has been shared on Facebook.\",\"UNDO\":\"Undo\",\"UNIT_PEOPLE\":\"People\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_DISAGREE\":\"disagree with your opinion.\",\"READ_MORE_TEXT\":\"Read what they have to say.\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"WHAT DO YOU THINK?\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_VERB_BEFORE_VOTING\":\"DRAG\",\"SLIDER_THUMB_WORDING_THANKS_VOTING\":\"Thanks for voting\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 1,557 people have answered this question\",\"ONE_PERSON_ANSWERED\":\" 1 person has answered this question\",\"TWO_PEOPLE_ANSWERED\":\" 2 people have answered this question\",\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s1\":1196,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s2\":111,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s3\":55,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s4\":55,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s5\":55,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s6\":85,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s7\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s8\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s9\":0,\"NUM_PEOPLE_RATED__s10\":0}","fbconfig":"{\"message\":\"undefined\",\"name\":\"undefined\",\"link\":\"\",\"source\":\"\",\"picture\":\"http:\\\/\\\/l.yimg.com\\\/a\\\/i\\\/ww\\\/news\\\/2011\\\/09\\\/27\\\/yahoo-tc.jpg\",\"description\":\"\",\"captionLeft\":\"undefined\",\"captionRight\":\"undefined\",\"app_id\":\"196660913708276\",\"redirect_uri\":\"\\\/_xhr\\\/ugcratefbredirect\\\/\"}","template_id":"LONG_SLIDER_SOUTH","obj_id":"ratings_3ce3d43ee8b8ab3fa1a91f765c357984","opt_count":"6","opt_color1":"","opt_color2":"","template_html":"

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/verizon-joins-lockheed-martin-cybersecurity-alliance-090014479.html

new air jordans jeff dunham young guns concord safe and sound botticelli x factor winner

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

'Cult Fiction' Traced to Ancient Egypt Priest

A recently deciphered Egyptian papyrus from around 1,900 years ago tells a fictional story that includes drinking, singing, feasting and ritual sex, all in the name of the goddess Mut.?

Researchers believe that a priest wrote the blush-worthy tale, as a way to discuss controversial ritual sex acts with other priests.

"Our text may represent a new and hitherto unrecognized Egyptian literary genre: 'cult' fiction, the purpose of which was to allow controversial or contentious matters pertaining to the divine cult to be scrutinized in this way," wrote professors Richard Jasnow and Mark Smith, who published their translation and analysis of the papyrus in the most recent edition of the journal Enchoria.

Jasnow, from Johns Hopkins University, and Smith, from Oxford, write that evidence of ritual sex is? rare in ancient Egypt and the act probably would have been controversial. "There is surprisingly little unequivocal Egyptian evidence for the performance of the sex act as such in ritual contexts," Jasnow and Smith wrote. [The Sex Quiz: Myths, Taboos & Bizarre Facts]

They added that the Egyptians were known to discuss other controversial matters using fictional stories.

Writing about sex

Containing writing in a form of ancient Egyptian known as Demotic, the papyrus is likely to have originated in the Fayum village of Tebtunis at a time when the Romans controlled Egypt. It is currently in Florence, Italy, in the Istituto Papirologico "G. Vitelli."

The newly deciphered tale refers several times to having sex. At one point a speaker implores a person to "drink truly. Eat truly. Sing" and to "don clothing, anoint (yourself), adorn the eyes, and enjoy sexual bliss." The speaker adds that Mut will not let you "be distant from drunkenness on any day. She will not allow you to be lacking in any (manner)."

The speaker defends his views by saying, "As for those who have called me evil, Mut will 'call' them evil."

Researchers know the story is fictional because it employs an Egyptian noun used only in fiction to mark separate sections of a story. ?

The full story

Reconstructing the overall plot narrative of the papyrus is tricky. The text is fragmentary, and researchers cannot be certain how the full story unfolded.

"Conceivably, we have here the remains of an account of how an adherent of the goddess Mut persuaded another individual to devote himself to her worship or join in her rites," the researchers write.??

This "cult fiction" interpretation of the papyrus is backed up by the Greek writer Herodotus, who lived more than 2,400 years ago. He wrote that "it was the Egyptians who first made it a matter of religious observance not to have intercourse with women in temples, nor enter a temple after such intercourse without washing." (That translation is from "Herodotus Volume 1," Harvard University Press, 1990.)

For some ancient Egyptians, the idea of mixing sex and religion may have been extreme, a problem priests discussed by way of a fictional story.

Smith declined an interview request, telling LiveScience that everything the researchers wanted to say is in the journal article. He did add that new fragments of the papyrus recently were discovered, and they may allow for more of the story to be deciphered.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/cult-fiction-traced-ancient-egypt-priest-174911934.html

george clooney rutgers dharun ravi george clooney arrested ravi leigh espn

Lucy Melford: Card games

I like playing cards, but sadly this is no longer a usual family passtime, and not many people now seem to play cards in the home, or even know how. I suppose that anyone brought up in an era where money was tight, entertainments were fewer, and home-made entertainment was important, will know a wide range of card games for varying numbers of players, including patience games for only one player. Especially if they were in the war, or had a job where hanging around for hours on end for an emergency call was the routine: cards helped to fill in the waiting time.

I first learned about cards as a young child in the 1950s, because my Dad and my Uncle W--- were inveterate players. And on holiday - in the chalet say - the parents would all play Whist or similar games. Mum wasn't very good; but she knew enough to play a decent game; and an ability to take part in a game of cards was definitely part of one's social repertoire, as much as knowing how to dance, or how to hold a cigarette as done in the movies (which we called 'the pictures'). Cards might bore you rigid, but nevertheless it was something you had to be prepared to join in with. People who refused to take part in a game were thought odd and awkward. Like making too much of a fuss about not watching a well-loved TV programme in the days when people really did sit enthralled by I Love Lucy, and The Phil Silvers Show (that is, Sergeant Bilko), and The Flintstones, and The Black and White Minstrel Show.

There were many, many card games to play, full of interest, and the ones suitable for children, like Snap, were always lots of fun. I staunchly maintain that I didn't have a satisfactory childhood - you can easily guess why in retrospect - but I must admit that family card games were something I always enjoyed, whatever the company. I was never very good at them, but I was better than Mum was, and it was always a pleasure, and a delicious taste of grownupness, to play Solo Whist with Dad and Uncle W---. They were both gentle, good-tempered men, who studied the game and were good at it. When they won, they'd comment on their very good luck (not their skill); and when they lost, they did so with no more than a rueful smile. It was a world of laughing and chuckling, of winks and twinkling eyes, without strife and inquests or any suggestion of bad feeling.

If I ever thought about it, I saw a game of cards as a ritual in which the rules of the game overrode any personal feelings, a ritual that made people friends, not enemies. I associated my childhood card games with enduring stability and the best of family life.

But then I never took part in cut-throat backroom games for money, never felt the motification of being cheated, and of being afraid to challenge the perpetrators. In the course of my job, I once investigated a London bookmaker who had been cashiered from the RAF for gambling. I was able to prove that he was now taking a percentage off the Revenue. We agreed on that percentage, and settled on that basis, after a cross and contentious interview at which I felt not only soiled by the man himself, but by his equally shysterish accountant. My Revenue experience, whether it was the girl early on who was a croupier on a cruise ship, or the dentist much later who claimed to make a large income from private games of backgammon, all made me associate gambling with sleaze and moral corruption.

I'm sorry to say that. After all, I used to like playing Pontoon for matchsticks when young. I thrilled to the glamorous descriptions of casino gambling, and cards with M at Blades, in the James Bond books, especially Casino Royale (Baccarat, against Le Chiffre) and Moonraker (Bridge, against Hugo Drax).

But during my teens I read Scarne's Complete Guide to Gambling - which I still possess. This was a pre-computer age treatise, on all kinds of gambling from poker to horse-racing; all about craps, blackjack, roulette and other casino games; all about sweepstakes and the numbers game; all about one-armed bandits, all about fairground rackets; with a section on how to cheat. Fascinating stuff. I absorbed it. It was one area in which I felt well-informed as I grew up, and apart from some drunken games of three-card brag with friends after a take-away chinese late at night during the mid-1970s, with nothing but pennies at stake, I kept well away from gambling. The 'glamour' entirely faded when confronted (in my Revenue career, though thankfully not as a steady diet) with real people who did it for real money in real life, and cheated, and then lied about their winnings (or losses) to my face. Even if they could produce scorecards and silver cups. Even if they could claim to be close friends of John Aspinall. Ugh. Or the pathetic Kebab House owner who concealed ?300 a week of his takings so that he could blow it on gambling, eventually confessing this in tears to a colleague. The tears didn't signal an end. He didn't stop placing bets so that he could pay his tax arrears instead. Gambling was in his soul.

To this day, I feel disinclined to take part in the National Lottery. No Thunderball for me. You don't see me at the bingo club either. Nor do I ever fancy Camira Flash - that's The Duke's dog, innit - or want to put twenty-five knicker on Yellow Printer, the dog that broke the record at White City last week. I don't even have a flutter on the Grand National. My prejudice is deep. I'm as unlikely to visit the betting shop as shoot cocaine.

All this is a far cry from the innocent joys of family cardplaying! All my life I have distinguished between card playing in that way, and 'serious' card playing - Bridge, mainly - at clubs. Or the racy gambling games like poker, which are now relentlessly pushed at punters, and which for a certain type of young man must be as dangerously addictive as fast red sports cars, and easy sex with young blonde girls in hotpants and exaggerated manga bodies. What a shame that for many people, especially young people, 'cards' are associated only with Texas Hold 'Em, and hammering the credit card balance at midnight in front of the computer.

Elsewhere on this blog I've described how I used to play cards with Dad. And how for three years after he died, I missed not playing our favourite games with him. Buying my Sony tablet last April has changed that. I can now have a game with an 'artificial intelligence'. This is what I have installed. (These are games for an Android device. You'd have different versions for an iPad)

BTO Cribbage by Buck The Odds, LLC (?1.28)
Ecart? by GoodSoft (free)
Piquet by GoodSoft (free)
Klondike Solitaire by Softick Ltd (free)

As you can see, these were mostly free. I'm sure you are familiar with Cribbage, and of course Solitaire. Ecart? was an Edwardian casino game, a bit like Whist with trumps but played with only five cards, in which you discard again and again to improve the hand before someone calls a halt and you play with what you've got. Piquet is a very old but highly skilful game, again on the lines of Whist, with a discarding stage, scores for sets and sequences, and a playout at No Trump. There is facsimile onscreen running commentary, because in the real game you speak as you play. In the example below, I'm 'Y' for 'Younger Hand' (i.e. the dealer). It's the fifth of six deals, and I've got a commanding lead already, but then I get this cracker of a hand. I think I won with over 300 points clocked up (the computer does the arithmetic):


With all but Solitaire you are playing for points against an opponent. I keep to 'moderate' difficulty with the two-player games. I can usually thrash my opponent at Piquet, because I've got a feel for the game. But Ecart? and Cribbage (with much more of an element of luck, good or rotten, in them) are harder, and I can feel more of a triumph if I win, or savour a sweeter revenge if I lose and then trounce my opponent in a return match. Complete with 'swivel on that' gestures. (Pointless of course, because there's really nobody there. But I get exasperated at the impossible luck the 'artificial intelligence' seems to enjoy all too often, and frankly he-she-it deserves much worse abuse than I give out!)

These are pretty good card games if you can seldom play anyone in real life. Computerisation makes them unnaturally slick, but the same fine judgements on the odds can be made, and you can play your hunches, just as in the real-life version. Softick's classy version of Solitaire is an absolute winner in my view. It has so many nice touches. Even a 'realistic' noise as you turn up cards, or send them onto different piles. And you can put the photo of your choice on the back of each card. I use Mr Punch, as in this photo I took in 2010:


If I'm doing nothing else, and feel inclined to play cards, as I might anytime during the day, I will challenge my opponent at Ecart? and Cribbage - or rather less often at Piquet (because it takes six long deals to win). That usually results in a satisfying tussle. Then I'll play Solitaire until I have clocked up three wins. 'Three-win Solitaire' is my regular bedtime mental exercise, and because the tablet is easy to hold or prop up, I can actually do this when snug in bed, whether that's in the house or away in the caravan.

The 'mental exercise' aspect is important. You can buy little gadgets that let you play Sudoku - pardon me, while I yawn and fall over at the thought of Sudoku - as bad as crosswords - anywhere, anytime, to keep your decrepid brain from seizing up. But I prefer Solitaire, or, for a bit more excitement and emotional expression, one of my other card games. Same function.

And is my brain in better shape? Or am I still going gaga? Reader, you must make up your own mind.

And if anyone recognises where the references to Yellow Printer, or Camira Flash (The Duke's dog, innit) come from, I will be mightily impressed with their Great Knowledge.

Source: http://lucymelford.blogspot.com/2012/09/card-games.html

courtney mercury retrograde bath salts heart shaped box lucid 2012 ncaa tournament bracket matterhorn