Saturday, December 31, 2011

Washington man killed in crash south of Bakersfield

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KBAK/KBFX) ? A 72-year-old Washington man died Friday in a crash south of Bakersfield.

Eugene Wilfred Lewis, of Seatac, Wash., drove his Chevrolet Impala into the path of an International semitruck on Copus Road just off Interstate 5, according to the California Highway Patrol. Lewis was killed, and his passenger, 86-year-old Dona Mae Costello, of Des Moines, Wash., was airlifted to Kern Medical Center with major injuries.

The truck driver wasn't injured.

The CHP said it isn't sure why Lewis drove into the truck's path.

Source: http://www.bakersfieldnow.com/news/local/Washington-man-killed-in-crash-south-of-Bakersfield-136457628.html

the brothers grimm penn state football weather boston grimm fairy tales grimm fairy tales gold rush gold rush

Iowa Rep. King joins Bachmann, but no endorsement (AP)

EARLY, Iowa ? Republican Michele Bachmann's closest congressional ally has offered kind words for the presidential candidate but stopped short of an outright endorsement that could lift her back-of-the-pack campaign.

Bachmann and Iowa Rep. Steve King appeared together Friday at a small-town cafe in his congressional district.

King has remained neutral in the race despite attempts by several candidates to land his official support and that of the evangelical voters he tends to attract in his own elections.

King called Bachmann "my great friend" but said he still hasn't reached a personal decision in the GOP race.

Bachmann attracted small crowds in two stops Friday. She chalked it up to last-minute scheduling.

The Iowa caucuses are Tuesday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_el_pr/us_bachmann_king

loft old navy cyber monday best deals cyber monday best deals brownback brownback salvia

Another Free Web-Hosted Personal Finance App

I've written about a couple of web-based personal finance managers recently, so here's a final one to round off the trilogy.

Out Of The Dark (OOTD) is an online service designed to help you manage your money. ?Just enter details of what comes in, and what you spend it on, and the site's rich collection of reports and visualisations will help to ensure that you know where all your money is going.

You can reach the site at www.myootd.org. ?Access is free, and you simply need to enter an email address and password in order to register. ?Like most online services of this kind, there's no facility to initiate bank transfers or store details of bank accounts, so your money remains safe. ?As should your data too, of course, though I was slightly disappointed to see that my "welcome to OOTD" email contained a reminder of my password in plain text. ?Quite how the system knows this, if ?it's encrypting passwords before it stores them, is something that I intend to find out.

Still, OOTD seems like a useful system, especially as it's also available to use on smartphones so that you can track your finances from wherever you are. ?My thanks to user?Hareiana for telling me about it.

?

Share this

Source: http://www.techsupportalert.com/content/another-free-web-hosted-personal-finance-app.htm

philadelphia marathon rhodes scholar cranberry sauce recipe mls cup amas 2011 black friday elliot

soccerway: Lazio set for Cisse swap?: Reports claim Lazio are lining up a potential swap deal to send Dji... http://t.co/BL8dujvO #soccer #football

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Lazio set for Cisse swap?: Reports claim Lazio are lining up a potential swap deal to send Dji... bit.ly/vFKgO6 #soccer #football soccerway

Soccerway News

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/soccerway/statuses/152617047212294144

julia gillard pecan pie the hobbit trailer prometheus trailer red velvet cake recipe josh krajcik porphyria

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Shanahan maintains optimism despite 11-20 record in Washington

Credit: AP PHOTO/BILL KOSTROUN

As Shanahan nears the conclusion of a second consecutive season with double-digit losses, though, he has developed an appreciation for the magnitude of the building project.


'); $('.re_content').show(function(){ $('.poll_mod .poll_form .poller .poller_results .result_pollerTitle:last').nextAll().remove(); }); $('.sidebar .expendable').remove(); $('.sidebar .sidebar_segment:last').addClass('flat').addClass('borderless'); function lightBoxer(sectionClass, imgClass){ $('.' + sectionClass + ' img.primary').click(function(){ var imgSrc = $(this).parent().children('.' + imgClass).attr('src'); var imgAlt = $(this).attr('alt'); var imgAbstract = $(this).parent().children('.prime_ab').text(); var imgCredit = $(this).parent().children('.prime_credit').text(); imgCredit = '' + imgCredit + ''; var overlay = '

' + imgCredit + '

' + imgAlt + '

' + imgAbstract + '

x close'; var rootImgHeight = $('.' + sectionClass + ' img.primary').height(); var scrollDownAmount = $(window).scrollTop(); $('body').css('position', 'relative').append(overlay); $('#lightbox_overlay').css('visibility','visible').hide().fadeIn(300, function(){ var imgWidth = $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img img').width(); var imgHeight = $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img img').height(); var boxWidth = imgWidth + 40; if(imgHeight 950) { $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img img').css('width', '955px'); var modWidth = $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img img').width(); $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img').css({ top: scrollDownAmount + 50 + 'px', width: 955, marginLeft: ((955/2) * -1) - 20, visibility: 'visible' }).hide().fadeIn(500); $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img .desc').width(955); } else { $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img').css({ top: scrollDownAmount + 50 + 'px', width: imgWidth, marginLeft: ((imgWidth/2) * -1) - 20, visibility: 'visible' }).hide().fadeIn(500); $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img .desc').width(imgWidth); } }); $('#lightbox_overlay .light_img').click(function(){ $('#lightbox_overlay').fadeOut(300, function(){ $('#lightbox_overlay').remove(); }); }); }); } lightBoxer('photo_section', 'primary'); lightBoxer('alt_photo_section', 'big'); lightBoxer('mugshots', 'big'); }); //-->

By: RICH CAMPBELL | The Washington Times

Transforming the Washington Redskins from a 4-12 geriatric unit into a perennial Super Bowl contender never was going to be easy for executive vice president/head coach Mike Shanahan. Talent deficiencies were rampant on the NFL's oldest roster when he took over in January 2010.

As Shanahan nears the conclusion of a second consecutive season with double-digit losses, though, he has developed an appreciation for the magnitude of the building project.

"A lot longer than I first anticipated," he told reporters at Redskins Park on Monday afternoon. "We had less depth than I thought. We were a little bit older at a few different positions, and I thought we might keep those players a little bit longer than we did.

"But that's not a negative. You've just got to evaluate your squad on a day-to-day basis, a year-to-year basis, and put the best football team together. And I think that's what we're doing."

Shanahan addressed the big picture Monday, sounding like a coach who believes he will get to see his plan through to the next stage.

Redskins owner Daniel Snyder has fired coaches with better records than Shanahan's mark of 11-20, but Shanahan's message emphasizing the importance of stability has at least fostered self-confidence.

Although a win in Sunday's season finale at Philadelphia would only equal last season's total of six wins, progress is evident to the Redskins' top personnel decision-maker.

"I see a big difference from two years ago," Shanahan said. "We have a much younger football team. We have a lot more depth at a lot of different positions. I feel good with the type of players that we do have."

Many players agree. The Redskins overcame a slew of serious injuries to several of their top offensive players and have played competitive football during the second half of the season.?Starting running back Tim Hightower, first-string left guard Kory Lichtensteiger and two-time Pro Bowl tight end Chris Cooley were lost to season-ending injuries by the seventh game. And left tackle Trent Williams and tight end Fred Davis were suspended for violating the league's drug policy.

Nevertheless, three of their past four losses were by seven points or fewer, and they led in the other loss ? their 34-19 defeat against the New York Jets ? in the fourth quarter.

"We've got the right guys in this locker room," linebacker Brian Orakpo said. "Guys are fighting hard. We don't have any, really, issues as much. Guys play for each other. We've got a great coaching staff. We've got everything. We've got an owner that's doing everything possible to win. Just got to be optimistic."

Shanahan is, at least. A loss to the surging Eagles on Sunday would ensure his worst record in 18 seasons as an NFL head coach, but he senses progress, especially on defense.

The Redskins made upgrading defensive personnel last offseason a priority ? particularly the front seven ? and the unit has improved from 30th?to 17th?in yards allowed per play.

"I feel good about that," Shanahan said. "Not only do we have some first-teamers there, but we believe we have some second- and third-teamers there, and that's what you're looking for is depth in that front seven, front eight."

Much work remains, though, especially on offense. Only two teams have turned the ball over more than the Redskins' 34 giveaways. Washington ranks 21st?in the NFL with a 5.21 yards-per-play average.

Shanahan has discussed their need for playmakers, and the time to add some is approaching.

"We still need a good draft, a good free agency," he said. "We still need to improve from where we're at right now. Our record obviously dictates that, but I feel good about the football team and the direction we're headed."

NOTES: Running back Roy Helu was inactive for Saturday's 33-26 loss to the Minnesota Vikings because his knee and toe injuries were problematic. "We ran him about three hours before the game," Shanahan said. "We tried to get him to push off and do all the football-related drills, but I talked to him, and our gut was no."

Helu's replacement, Evan Royster, rushed for 132 yards on 19 carries. "I thought Evan made a lot of great cuts, and he was very productive throughout the whole game," Shanahan said.

Source: http://www2.timesdispatch.com/sports/2011/dec/27/tdsport03-shanahan-maintains-optimism-despite-11-2-ar-1569620/

jeff garcia big east jesse james pearl harbor day discovery channel jersey shore season 5 lea michele

Oil: Price falls as Saudis trump Iran threat

The U.S. Navy warned that any disruption of traffic through the vital Strait of Hormuz "will not be tolerated."

On Tuesday Iran's vice president said that his country was ready to close the Strait of Hormuz ? a vital waterway through which a third of the world's tanker traffic flows ? if western nations embargo the country's oil because of Iran's ongoing nuclear program. The head of the country's navy added on Wednesday that his fleet can block the strait if need be. His comments came as Iran held a 10-day drill in international waters near the strategic route, which is 21 miles wide at its narrowest point.

A Saudi oil ministry official told The Associated Press that Saudi Arabia and other Gulf producers are ready to provide more oil if Iran tries to block the strait. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue. He didn't specify other routes that could be used to transport oil, although they would likely be longer and more expensive for getting crude to the region's customers.

"Anyone who threatens to disrupt freedom of navigation in an international strait is clearly outside the community of nations; any disruption will not be tolerated," said Lt. Rebecca Rebarich, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet, which is responsible for naval operations in the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea.

Some analysts think the Iranian threats are more rhetoric than reality. "We doubt political posturing will turn into action," energy consultant and trader Stephen Schork said in a report.

"Shutting down the strait ... is the last bullet that Iran has and therefore we have to express some doubt that they would do this and at the same time lose their support from China and Russia," said analyst Olivier Jakob of Petromatrix in Switzerland.

Iran is the fourth largest oil exporter in the world, according to the Energy Department. Most of its crude goes to Asia, with China its biggest customer. Oil provides half of Iran's revenue. Last year that amounted to about $73 billion.

In New York benchmark crude fell $1.98 to finish at $99.36 a barrel. Brent crude fell $1.71 to end at $107.56 a barrel in London.

Oil prices were also undercut on Wednesday by persistent worries about Europe and future demand for oil as the region's economy weakens. The European Central Bank said the continent's banks parked a record $590.72 billion overnight with the ECB, reflecting distrust in the European banking system.

Meanwhile in the U.S. the average pump price of gasoline rose a penny on Wednesday to $3.24 a gallon. That's about 4 cents more than a week ago and 21 cents higher than a year ago.

In other energy futures trading, heating oil fell 2 cents to finish at $2.89 a gallon, gasoline fell 4 cents to end at $2.65 a gallon and natural gas fell 3 cents to finish the day at $3.08 per 1,000 cubic feet.

?

Ali Akbar Dareini in Teheran, Tarek El-Tablawy in Cairo, Abdullah Shihri in Riyadh, Adam Schreck in Dubai and Pablo Gorondi in Budapest contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.tulsaworld.com/site/articlepath.aspx?articleid=20111228_49_0_NEWYOR719712&rss_lnk=298,297

nba schedule nhl realignment nhl realignment kristin chenoweth country music awards new earth light year

From coach to sex offender

Coach Matthew Ryndak showed an intense interest in teen basketball players that alarmed parents.

2003-07: Ryndak works as a middle school gym teacher and basketball coach at Leigh Elementary in Norridge. While there, parents note his controlling personality, according to one father, Stephen Frey.

Nov. 1, 2006-Feb. 28, 2007: Ryndak works as an assistant basketball coach at Ridgewood High School in Norridge. Frey's son complains about obsessive texting and calls from Ryndak.

May 2007: Ryndak is hired as head basketball coach at Johnsburg High School. Over the summer, he repeatedly asks a Johnsburg community booster to contact Frey and ask him to move his son to Johnsburg.

Late 2007: Johnsburg High basketball player Bob Hutchinson receives odd texts and calls from Ryndak, including one in which Ryndak asks the then-16-year-old about his pubic hair, according to Hutchinson and a Johnsburg police report.

July 2008: Hutchinson's mother, Mary Lou, contacts school officials after learning of the phone conversation. Another parent, Scott Dixon, also complains to school officials.

August 2008: The Hutchinsons and Dixons complain to Johnsburg police, who find no evidence of criminal wrongdoing.

Oct. 13, 2008:Mary Lou Hutchinson writes to Johnsburg High School Principal Kevin Shelton, questioning why no disciplinary action has been taken.

Oct. 23, 2008: Ryndak resigns.

Oct. 29, 2008: A third parent complains to Johnsburg police, saying Ryndak has purchased an iPod Touch for his son. The father inquires about getting a restraining order against Ryndak after learning Ryndak has made derogatory statements in an email to his son, a police report states.

2009: Ryndak begins a new job as an assistant basketball coach for Crete-Monee High School, which later hires him as a full-time physical education teacher and coach during the 2010-11 season. He helps turn the team around with a 25-4 record.

May 2011: Ryndak is put on administrative leave after school officials learn that the Department of Children and Family Services is investigating an allegation of sexual abuse. He is charged with eight counts of aggravated sexual abuse against a teenage boy.

Nov. 2, 2011: Ryndak pleads guilty to four counts of aggravated sexual child abuse. He is sentenced to four years' probation and mental health counseling. He is labeled a sex offender, and his teaching certificate is revoked.

SOURCE: Tribune reporting

Source: http://feeds.chicagotribune.com/~r/chicagotribune/news/local/~3/M7-q3CFuhSQ/ct-met-johnsburg-timeline-info-20111228,0,2219148.story

rudy zynga free shipping free shipping esophageal cancer extreme makeover home edition marfan syndrome

^^ ( " , ) Watch California vs Texas NCAA Football Live Stream Dec. 28, 2011

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Source: androidcommunity.com --- Wednesday, December 28, 2011
GAME SUMMARY: ENJOY Watching the games between California vs Texas Live Stream Games, the event will be held in BRIDGEPOINT EDUCATION HOLIDAY BOWL game starts at exactly 8:00 PM ET on Dec. 28, 2011. Both teams will surely give us a tremendous, thrilling and heart breaking fight, Fight to win this match up.California vs Texas have only mission, to win this game. http://dailysportstrends.blogspot.co...-football.html Matches details: TEAM: California vs Texas live DATE : Dec. 28, 2011 GAME START: 8:00 PM ET COMPETITIONS: NCAA Football Regular Season 2011/2012 http://dailysportstrends.blogspot.co...-football.html It is a very exciting and action packed match up between California vs Texas . Enjoy watching and have fun in every game. California vs Texas games live from home and support your favorite teams. http://dailysportstrends.blogspot.co...-football.html Relative search : California vs Texas Live Stream, California vs Texas Live Online, California vs Texas Live Streaming online, California vs Texas Live Scores, Boston Celtics vs Miami Heat Highlights, California vs Texas Results, California vs Texas Live online Streaming ...

Source: http://androidcommunity.com/forums/f9/watch-california-vs-texas-ncaa-football-live-stream-dec-28-2011-a-84321-new/

personhood amendment haynesworth haynesworth ohio issue 2 ohio issue 2 mississippi personhood mississippi personhood

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Update: Florida congresswoman plans hazing law

7:47 P. M.

"It's not a color thing," U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, a first-term Miami Democrat, said in an interview with the Tallahassee Democrat this evening. "You have hazing in white sororities and fraternities, whether it's making children visit graveyards, or drinking liquor 'til you pass out or smoking drugs."

Wilson, an educator who headed a dropout-prevention program for Miami-Dade schools when she was in the Florida Legislature, was regional director for Alpha Kappa Alpha, the nation's first black sorority, from 1986 through 1990. She said she became know as "the haze-buster" for rooting out the ritualized harassment of sorority pledges, band members, new players on sports teams and other organizations.

"I stopped it. I stopped it," Wilson said of her AKA tenure. "They were afraid of me."

She said "you can reach them two ways" -- by getting adult alumni to advise students not to inflict indignities on pledges and by holding students responsible for submitting to violent or abusive initiation rites. Getting young people to talk about hazing is difficult, she acknowledged, but Wilson said her experience has shown that the silence of victims helps the offenders perpetrate the "demeaning, dangerous and, sadly, deadly" tradition of hazing.

"Each one of those fraternities and sororities has graduate members who can mentor," she said. "Also, you can put some onus on the children who are being hazed, and make it their responsibility to report it?.I know they're going up against a wall of tradition and that wall is very deep, especially among people who have already graduated from college."

Wilson said "it's gotten better but it still exists" since the Florida Legislature passed a state statute making hazing a misdemeanor -- or a felony, if severe injury or death results.

Champion, 26, died Nov. 19 in Orlando. A medical examiner's report released last week ruled his death a homicide, caused by a severe beating.

FAMU President James Ammons suspended all appearances by the Marching 100 indefinitely and moved to fire band director Julian White. White is fighting to keep his tenured faculty position, saying he suspended more than two-dozen Rattler band members involved in hazing and had reported incidents to Ammons repeatedly prior to Champion's death.

(Page 2 of 2)

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is investigating the homicide, as well as undescribed "financial irregularities" in band operations.

Separately, three men have been charged with beating a young Atlanta woman who suffered a cracked thigh bone and knee injuries. She subsequently left FAMU.

2:35 P. M.

A Florida Congresswoman with a long history of combating hazing in schools plans to introduce federal legislation next month to outlaw the practice.

U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, a first-term Democrat from Miami, said today her bill was motivated by the current investigation at Florida A&M University into the Nov. 19 death of Marching 100 drum major Robert Champion.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is investigating his death, which medical examiners determined to be a homicide caused by a severe beating.

?I am having policy discussions now with presidents of historically black colleges and universities, band members and presidents of Greek-letter organizations so that we will be able to craft a strong bill for introduction next month,? said Wilson.

She said hazing ?is demeaning, dangerous and, sadly, deadly.?

Wilson, an educator and administrator for Miami-Dade County schools before her election to Congress, supported anti-bullying and hazing legislation as a member of the Florida Legislature. She also fought hazing as south Atlantic regional director of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.

She said Champion?s death and the FAMU investigation prompted her to work on a federal hazing law. The state has already made hazing illegal.

?It?s time that we put an end to this horrible and humiliating ritual once and for all, so that no more students suffer the way that Robert and others have,? Wilson said in announcing her planned legislation.

Source: http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20111227/NEWS/111227008

stevens johnson syndrome verdict in michael jackson trial verdict in michael jackson trial brian urlacher matt forte dr conrad murray verdict take care

hnfirehose: Google maps now showing isometric overlay?: http://t.co/TOYYgKJA

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Google maps now showing isometric overlay?: bit.ly/uHV2jj hnfirehose

HN Firehose

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/hnfirehose/statuses/151639552400957440

power outage snow storm snow storm reggie bush ufc 137 boston news matilda

Sunlight and bunker oil a fatal combination for Pacific herring

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

The 2007 Cosco Busan disaster, which spilled 54,000 gallons of oil into the San Francisco Bay, had an unexpectedly lethal impact on embryonic fish, devastating a commercially and ecologically important species for nearly two years, reports a new study by the University of California, Davis, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The study, to be published the week of Dec. 26 in the early edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that even small oil spills can have a large impact on marine life, and that common chemical analyses of oil spills may be inadequate.

"Our research represents a change in the paradigm for oil spill research and detecting oil spill effects in an urbanized estuary," said Gary Cherr, director of the UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory and a study co-author.

On the foggy morning of Nov. 7, 2007, when the container ship collided with the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, bunker oil contaminated spawning habitats for the largest U.S. coastal population of Pacific herring?a month before spawning season.

The new study, which analyzed Pacific herring embryos following the spill, highlights the effects of bunker oil on fish embryos in shallow water, the potential significance of sunlight interacting with oil compounds, and the extreme vulnerability of fish in early life stages to spilled oil.

Specifically, the study found that components of Cosco Busan bunker oil accumulated in naturally spawned herring embryos, then interacted with sunlight during low tides to kill the embryos. Laboratory fertilized eggs, caged in deeper waters, were protected from the lethal combination of sunlight and oil, but still showed less severe abnormalities associated with oil exposure.

Crude oil is naturally occurring, liquid petroleum. Bunker oil is a thick fuel oil distilled from crude oil and burned on ships to fuel their engines. It is contaminated with various, sometimes unknown, substances.

The study builds on research following the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill, which released up to 32 million gallons of crude oil into the comparatively pristine environment of Prince William Sound, Alaska. That research established a new paradigm for understanding the effects of oil toxicity on fish at early life stages.

The new study suggests that this old paradigm is inadequate to explain the dramatic, lethal effects of very low levels of oil on fish embryos, even in an urban estuary with preexisting background pollution.

"Based on our previous understanding of the effects of oil on embryonic fish, we didn't think there was enough oil from the Cosco Busan spill to cause this much damage," Cherr said. "And we didn't expect that the ultraviolet light would dramatically increase toxicity in the actual environment, as we might observe in controlled laboratory experiments."

Researchers began the new study in February 2008. They analyzed the levels of oil-based compounds in caged herring embryos at four oiled and two non-oiled subtidal sites, all of which were at least 1 meter below the water's surface. Naturally spawned embryos from shallower sites were also analyzed.

Three months after the spill, caged embryos at oiled sites showed nonlethal heart defects typical of oil exposure.

But embryos from the shallower, intertidal zone not only exhibited the nonlethal heart defects, they also showed surprisingly high rates of dead tissue and mortality unrelated to heart defects.

"These embryos were literally falling apart with high rates of mortality," said Cherr.

In 2008, almost no live larvae hatched from the natural spawn collected from oiled sites.

The high death rates did not seem to be caused by natural or manmade causes unrelated to the spill, the researchers report. No toxicity was observed in embryos from unoiled sites, even those near major highways.

Embryos sampled two years later from oiled sites showed modest heart defects but no increased death rates.

Pacific herring is a commercially and ecologically important species. The fish travel in large schools, typically from the San Francisco Bay north to the Bering Sea, and serve as a forage fish for humpback whales, other mammals, birds and salmon. After two years at sea, they spawn in shallow areas of bays and estuaries.

"In San Francisco, herring is one of the last urban fisheries, and herring is an indicator for the health of the Bay," said Cherr.

###

University of California - Davis: http://www.ucdavis.edu

Thanks to University of California - Davis for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 40 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116325/Sunlight_and_bunker_oil_a_fatal_combination_for_Pacific_herring

lance ball kansas city chiefs tom brady packers green bay packers tim tebow chiefs

Samsung and Sony end LCD partnership

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.php?subaction=showfull&id=1324976422&rss

ohio university ohio university etta james keystone xl pipeline bowl games idaho potato bowl cagayan de oro

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

how to get a Free apple ipad from reward site?

Hello, One of my friend got a free apple ipad i dont know how. do you think it is legit. If it is true can you please tell me how to get free ipad.?





Tags: Apple Ipad, Free Apple, Hello

Leave a Reply

Source: http://free-i-pad.com/how-to-get-a-free-apple-ipad-from-reward-site

raiders vincent jackson veterans day paterno oakland raiders carson palmer al davis

Wealth gap widens between Congress, constituents (Star Tribune)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179452632?client_source=feed&format=rss

snow day ryan braun neti pot iron chef bath and body works coupons jeff probst jeff probst

2011's Best Episodes: Oprah's Last Lesson in Gratitude, the Housewives' Game Night Goes Wild (omg!)

From Oprah's surprisingly low-key farewell to the year's most soul-crushing break-up on The Good Wife (Kalicia, no!), the year was packed with fantastic hours of television ? pretty much all of which we watched. There were teary goodbyes (Friday Night Lights' Texas forever! Smallville's tights and flights!), tense face-offs (why can't all CIA interrogations take place on the front porch of a cabin, like on Homeland?) and of course we made room for a little Glee (because certain underdogs deserved it). Which made the list. Tune in all week for our top 25.

Here's the first batch in our weeklong countdown of 2011's best episodes:

25. " The Oprah Winfrey Show Finale," The Oprah Winfrey Show
After 25 years and 4,561 episodes, we figured that the Queen of Daytime would use her final hour on the air to lead a parade of celebrities who would sing her praises and reminisce about all the crazy times on her couch. (But that, as it turns out, was what the second- and third-to-final hours were for.) Instead, the last show was simply O, reading a prepared speech from a bare set that reflected on the many lessons she had learned and that thanked her fans. "This show is the great love of my life," she said through tears. No guests, no surprises, no makeovers (not even one person got a car!) It was simple, nostalgic, and the perfect way to end a legendary chapter.

24. "Lysergic Acid Diethylamide," Fringe
The title alone indicated that this episode would be a trip. When Olivia attempted to extricate William Bell's consciousness from hers by taking LSD, the world went topsy-turvy, and the episode switched from live-action to animation. The twisty, Inception-like hour also marked Leonard Nimoy's farewell to the series.

23. "Melissa McCarthy," Saturday Night Live
On the heels of her big Emmy win, we had high hopes for McCarthy's first hosting gig on SNL. She did not disappoint. The Mike and Molly star shimmied her way across the stage for a hilarious dance number with her Bridesmaids buddy Kristen Wiig, made brazen, unwanted sexual advances toward Jason Sudekis as Arlene, a horny office worker, and taste-tested Hidden Valley Ranch dressing in a manner that gave us the dry heaves ? first from laughing so hard and then with actual nausea. (Can you Garlic Ranch Blast me now?)

22. "Game Night Gone Wild!," The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills
All we're saying is that when you mix rich Beverly Hills housewives, booze, Pictionary, and a not-so-lucid Hilton sister, things are bound to get interesting. It started innocently enough, as the ladies headed to Dana's house for game night ? but then everyone got wasted, broken-legged Brandi accused Kim of doing crystal meth in the bathroom and Kyle came to her sister's defense by calling Brandi a trashy slut. You stay classy, Beverly Hills.

21. "Bad News," How I Met Your Mother
Mother
had no shortage of shockers in 2011, but none was more surprising or poignant than when Marshall, who was trying to reach his dad to tell him good news, learned from Lily that his dad died from a heart attack. Jason Segel's quick switch from jubilation to inconsolable heartbreak was Emmy-worthy ? especially when you know that he did the scene in one take.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news2011s_best_episodes_oprahs_last_lesson_gratitude_housewives_030000729/44004660/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/2011s-best-episodes-oprahs-last-lesson-gratitude-housewives-030000729.html

wade phillips new orleans hornets time person of the year sag nominations sag nominations derek jeter time magazine person of the year

China: Rotten feed behind toxin in milk (AP)

BEIJING ? Mildewed feed given to cows caused the high levels of a cancer-causing toxin found in milk from China's biggest dairy company and a smaller one, according to a government safety agency investigating the troubled dairy industry's latest scandal.

An expert review identified the mildewed feed as the cause of the excessive levels of aflatoxin in milk from industry giant Mengniu Dairy Group and the Fujian Changfu Dairy Industry Group, the quality supervision and inspection agency said in a statement posted on its website late Monday.

The agency ordered the dairies to destroy the tainted products, and it advised the public that the contamination will end once the cows stop eating the rotten feed.

Aflatoxin is produced by a fungus that commonly grows on grain and legume crops such as peanuts, soybeans, corn and wheat. The toxin turns up in the milk of animals that eat affected crops.

Though at low doses it is not considered harmful to humans, high doses are linked to cancer, especially in the liver.

Both Mengniu and Changfu have issued public apologies. Mengniu said that the tainted products were produced at a subsidiary in Sichuan province and none had entered the market. Changfu said it recalled the affected products immediately after inspectors told the company.

While once a rarity in the Chinese diet, dairy has become a staple as incomes have risen, and the industry's booming growth has been accompanied by persistent quality issues. In the worst scandal, at least six infants died and 300,000 children were sickened in 2008 from drinking infant formula and milk products made with melamine, an industrial chemical that was being added to watered-down milk to elevate protein levels in quality tests.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_on_re_as/as_china_tainted_milk

snow day snow day ryan braun neti pot iron chef bath and body works coupons jeff probst

Monday, December 26, 2011

Robert De Niro a father again at 68

Grandparents, schmandparents. Robert De Niro is on diaper duty again at the age of 68!

  1. More Entertainment stories
    1. 'Teen Mom' Amber accused of 2 new felonies

      During a Friday court appearance, she was accused of felony battery and possession of a controlled substance.

    2. The winner of 'The X Factor' is ...
    3. 11 Christmas songs we hope never to hear again
    4. Will Tim Tebow host 'SNL'?
    5. 'Alien' trailer is a face-hugging hit

"The Little Fockers" star and wife, 56-year-old Grace Hightower De Niro, welcomed a daughter via surrogate recently, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

So what did the couple name their little one?

MORE: Killer Elite Rocks You Like a Hurricane of Badass Action

Helen Grace!

This is the second child for the De Niros, who are also parents to 13-year-old son Elliot.

But little Helen isn't the second addition to Robert's entire brood.

Advertise | AdChoices Advertise | AdChoices Advertise | AdChoices

MORE: Is Ryan Gosling the Next Robert De Niro?

This is the sixth (!) child for the Oscar-winning actor, who also has two children with ex-wife Diahnne Abbott and 16-year-old twin sons with ex-girlfriend Toukie Smith.

Congrats to the couple!

MORE: Top 10 Celebrity Baby Bumps of 2011

? 2011 E! Entertainment Television, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

More from the web

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45788722/ns/today-entertainment/

day light savings time 2011 hocus pocus hocus pocus bj penn roasted pumpkin seeds roasted pumpkin seeds pumpkin seed recipe

MildredVon: Cheers! "@SolangeNoir: You are amazing, @MildredVon :) What would a modern Wizard wear? Mother of London 2012 ~ http://t.co/0mNhgb9A"

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Cheers! "@SolangeNoir: You are amazing, @MildredVon :) What would a modern Wizard wear? Mother of London 2012 ~ coilhouse.net/2011/12/what-w?" MildredVon

Mildred vonHildegard

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/MildredVon/statuses/150435682240827392

occupy portland occupy portland the hunger games neil degrasse tyson neil degrasse tyson bears lions bears lions

newsobserver: Raleigh family, devastated by April tornado, is home for Christmas http://t.co/d4SeNiK1

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
Raleigh family, devastated by April tornado, is home for Christmas bit.ly/rrnx9G newsobserver

newsobserver.com

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/newsobserver/statuses/150903096023859200

twas the night before christmas detroit lions cincinnati bengals jaws norad santa epic beard man new york jets

tweetSETX: RT @Beaumont_Job_TX Beaumont Jobs: Best Buy Mobile Lead Sales Consultant - SAS: Beaumont, TX - It#39;s an exciti... http://t.co/QSICZk3M

  • Passer la navigation
  • Twitter sur votre mobile ? Cliquez ici m.twitter.com!
  • Passer cette ?tape
  • Connexion
Loader Twitter.com
  • Connexion
RT @Beaumont_Job_TX Beaumont Jobs: Best Buy Mobile Lead Sales Consultant - SAS: Beaumont, TX - It#39;s an exciti... bit.ly/vEjpKS tweetSETX

Tweet Southeast TX

Pied de page

Source: http://twitter.com/tweetSETX/statuses/150865289322577920

dragonfly courtney stodden drake take care herman cain accuser herman cain accuser election day kawasaki disease

A '12er Christmas (TIME)

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

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/178869850?client_source=feed&format=rss

junior dos santos evelyn lauder devin hester devin hester shayne lamas cain velasquez dos santos

Video: Get off the couch and go shopping!

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/45783293#45783293

cyber monday deals 2011 cyber monday deals 2011 real housewives of atlanta bernie fine bernie fine matt leinart cyber monday 2011

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Cherry orange loaf cake

Dried cherries, pecans and orange zest and juice flavor this not-too-sweet cake, perfect for a holiday breakfast or with coffee and tea.

I don?t bake much. So I was more than a little surprised when my Hazelnut Rosemary Jam Cookies were featured in Bon App?tit?s Blog Envy holiday showcase. And when I was invited to participate in 2009's Bon App?tit Blog Envy Bake-Off, an actual competition, I was flattered but less than inclined to give it a try.

Skip to next paragraph Terry Boyd

Terry Boyd is the author of Blue Kitchen, a Chicago-based food blog for home cooks. His simple, eclectic cooking focuses on fresh ingredients, big flavors and a cheerful willingness to borrow ideas and techniques from all over the world. A frequent contributor to the Chicago Sun-Times, he writes weekly food pieces for cable station USA Network's Character Approved Blog. His recipes have also appeared on the Bon App?tit and Saveur websites.

Recent posts

There are some serious bakers out there in the blogosphere. We?re talking pastry chef serious. I knew whatever simple efforts I came up with would not compete well in that arena. Then I remembered a story my grandmother told every December around the holidays, about a simple gift that meant so much to her as a little girl. Suddenly, winning wasn?t as important as sharing a recipe inspired by that gift.

My maternal grandmother was a big part of my life growing up in St. Louis and embracing city living early on. She often took me downtown on the bus to go shopping, have lunch and maybe catch a movie matinee. But she had grown up on a farm, and I could tell from the stories she would tell with such longing that she missed farm life. I wrote about some of those stories last year and of the Christmas gift she looked forward to each year. An orange. That post resonated with a number of readers, bringing up similar stories and experiences. And thinking about all that, I realized that a dessert didn?t need to be extravagant or architecturally exuberant to add some sweetness to the season.

My grandmother was a big fan of stollens, coffee cakes and gooey butter cakes, a St. Louis delicacy. More Saturdays than not, treats like these would make their way into our house, usually from the Favorite Bakery on Cherokee Street. Some were sugary sweet, but as often they would be dense, non-cakey loaves with just a little sweetness. Perfect with a cup of coffee from the chrome electric percolator that always seemed to be brewing on the kitchen table.

This Cherry Orange Loaf Cake is that kind of cake. Not overly sweet and, if not exactly dense, not exactly fluffy either. Cherries, chopped pecans and flaxseed meal give it a satisfying textural richness and mix of flavors. Orange zest and a drizzled frosting of orange juice and powdered sugar add a subtle citrus finish. Honestly, when concocting this cake, a variation on a Lemon Flaxseed Cake I make, I expected the orange flavor to be a little more prominent. I?m kind of thinking that my orange was a little on the anemic side, though ? there was no big burst of orange fragrance as I zested or juiced it. I?m looking forward to trying this recipe again with a more robust orange.

And delicateness of its orangeness aside, this is a lovely, light treat. Not too rich or guilt-laden, it?s just right for when holiday guests drop in or as a holiday breakfast while you open presents.

Cherry Orange Loaf Cake
?12 servings

For Cake:
?1 cup dried cherries
?1/4 cup [+ a little extra] canola or vegetable oil
?1 cup + 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
?2 cups all-purpose flour
?6 tablespoons flaxseed meal [or 1/4 cup flaxseed ground in small food processor]
?1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
?1/2 teaspoon baking soda
?1/2 teaspoon salt
?3/4 cup low-fat buttermilk
?grated zest of 1 orange
?1 teaspoon vanilla extract
?2 large eggs
?1/4 cup chopped pecans

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/dmoNlv_UXRM/Cherry-orange-loaf-cake

49ers news johnny knox johnny knox monday night football monday night football bonjovi bonjovi

Military Experiments on Fruitcake (Part 2: 1982-4)

This is part 2 of our look at the US military?s tests, conducted at their laboratories in Natick, Massachusetts, during the 1970s and 1980s, on?fruitcake, the time-honored holiday comestible. They issued at least two reports. Here?s a look at their second report:

?Effects of Storage Time and Temperature on Nutritional Content of Fortified Fruitcake? [Final report 1982-1984], Ann Morrill, Mary V. Klicka, Doris E. Sherman, Maureen T. Branagan and Ivy Fossum, report ADA191995, July 1, 1987, 29 pages.

The authors explain:

Fortified fruitcake was accepted by astronauts on Apollo 17 [the last of America's lunar manned missions], permitted on SkyLab as a Christmas treat, included on the Apollo-Soyuz menu, a component of Orbital Flight Test menus, and is available for shuttle flight menu use. Results from earlier storage studies indicated that although fruitcake retained consumer acceptability throughout storage, fortification levels of some nutrients were inappropriate. This report describes the results of a two-year follow-up study on fruitcake with some alterations in nutrient fortification levels?.? Fruitcakes were stored for two years at 4 C and 21 C, and one year at 38 C?.

CONCLUSIONS: Fortified fruitcake is an adequate carrier of vitamin A, thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, pyridoxine, and vitamin E. It is not adequate for vitamin B12, folacin, and ascorbic acid?.

The authors wish to acknowledge gratefully the contributions of Mrs. Nancy Kelley. Mr. Henry Russell. and Mr. Henry Morgan in the production and packaging of the fruitcake.

(Thanks to investigator Brenton R. Stone for bringing this to our attention.)

BONUS VIDEO: Fruitcake experiments at the Science Museum of Virginia:

BONUS VIDEO: A recent Princeton University project involving a fruitcake and a robot:

?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ImprobableResearch/~3/FZEgMRxbbQA/

ruben studdard black friday sales 2011 black friday sales 2011 whitney duncan bradley cooper elisabeth hasselbeck roger craig

Another face of the U.S. recession: homeless children (Reuters)

MIAMI (Reuters) ? As her mother sat in a homeless shelter in downtown Miami, talking about her economic struggles and loss of faith in the U.S. political system, 3-year-old Aeisha Touray blurted out what sounded like a new slogan for the Occupy Wall Street protest movement.

"How dare you!" the girl said abruptly as she nudged a toy car across a conference room table at the Chapman Partnership shelter in Miami's tough and predominantly black Overtown neighborhood.

There was no telling what Aeisha was thinking as her 32-year-old mother, Nairkahe Touray, spoke of how she burned through her savings and wound up living in a car with five of her eight children earlier this year.

But how dare you indeed? How does anyone explain to kids like Aeisha and countless others how they wound up homeless in the world's richest nation?

In a report issued earlier this month, the National Center on Family Homelessness, based in Needham, Massachusetts, said 1.6 million children were living on the streets of the United States last year or in shelters, motels and doubled-up with other families.

That marked a 38 percent jump in child homelessness since 2007 and Ellen Bassuk, the center's president, attributes the increase to fallout from the U.S. recession and a surge in the number of extremely poor households headed by women.

Recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau provided a sobering backdrop. Based on new or experimental methodology aimed at providing a fuller picture of poverty, the data showed that about 48 percent of Americans are living in poverty or on low incomes.

Under the bureau's so-called Supplemental Poverty Measure for 2010, issued last month, the poverty level for a family of four was set at income anywhere below $24,343 per year.

"I see it every day," said Alfredo Brown, 73, a retired army officer and deputy director of the non-profit Chapman Partnership, when asked about child homelessness.

The organization, funded largely by a 1 percent food and beverage tax on larger restaurants to bankroll homeless programs, operates two sprawling homeless shelters in Miami-Dade County.

"I see so many children and mothers that are homeless and sleeping in their car or an abandoned building, an old bus. It's a sad situation that we live in a country that has so much and many people have so little," Brown said.

Child homelessness is a relatively new social problem in the United States, where being on the street and the stigma attached to it has long been associated with adults with alcohol or drug dependency issues.

IMPOVERISHED MOTHERS

Families accounted for less than 1 percent of the U.S. homeless population in the mid-1980s, according to Bassuk, but they now comprise about a third of the homeless population. A lot of children are dependent on poverty-stricken single moms.

"There's sort of a Third World emerging right in our backyard. You know, we talk about developing countries but look at what's going on here," Bassuk said.

To put a face to the breadth and depth of the homeless problem, a team of Reuters journalists fanned out across the country in the past week, for interviews with parents and children who are down on their luck.

From Skid Row in Los Angeles to the South Bronx in New York, a common thread of economic devastation from the recession ran throughout many of the stories these people told.

But there also was a common thread of hope running through their compressed life stories.

Little Aeisha in Miami got visibly upset as her mother spoke tearfully about the wear and tear on her children amid her struggles with a bad economy, severe depression, diabetes and chronic foot problems stemming from torn ligaments.

Touray sounded like an Occupy Wall Street protester herself, as she complained about bailout money for banks but not people. "You get treated like an animal because you're homeless," said Touray, who said she lives on just $583 a month in child support after going through a divorce last year. Her parents, who live separately in Atlanta and Chicago, are also homeless.

"Just because I'm homeless it doesn't mean that I was like nothing yesterday," said Touray, who said four small businesses she owned in Atlanta only went bust due to the recession.

She also complained about the tone-deafness of many politicians, saying they were doing nothing to ease the unemployment and inequality that have come to dominate the national conversation.

"I'm living the real deal," Touray said. "I don't need for somebody to come up here and tell me what the economy's doing. They (the politicians) need to get out here and see these children, see these parents."

RIDING THE RAILS

Across the country in Los Angeles, Reuters came across Luis Martinez, 34. A single parent, he lives with his three children at the Union Rescue Mission on a trash-strewn city block where homeless men and women stand vigil over plastic shopping carts.

But the shelter is an improvement over the time when Martinez passed nights on the L.A. subway with his children, riding the rails to nowhere.

A junior high school dropout who became unemployed after he injured his back on construction site job about six years ago, Martinez spoke proudly about how well he said his kids were doing in school.

They have a laptop computer, which they use to help do homework through free wireless connections at McDonalds and Starbucks. They also have an Xbox video game system and Martinez, who wears a necklace that says "My Kids First," has a cell phone to stay in touch with family and potential employers.

"I mean, I'm homeless but not hopeless," Martinez said.

"(It) gets easier as you go," said Jesse, Martinez's 8-year-old son.

Highlighting the shrinking middle class in America, a reporter found Tracy and Elizabeth Burger and their 8-year-old son, Dylan. The Burgers said they once earned nearly $100,000 a year combined but saw their middle-class lifestyle evaporate when Tracy lost his job in audiovisual system sales.

Unable to pay rent, they were evicted from their apartment in early 2009 and had to move into a motel. In March they moved into a cramped converted garage at Elizabeth's mother's house in Los Angeles.

Elizabeth, a former medical assistant, said she has less than six weeks left on her unemployment insurance and was anxiously watching this week's standoff in Congress over extending those payments, along with the payroll tax cut for 160 million Americans.

The congressional debate highlighted the partisan bickering that has made this a tumultuous year in U.S. politics, while throwing Washington's ability to make sound economic policy into doubt.

In central Florida, Justin Santiago, 15, said he was not surprised when he, his parents and three younger siblings landed in a downtown Orlando shelter last September.

Since the national economic collapse in 2008, his out-of-work family bounced from one relative's home to another, and left California in search of employment and stability.

"I wasn't shocked. When the economy's going down and it just drops, it's out of control," Justin said.

EYES ON THE PRIZE

In 16 years of marriage, his parents, Theresa and Timothy Santiago, managed to provide for their family by working multiple jobs, earning about $20,000 in their best year. But work dried up and the family set out for Florida last spring in search of cheaper living expenses.

After a run of more bad luck, they found their way to the Coalition for the Homeless of Central Florida shelter. But Justin is taking eighth grade honors classes now and says his family's recent experience will not keep him from pursuing his dream career in video game production and becoming an Internet success story.

"It will get better for me and my family," he said. "I'll be making billions, I know that."

Antonio Dixon, 26, knows all about things getting better. His mother, Corenthia, said he bounced between at least a dozen homeless shelters growing up in Miami and Atlanta.

He eventually won a football scholarship at the University of Miami and fought dyslexia to become the first person in his family to graduate college.

"They had me study hard every hour," Dixon told Reuters.

He has since gone on to play defensive tackle for the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles, making good on his boyhood dream.

Dixon has been sidelined by a torn tricep since early October. But he seems confident about overcoming adversity yet again and plans on being in the starting lineup next season.

His advice to homeless kids is to stay in school and get focused on whatever it is they really want to do in life.

"Just keep on doing something you like and don't give up," Dixon said. I had to work myself up from the bottom to the top. I did that. Don't let nobody stand in your way. You just got to go and get it. You can't be afraid to take a chance on life."

Bassuk, a psychiatrist and Harvard Medical School professor, said medical problems and under-achievement in school were among the things that often go hand in hand with childhood homelessness.

"These are kids who don't have any opportunities," she said. "If you look at some of the educational variables, they're doing really poorly. And they're kids who can do OK. They just don't have appropriate support.

"It just seems that on every front this is a very vulnerable group of kids," she said.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis, Tim Gaynor, James Kelleher, David Bailey, Michelle Nichols, Kelli Dugan and Barbara Liston; Editing by Bill Trott)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111223/us_nm/us_usa_homeless

bank transfer day daylight savings 2011 day light savings day light savings us geological survey us geological survey oklahoma

David Paul: Before They Left Town, Did House Republicans Change the Rules of the Tax-cutting Game?

House Republicans, just days after standing their ground, decided instead to head home for Christmas dinner.

So much for the principles that brought them to power in 2010. So much for ending business as usual in the nation's capital.

But their language changed by the end. Gone was the moral outrage, the appeals to end the mindless spending that was bankrupting the nation. This week, the House Republican talking points led with the insistence that America's working men and women deserved more than a two-month payroll tax holiday. Somehow, the Tea Party-spawned House Republicans had morphed into demagoguing Proletarian heroes.

But this was an important moment. After all, when the current House majority seized the reins, they were clear that their mission was to curtail spending as the singular path to curbing massive fiscal deficits, while not impeding the morally righteous task of cutting taxes. Specifically, the House Republicans changed "Paygo" rules that had been in effect for many years -- whereby tax and spending measures must be budget-neutral over a 10-year period, as scored by the Congressional Budget Office -- to provide instead that such constraints should not apply to tax cuts.

This perspective -- that deficits are not a function of the mix of revenues and expenditures but rather a function of spending alone -- is an odd vestige of the Reagan era, when cutting taxes emerged as the sine qua non of the modern Republican Party and liberated the GOP from its stodgy traditions of fiscal prudence and school marmishness. At the time of the Reagan revolution, when marginal tax rates were high, one could make a fairly reasoned argument of the supply-side premise, that cutting taxes would increase revenues. But that argument was bound up in the facts and economics of that era, and only attained that status of a moral imperative in the ensuing years.

But in the debate regarding extending the payroll tax cut, for reasons that are unclear, the House Republicans did not merely forsake their rule that tax reductions are morally self-justifying, they went to the mattresses to demand that they be paid for like any other legislation of Democrat-inspired spending.

Then, suddenly, they got up off the mattresses, changed their votes and went home.

Fast forward to late next year and the implications of the House action looms large. At the end of 2012, the Bush-era tax cuts are set to expire just like the payroll tax cut that was just extended. Under the House Paygo rules, Republicans would have no problem demanding that such tax cuts remain permanent, despite the $4 trillion of projected costs over ten years. But the payroll tax debate should cast the stance of the House Republicans in a new light. This month, for the first time in recent memory, the Republicans took a stand against tax cuts because of the fiscal implications of those cuts.

For the first time in recent memory, Milton Friedman and the Republican Party of my grandfather were redeemed. This was a significant point that should not be lost.

Because the simple truth is that to extend the Bush tax cuts is wrong.

Little, if anything, has been said in the public debate over those tax cuts to remind the public about why they had an expiration date to begin with. After all, changes in the tax code tend to be eternal, and ability to rely on the rules of the tax system is a bedrock principle of our economy. But the Bush-era tax cuts had to expire if they were going to comply with the fiscal rules in place when the cuts were enacted into law. To meet the ten-year Paygo scoring rules, the Bush-era tax cut legislation provided for rates to return to the levels in effect in 2001 after seven years in order to pay for the largesse that was bestowed upon taxpayers over the period the cuts were to be in effect.

Oddly, in the debate over extending those tax cuts, up until now the Democrats and Republicans essentially had to act under different political rules. Democrats, because they are the party of wanton over-spending and fiscal profligacy, had to justify how extending the tax cuts would be somehow fiscally justifiable. Republicans, because their brand includes the long-defunct notion that they are the party of fiscal prudence, felt no such constraint, and they have felt free to argue that the cuts be made permanent, whatever the fiscal impact might be.

The argument in Congress that the Bush-era tax cuts should be extended has given the lie to the notion that Congress is subject to any rules, even the ones it places on itself. The argument that tax rates should not be increased in the face of a recession is utterly disingenuous. Those arguing to gut the 2001 and 2003 tax bills now would be doing so regardless of our economic condition.

Look back at the historical record. Even as the Bush-era tax cut legislation was being considered, Republican leaders assured their base that by 2010 those cuts would be made permanent, as the Republicans pledged from the outset to attack as taxers any who would let the cuts expired. That is to say, even at the moment of the original legislation, those who supported those tax cuts eschewed any intention of adhering to the fiscal rules that Congress had imposed on itself. At the time, the cynicism was breathtaking. But as political calculation, it was prescient.

This month, House Republicans veered from the Republican orthodoxy on cutting taxes without offsets in favor of their Tea Party anti-deficit principles when they demanded spending cuts if the payroll tax cut was to be extended. For the first time in recent memory, Republicans returned to pre-Reagan principles and demanded that tax cuts be paid for.

A cynic might argue that this was not a change from the Republican playbook. They might suggest instead that we have seen the emergence of a codicil to the principle that tax cuts are morally self-justifying that suggests that such cuts must be paid for if the benefit accrues to working class Americans. Or perhaps the House leadership simply got caught up in needing to oppose anything that Democrats supported and lost sight of the fact that they were in the odd position of opposing a tax cut.

In acting to demand that the payroll tax cut extension be paid for, will the House Republicans apply the same rule to extending the Bush-era tax cuts? That would be a game changer. But it is more likely that the House Republicans will get their act together, and once again the $4 trillion cost -- and profound hypocrisy -- of extending the Bush-era tax cuts will be subordinate to the higher moral principle of cutting taxes -- without regard to cost.

?

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-paul/did-house-republicans-change-rules_b_1168910.html

powerball ihop knicks green bean casserole prime rib recipe dennys rex ryan