The timer is one of the basic elements of the normal operation of the communication protocol is mainly used for a variety of digital timer
and frame retransmission task. The communication protocol used in the SCM system timer, timing accuracy is not required, but the number of requirements. Hardware resources are limited, it is impossible for every single task is assigned a hardware timer, only through a single hardware timer simulate a number of software timers to meet the timing needs agreement.
These software timer data structure to organize themselves, and provides a uniform interface, called "Timer". Timer management are mainly two kinds of method:
(1) static array method. Timer node is stored in the array. The advantage is simple logic, occupy less ROM. However, this program has significant disadvantages: when the hardware timer interrupt occurs, the subtraction operation of all timer node, the time overhead and delay uncertainty (related to the timer number).
(2)delta linked list method. Ascending order to form a linked list in accordance with the timing value of the timer. A timer value of timer in front of all the timer value plus the value of the node. Thus, in each clock interrupt handler, only the subtraction operation on a timer node, greatly reducing the time overhead. However, the complex program logic, ROM, dosage, require frequent allocation of recovery of memory, easy to form the memory fragmentation.
The timer management module design is based on a static array method. Use a timer node array to hold all of the timing of the request, a representative of an available timer node of the array. Each timer node has a status indicates that the timer is in idle, or overflow state. Timing value of the timer and the timer expires, the message to be sent is also stored in the timer node, in order to achieve a hardware timer to provide users with a number of software timers.
In order to solve the problem of interrupt processing time overhead, the introduction of an auxiliary timer module, auxiliary timer value is always equal to the minimum timing value of all the timer node. In the hardware timer interrupt processing, only the auxiliary timer subtraction operation, which will greatly reduce interrupt processing time.
Start a timer, the main node to node array in an idle state is set to use. If the new timer is enabled, all timers from time to time to the minimum value, but also to update the auxiliary timer. Function pointer to point to the timer message and time value parameters, start the timer process shown in Figure 2. Successful start-up timer, return the node ID number of the timer.
Software timer is driven by the hardware digital timer. In the hardware timer interrupt, the first auxiliary timer value minus 1. If the auxiliary timer value is 0, then the timer value minimum timer has timed out, the corresponding message should be sent to the user task, the node set to the idle state, and re-calculate the timing values ??of the other nodes, and find the timing value the smallest node, update the auxiliary timer.
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Showing posts with label Digital Timer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Digital Timer. Show all posts
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
Thermometer use after disinfection
The sterilization of a digital thermometer involving soap, water and denatured alcohol is a process that members of the boomer generation know well. But this process has changed and it has changed for reasons unrelated to how effective it was in killing germs.
Wipe off the bulb thermometer with denatured alcohol after its soap and water wash. It should then be placed in a clean protective container. It may also be placed in a covered container of denatured alcohol.
Make sure that you wipe off the ENTIRE AREA of the thermometer that has been touched by the patient. If possible, use denatured alcohol since this is the best bactericidal agent, but you must check with the thermometer's directions since some do not tolerate its use.
Get a new thermometer if you have one with mercury in it. Sterilize other bulb thermometers, using colored alcohol for example, by initially washing it in soap and water.
Use the disposable coverlets on those models designed for their use. Following use, simply wipe off the area of the thermometer that has been exposed to a patient's touch.
Wipe off any area of a digital ear thermometer touched by a patient immediately following use. With the unit's next use, then apply the disposable ear tip. The chances of contamination of an ear thermometer are obviously far less than that for an oral unit, but never underestimate a toddler's ability to slobber over great distances.
Check the instructions that come with a digital thermometer for the way it should be cleaned. This is necessary because different thermometers have different ways of sterilization.
Wipe off the bulb thermometer with denatured alcohol after its soap and water wash. It should then be placed in a clean protective container. It may also be placed in a covered container of denatured alcohol.
Make sure that you wipe off the ENTIRE AREA of the thermometer that has been touched by the patient. If possible, use denatured alcohol since this is the best bactericidal agent, but you must check with the thermometer's directions since some do not tolerate its use.
Get a new thermometer if you have one with mercury in it. Sterilize other bulb thermometers, using colored alcohol for example, by initially washing it in soap and water.
Use the disposable coverlets on those models designed for their use. Following use, simply wipe off the area of the thermometer that has been exposed to a patient's touch.
Wipe off any area of a digital ear thermometer touched by a patient immediately following use. With the unit's next use, then apply the disposable ear tip. The chances of contamination of an ear thermometer are obviously far less than that for an oral unit, but never underestimate a toddler's ability to slobber over great distances.
Check the instructions that come with a digital thermometer for the way it should be cleaned. This is necessary because different thermometers have different ways of sterilization.
Monday, March 19, 2012
Electronic digital timer automatically sets the heating time
Electronic digital timer capable of automatically setting the time of heating according to the quantity and kind of food being cooked.
The mechanical timer requires the timer needle to be manually rotated whenevercooking time is set, leading to a very much complicated operation. Since indication by the timer is always made solely by means of the needle, an actual lapse of time since the commencement of heating can not be found, if the needle is fixed at a pointof said set time. Conversely where the needle is made to move as time goes on, then it is impossible to trace an originally set time, giving rise to the erroneous observation of time indication on the panel of the timer or the incorrect setting ofcooking time. These errors have often caused the misunderstanding of the initially set time or the wide displacement of a set time from a desired value, resulting in insufficient cooking.
According to this invention there is provided an electronic range fitted with a high frequency generator which comprises a device for setting a value representing the quantity of food being cooked; a device for indicating said set value in theform of digits; a pulse generator; a device for varying the period of pulses generated by said pulse generator according to the quantity and kind of food being cooked; a counter for counting pulses from the pulse generator upon the commencement of afood-heating operation; and a device for bringing the operation of the high frequency generator to an end when a prescribed relationship arises between the counts made by the counter and a value denoting an originally set time.
A general electronic range sets a time of cooking food by a timer. In this case, heating time is set by searching for an optimum length of cooking time for the quantity and kind of food being cooked or by the experience or sense of a personundertaking cooking. Accordingly, the time of cooking the same quantity and kind of food varies from person to person using an electronic range, resulting in a failure to carry out proper cooking.
It is accordingly the object of this invention to provide an electronic range provided with a compact electronic digital timer which can automatically set a proper time of cooking or heating for the quantity and kind of food being cooked and,where required, indicate an originally set time as well as a lapse of time from the initial point of cooking time set in the form of digits.
The mechanical timer requires the timer needle to be manually rotated whenevercooking time is set, leading to a very much complicated operation. Since indication by the timer is always made solely by means of the needle, an actual lapse of time since the commencement of heating can not be found, if the needle is fixed at a pointof said set time. Conversely where the needle is made to move as time goes on, then it is impossible to trace an originally set time, giving rise to the erroneous observation of time indication on the panel of the timer or the incorrect setting ofcooking time. These errors have often caused the misunderstanding of the initially set time or the wide displacement of a set time from a desired value, resulting in insufficient cooking.
According to this invention there is provided an electronic range fitted with a high frequency generator which comprises a device for setting a value representing the quantity of food being cooked; a device for indicating said set value in theform of digits; a pulse generator; a device for varying the period of pulses generated by said pulse generator according to the quantity and kind of food being cooked; a counter for counting pulses from the pulse generator upon the commencement of afood-heating operation; and a device for bringing the operation of the high frequency generator to an end when a prescribed relationship arises between the counts made by the counter and a value denoting an originally set time.
A general electronic range sets a time of cooking food by a timer. In this case, heating time is set by searching for an optimum length of cooking time for the quantity and kind of food being cooked or by the experience or sense of a personundertaking cooking. Accordingly, the time of cooking the same quantity and kind of food varies from person to person using an electronic range, resulting in a failure to carry out proper cooking.
It is accordingly the object of this invention to provide an electronic range provided with a compact electronic digital timer which can automatically set a proper time of cooking or heating for the quantity and kind of food being cooked and,where required, indicate an originally set time as well as a lapse of time from the initial point of cooking time set in the form of digits.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
How to change the different units of the digital thermometer
The digital thermometer is a device that is very good to be at home in the medicine cabinet.There are times when the digital thermometer may not read the temperature in the unit you are familiar with. If you live in the United States,but have a thermometer that reads temperature degrees Celsius, and you want to go to they could turn into units Fahrenheit. How can you change the digital thermometer to different units?
Most digital thermometers have a small menu that you can access by pressing the Start button and hold until the menu flashes on the screen. Some digital thermometers have an additional button on the side of the access to this feature. In order to change the temperature reading on the thermometer must be moved through the list to find the option of conversion. Highlight to read the temperature and want to go out and then in the menu by pressing and pressing the start button again.
If the Digital Thermometer your only reads in Celsius, but you're used to system Fahrenheit, you can also use a similar formula to change the unit of measurement. Using the reading you currently have on the thermometer, you will need to multiply by 9. With that you receive the answer, divide it by 5. Now, you can add 32 to the number in order to reach a temperature reading in Fahrenheit.
With a digital thermometer in hand, you press the button in the upper part of the device. Click on the button until the screen lights up. Will run the version on the button and the digital thermometer in your. Must be set to read on the screen at 0 degrees. Look next to see what the unit of measurement is set. Will have to either type (F 'for Fahrenheit, or' c 'for Celsius.
Another way to change the unit of measurement temperature on the thermometer read your digital standard for the use of mathematical equation. To do this, you will need to have a calculator, a pencil and paper ready.
If you want to use to read degrees Celsius, but the digital thermometer only reads your temperature in Fahrenheit you can change the reading with a formula easy. Take readings you currently have and put 32 of it. The answer is that the gap by 9 and then double what you have at this stage by 7. By following these simple math equation will end up with a degree Celsius.
If you're near a computer, and there to read the temperature with you, you can easily convert the unit converter with temperatures on the Internet. Go to the site on the Internet, such as the National Weather Service, and major figures in the converter. If you have a percentage, then you want to convert to Fahrenheit and vice versa.
Most digital thermometers have a small menu that you can access by pressing the Start button and hold until the menu flashes on the screen. Some digital thermometers have an additional button on the side of the access to this feature. In order to change the temperature reading on the thermometer must be moved through the list to find the option of conversion. Highlight to read the temperature and want to go out and then in the menu by pressing and pressing the start button again.
If the Digital Thermometer your only reads in Celsius, but you're used to system Fahrenheit, you can also use a similar formula to change the unit of measurement. Using the reading you currently have on the thermometer, you will need to multiply by 9. With that you receive the answer, divide it by 5. Now, you can add 32 to the number in order to reach a temperature reading in Fahrenheit.
With a digital thermometer in hand, you press the button in the upper part of the device. Click on the button until the screen lights up. Will run the version on the button and the digital thermometer in your. Must be set to read on the screen at 0 degrees. Look next to see what the unit of measurement is set. Will have to either type (F 'for Fahrenheit, or' c 'for Celsius.
Another way to change the unit of measurement temperature on the thermometer read your digital standard for the use of mathematical equation. To do this, you will need to have a calculator, a pencil and paper ready.
If you want to use to read degrees Celsius, but the digital thermometer only reads your temperature in Fahrenheit you can change the reading with a formula easy. Take readings you currently have and put 32 of it. The answer is that the gap by 9 and then double what you have at this stage by 7. By following these simple math equation will end up with a degree Celsius.
If you're near a computer, and there to read the temperature with you, you can easily convert the unit converter with temperatures on the Internet. Go to the site on the Internet, such as the National Weather Service, and major figures in the converter. If you have a percentage, then you want to convert to Fahrenheit and vice versa.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
How to buy a basal digital thermometer
A regular thermometer is little bit daunting to use as it requires you to keep still for few minutes and moreover it is not perfect in giving readings. A basal digital thermometer is more reliable as it gives you reading by 10th's of a degree. A basal digital thermometer is more accurate than a simple thermometer.
How to use a basal digital thermometer?
Use the basal digital thermometer first in the morning before getting out of bed because it is the best time to measure the temperature. There on you should try to take the temperature from the basal digital thermometer at as close to the same time each day as possible so that you can fill up your daily chart correctly.
The best time to take advantage of digital basal thermometer is when you have taken a five hour uninterrupted sleep. Moreover you can use your digital basal thermometer orally, vaginally or rectally depending on you that which style is best suited to you.
Basal digital thermometer is a latest innovation which can keep you informed of your normal body temperature throughout the day so that you can get to know of the times when your body temperature is high or when your body is going to ovulate.
How to buy a basal digital thermometer?
You can have many options to buy a basal digital thermometer from any route you like. You can have online routes to make purchases of basal digital thermometer. Online stores are widely present in the world but you need to be confident about the route. Moreover you can have another way to buy the basal digital thermometer and that is by visiting the shop on your own.
A basal digital thermometer is extra sensitive thermometer which tracks your body temperature minutest shift or basal temperature. A basal temperature is the normal temperature of the person after awakening in the morning. The basal temperature rises at times of ovulation that is hormonal changes. A basal digital thermometer is easy to use near the middle of the menstrual cycle.
Difference between basal digital thermometer and a regular thermometer
A basal digital thermometer is often used by women when they want to know about their fertile period or ovulation. You can find different types of basal thermometers but a basal digital thermometer is best for the usage especially when you want to make a chart of your basal digital thermometer.
How to use a basal digital thermometer?
Use the basal digital thermometer first in the morning before getting out of bed because it is the best time to measure the temperature. There on you should try to take the temperature from the basal digital thermometer at as close to the same time each day as possible so that you can fill up your daily chart correctly.
The best time to take advantage of digital basal thermometer is when you have taken a five hour uninterrupted sleep. Moreover you can use your digital basal thermometer orally, vaginally or rectally depending on you that which style is best suited to you.
Basal digital thermometer is a latest innovation which can keep you informed of your normal body temperature throughout the day so that you can get to know of the times when your body temperature is high or when your body is going to ovulate.
How to buy a basal digital thermometer?
You can have many options to buy a basal digital thermometer from any route you like. You can have online routes to make purchases of basal digital thermometer. Online stores are widely present in the world but you need to be confident about the route. Moreover you can have another way to buy the basal digital thermometer and that is by visiting the shop on your own.
A basal digital thermometer is extra sensitive thermometer which tracks your body temperature minutest shift or basal temperature. A basal temperature is the normal temperature of the person after awakening in the morning. The basal temperature rises at times of ovulation that is hormonal changes. A basal digital thermometer is easy to use near the middle of the menstrual cycle.
Difference between basal digital thermometer and a regular thermometer
A basal digital thermometer is often used by women when they want to know about their fertile period or ovulation. You can find different types of basal thermometers but a basal digital thermometer is best for the usage especially when you want to make a chart of your basal digital thermometer.
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Georgia chartered the school's decision could set a precedent
The Georgia Legislature is hotly debating a bill that would allow the state to cover the costs of charter schools even if local school boards reject them, setting up a case that could set national precedent on educational reform.
"In the education reform battle often times things boil down to a turf battle, and that's what we have here. We have some local school systems that are worried that by metal stamping virtue of having state charter schools that some of their turf is getting interfered. But it's about the children and the choice," said state Rep. Ed Lindsey, R-Atlanta. "It's a control issue, and it always has been."
The amendment would codify the authority of the Georgia Charter Schools Commission, an organization created by the state in 2008 after complaints that school boards were turning down charter school applicants, preventing competition. But the commission began approving and funding charter schools even at the objection of the local boards, illegal under current law. That's when the Georgia Supreme Court stepped in.
The legislation to amend the state constitution would allow the Peach State to create its own parallel K-12 system to local boards, drawing on the same limited pool power cord of Georgia's taxpayer funds -- a decision that the Georgia Supreme Court said was illegal just one year ago.
"The Georgia Constitution says local boards control where local dollars go, so if a charter school only gets state approval and not local approval, no way can they receive local funds. They can only receive state funds," said Tim Callahan, spokesman for the Professional Association of Georgia Educators or PAGE, which opposes the funding. "The people who are putting this constitutional amendment on the ballot are trying to do that in our Senate right now -- are really trying to do a run-around the Supreme Court ruling."
Critics say the move to create a state board will damage the public education system because the amendment would allow the state to siphon money from cash-strapped districts at a time when they're facing almost $1 billion in cuts.
"This bill in no way touches any kind of local funding," Lindsey said. "In fact we put in to the Constitution a specific provision that guarantees there will be no local money used for these state charter schools. But keep in mind also electric winch that these school that are in the more rural areas. It's a lot of these kids that need charter schools the most and it's the children in those areas we're most concerned about."
Lindsey said charter schools are a beneficial addition to the education world -- they build, not break down, community education.
"Our state is very strapped in terms of funding," Callahan said. "We have cut by over $2 billion the education budget over the past eight years or so, and we have a funding formula that dates back to 1985 (and) has not been updated for inflation."
Education spending accounts for almost half of the state's yearly budget but GOP leaders promise no money will be taken from school districts.
"Parents are hungry for the latest thing -- whatever may be the best for their children," he said. "And that's understandable, but we all need to step back a little bit and take a deep breath. The best research we've solenoid valve had on charter schools and its pretty comprehensive says that only 17 percent of charter schools actually do better than the public schools they replace."
"Charter schools are part of an overall tool in the tool box for education reform," Lindsey said. "It, along with the myriad of other programs, is extremely important in terms of giving parents and students a greater choice in what is the best education for a particular child and it encourages education achievement and success along the way. It creates innovation."
But Callahan said Georgia charter schools don't outperform public schools.
The amendment is supported by Republican Gov. Nathan Deal, who has gotten involved in the push to get the legislation passed. Lindsey said he is confident the bill will pass digital thermometer the Senate with strong bipartisan support as it did in the Georgia House.
"In the education reform battle often times things boil down to a turf battle, and that's what we have here. We have some local school systems that are worried that by metal stamping virtue of having state charter schools that some of their turf is getting interfered. But it's about the children and the choice," said state Rep. Ed Lindsey, R-Atlanta. "It's a control issue, and it always has been."
The amendment would codify the authority of the Georgia Charter Schools Commission, an organization created by the state in 2008 after complaints that school boards were turning down charter school applicants, preventing competition. But the commission began approving and funding charter schools even at the objection of the local boards, illegal under current law. That's when the Georgia Supreme Court stepped in.
The legislation to amend the state constitution would allow the Peach State to create its own parallel K-12 system to local boards, drawing on the same limited pool power cord of Georgia's taxpayer funds -- a decision that the Georgia Supreme Court said was illegal just one year ago.
"The Georgia Constitution says local boards control where local dollars go, so if a charter school only gets state approval and not local approval, no way can they receive local funds. They can only receive state funds," said Tim Callahan, spokesman for the Professional Association of Georgia Educators or PAGE, which opposes the funding. "The people who are putting this constitutional amendment on the ballot are trying to do that in our Senate right now -- are really trying to do a run-around the Supreme Court ruling."
Critics say the move to create a state board will damage the public education system because the amendment would allow the state to siphon money from cash-strapped districts at a time when they're facing almost $1 billion in cuts.
"This bill in no way touches any kind of local funding," Lindsey said. "In fact we put in to the Constitution a specific provision that guarantees there will be no local money used for these state charter schools. But keep in mind also electric winch that these school that are in the more rural areas. It's a lot of these kids that need charter schools the most and it's the children in those areas we're most concerned about."
Lindsey said charter schools are a beneficial addition to the education world -- they build, not break down, community education.
"Our state is very strapped in terms of funding," Callahan said. "We have cut by over $2 billion the education budget over the past eight years or so, and we have a funding formula that dates back to 1985 (and) has not been updated for inflation."
Education spending accounts for almost half of the state's yearly budget but GOP leaders promise no money will be taken from school districts.
"Parents are hungry for the latest thing -- whatever may be the best for their children," he said. "And that's understandable, but we all need to step back a little bit and take a deep breath. The best research we've solenoid valve had on charter schools and its pretty comprehensive says that only 17 percent of charter schools actually do better than the public schools they replace."
"Charter schools are part of an overall tool in the tool box for education reform," Lindsey said. "It, along with the myriad of other programs, is extremely important in terms of giving parents and students a greater choice in what is the best education for a particular child and it encourages education achievement and success along the way. It creates innovation."
But Callahan said Georgia charter schools don't outperform public schools.
The amendment is supported by Republican Gov. Nathan Deal, who has gotten involved in the push to get the legislation passed. Lindsey said he is confident the bill will pass digital thermometer the Senate with strong bipartisan support as it did in the Georgia House.
Crystal Cathedral announces changes to TV-ministries board
John Charles, who has held various administrative positions over the last 15 years and most recently served as the church's spokesman, will take over as interim chief executive and president.
Officials later acknowledged that Jim Penner, the executive producer of "Hour of Power" since 1999, also left the electric winch board. Penner is married to Schuller's youngest daughter, Gretchen.
In an e-mail, Penner said he was "very pleased" about the move because now he can focus more on his role as a pastor at the church and as the television ministry's executive.
The diocese plans to convert the 10,000-pane cathedral for Catholic worship in three years. In a statement released that day, Schuller Coleman said the ministry had begun a search for a new home for the "Hour of Power," one that is within 10 miles. She asked congregants to "embrace" her vision. "Be assured that this ministry is not about a church building," she said. "It is about building a church!"
"The leadership changes to the board of ac power cord directors for Crystal Cathedral Ministries are temporary, and we believe that they will be good for the Crystal Cathedral during this time of transition," according to a statement released through a public relations firm.
The statement said the changes were made to avoid a potential conflict of interest with the congregation board, a separate entity that is not under the umbrella of Crystal Cathedral Ministries. The move also would allow Schuller Coleman to "concentrate on her duties as pastor and on casting the vision for the future of the ministry."
Schuller Coleman took over leadership of the entire ministry in June 2009, after her brother, Robert A. Schuller, resigned from the senior pastor position. Sixteen months later, Crystal Cathedral Ministries filed for Needle valve bankruptcy, citing $50 million in debt that was blamed on the economic downturn.
"I'm very grateful for John's help and support at this time," Schuller Coleman said in the statement. "We're prayerfully considering many options regarding the new location for the church and the ministry and are excited about the future. We're confident we will end up where God needs us most."
The news announced Wednesday came after speculation over the weekend by longtime congregants that Schuller Coleman and Penner had been fired from the board of directors of the Crystal Cathedral Ministries. On Monday and Tuesday, the shower drain church did not return repeated e-mails and phone calls requesting comment.
Officials later acknowledged that Jim Penner, the executive producer of "Hour of Power" since 1999, also left the electric winch board. Penner is married to Schuller's youngest daughter, Gretchen.
In an e-mail, Penner said he was "very pleased" about the move because now he can focus more on his role as a pastor at the church and as the television ministry's executive.
The diocese plans to convert the 10,000-pane cathedral for Catholic worship in three years. In a statement released that day, Schuller Coleman said the ministry had begun a search for a new home for the "Hour of Power," one that is within 10 miles. She asked congregants to "embrace" her vision. "Be assured that this ministry is not about a church building," she said. "It is about building a church!"
"The leadership changes to the board of ac power cord directors for Crystal Cathedral Ministries are temporary, and we believe that they will be good for the Crystal Cathedral during this time of transition," according to a statement released through a public relations firm.
The statement said the changes were made to avoid a potential conflict of interest with the congregation board, a separate entity that is not under the umbrella of Crystal Cathedral Ministries. The move also would allow Schuller Coleman to "concentrate on her duties as pastor and on casting the vision for the future of the ministry."
Schuller Coleman took over leadership of the entire ministry in June 2009, after her brother, Robert A. Schuller, resigned from the senior pastor position. Sixteen months later, Crystal Cathedral Ministries filed for Needle valve bankruptcy, citing $50 million in debt that was blamed on the economic downturn.
"I'm very grateful for John's help and support at this time," Schuller Coleman said in the statement. "We're prayerfully considering many options regarding the new location for the church and the ministry and are excited about the future. We're confident we will end up where God needs us most."
The news announced Wednesday came after speculation over the weekend by longtime congregants that Schuller Coleman and Penner had been fired from the board of directors of the Crystal Cathedral Ministries. On Monday and Tuesday, the shower drain church did not return repeated e-mails and phone calls requesting comment.
U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan night raid homes shot and killed 16 civilians
Afghan Presidential Palace on the 11th issued a statement saying U.S. soldiers deliberately shot and killed 16 civilians in Afghanistan, President Hamid Karzai expressed the Digital thermometer strongest condemnation, that this is an act of murder.
The statement said: "Afghan President Hamid Karzai, NATO soldiers in Kandahar province early this morning shot and killed civilians in the event that the strongest condemnation of the Afghan government has consistently condemned the NATO military operations that caused civilian casualties, but the U.S. soldiers deliberately killed 16 Afghan civilians is murder. "
The Afghan Defense Ministry issued a statement condemning the incident, "I hope that the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) as soon as possible to bring the perpetrators to justice.
According to local government officials in Kandahar province, on the 11th morning, a U.S. soldier broke into several houses in a village in the province Jack Pan Wye area near the U.S. military base opened fire to the house of civilians solenoid valve, including women and children The 16 civilians were killed.
The NATO Zhue International Security Assistance Force that morning, said in a statement: "A U.S. soldier was arrested this morning in connection manufacture of civilians shot dead U.S. troops in Afghanistan with the Afghan authorities in Kandahar province and this an investigation into the incident, relevant information will be announced at the appropriate time. "
At the same time, Adrian Bradshaw, deputy commander of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) on the 11th of this event expressed regret and promised to investigate and severely punish the perpetrators.
Jacobson, the NATO Zhue International Security Assistance Force spokesman, at a news conference, said: is not today's events and protests over the past few weeks with the present situation, with individual behavior we are investigating vibrating screed the motive of the perpetrators. "
Hayden, White House National Security Council spokesman, the same day that the White House is very concerned about the Afghan civilians were shot event, to follow developments.
On Feb. 21, the Afghan national outbreak of large-scale protests, protest the U.S. military at Bagram Air Base to the burning of the Koran, there are two U.S. military advisers and four U.S. soldiers shot during the protests continued to be Afghans.
The statement said: "Afghan President Hamid Karzai, NATO soldiers in Kandahar province early this morning shot and killed civilians in the event that the strongest condemnation of the Afghan government has consistently condemned the NATO military operations that caused civilian casualties, but the U.S. soldiers deliberately killed 16 Afghan civilians is murder. "
The Afghan Defense Ministry issued a statement condemning the incident, "I hope that the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) as soon as possible to bring the perpetrators to justice.
According to local government officials in Kandahar province, on the 11th morning, a U.S. soldier broke into several houses in a village in the province Jack Pan Wye area near the U.S. military base opened fire to the house of civilians solenoid valve, including women and children The 16 civilians were killed.
The NATO Zhue International Security Assistance Force that morning, said in a statement: "A U.S. soldier was arrested this morning in connection manufacture of civilians shot dead U.S. troops in Afghanistan with the Afghan authorities in Kandahar province and this an investigation into the incident, relevant information will be announced at the appropriate time. "
At the same time, Adrian Bradshaw, deputy commander of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) on the 11th of this event expressed regret and promised to investigate and severely punish the perpetrators.
Jacobson, the NATO Zhue International Security Assistance Force spokesman, at a news conference, said: is not today's events and protests over the past few weeks with the present situation, with individual behavior we are investigating vibrating screed the motive of the perpetrators. "
Hayden, White House National Security Council spokesman, the same day that the White House is very concerned about the Afghan civilians were shot event, to follow developments.
On Feb. 21, the Afghan national outbreak of large-scale protests, protest the U.S. military at Bagram Air Base to the burning of the Koran, there are two U.S. military advisers and four U.S. soldiers shot during the protests continued to be Afghans.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Sears plans to sell the shop in cash gambling
Sears Holdings moved on Thursday to allay fears that it could run low on cash this year, announcing plans to sell stores in transactions that the company says could raise nearly $800 million.
Sears may be giving up its most profitable stores in exchange for a quick cash infusion today. In one of the transactions, Sears also expects current shareholders to foot the bill, potentially leaving indoor-outdoor thermometer them more exposed to the troubled retailer.
These moves come as the company’s largest investor, its chairman, Edward S. Lampert, has been increasing his personal stake in the company. Mr. Lampert engineered the merger of Kmart and Sears, Roebuck, in a $11 billion deal in late 2004, and his hedge funds now own 61 percent of the stock.
“As a matter of fact, spinoffs like these could leave Sears with a very unprofitable core Sears U.S. business,” said Mary Ross Gilbert, an analyst with Imperial Capital, a brokerage firm.
The price of Sears shares jumped 18.7 percent on Thursday, to $61.80, even as the company reported weak financial results.
Critics say that under Mr. Lampert the company has not spent solenoid valve enough to update its stores and that now, in the face of intense competition, Sears is in danger of permanently falling out of shoppers’ favor.
In a letter to shareholders, Mr. Lampert said: “We made it through the financial crisis and the housing crisis. Now we intend to make it through our current challenges and restore confidence in the company.”
For the year, Sears reported a loss of $3.14 billion, a number that included $2.7 billion of charges, compared with a profit of $133 million for 2010. The fourth quarter had a $2.44 billion loss, compared with a profit of $382 million the previous year.
The company also reported an annual decline in revenue, its fifth in a row. Such trends are a stark reminder that Sears’s problems have deepened since it came under Mr. Lampert’s control.
As Sears’s problems have persisted, all eyes are on its cash flows as concrete vibrating screed investors weigh its chances of survival. The company tacitly acknowledged the attention on its cash on Thursday.
It does not normally hold conference calls to discuss financial results, but Lou D’Ambrosio, Sears’s chief executive, said one of the reasons it did so after the latest earnings release was “to make our funding strategy clear.”
Analysts are also keeping an eye on Sears’s suppliers, as well as the companies, called factors, that make cash advances to the suppliers based on the goods they sell to Sears. If vendors and factors become wary of Sears’s creditworthiness, the retailer may have to pay suppliers cash upfront for goods, which could be a huge drain on liquidity.
“The focus of the call was for the vendors, and steps taken were all focused on near-term cash generation,” said Gary Balter, a retail analyst with Credit Suisse.
Sears said it had $277 million of adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda. But Ms. Ross Gilbert said that excluded $383 million of cash contributions to tomato paste its pensions. Including that would put Ebitda deep in negative territory. And if Sears’s top line continues to decline, the loss could be even deeper this year.
But Sears also has sizable cash sources. It had about $2.5 billion available on two credit lines at the end of January, though the company may draw much of that this fall as it spends large amounts stocking its stores ahead of the holidays.
This is where the property sales announced Thursday become important. If they all occur, and Sears succeeds in cutting costs and slashing inventory, the company could have a sizable cash cushion in the fall. That would bolster confidence and perhaps persuade suppliers not to demand upfront cash payments for their goods.
But the danger is that Sears may be selling some of its best properties, which could mean even worse operating results in the future. On the conference call on Thursday, a Sears executive declined to ac power cord say what proportion of its stores was profitable.
One of the asset sales appears to be in the bag. General Growth Properties, a mall operator, has agreed to buy 11 Sears properties, which will raise $270 million.
However, the other deal — which aims to raise as much as $500 million and is slated for later this year — is less straightforward. In effect, Sears aims to sell its smaller Hometown and Outlet stores to any interested Sears shareholders. The company said Mr. Lampert’s hedge funds expected to participate and exercise their rights in full.
The big question now is how many more of these types of sales Sears could do. More than 120 properties cannot be sold because they are effectively locked in an insurance subsidiary. Others may be harder to sell because metal stamping they are in less attractive malls.
Furthermore, agreements with Sears’s creditors may contain restrictions on assets sales. A Sears spokeswoman said, “The domestic credit agreement contains customary limitations on asset sales.” But she added, “We do not believe our debt agreements place material restrictions on us that would prevent us from taking value-adding actions, such as those announced today.”
Sears may be giving up its most profitable stores in exchange for a quick cash infusion today. In one of the transactions, Sears also expects current shareholders to foot the bill, potentially leaving indoor-outdoor thermometer them more exposed to the troubled retailer.
These moves come as the company’s largest investor, its chairman, Edward S. Lampert, has been increasing his personal stake in the company. Mr. Lampert engineered the merger of Kmart and Sears, Roebuck, in a $11 billion deal in late 2004, and his hedge funds now own 61 percent of the stock.
“As a matter of fact, spinoffs like these could leave Sears with a very unprofitable core Sears U.S. business,” said Mary Ross Gilbert, an analyst with Imperial Capital, a brokerage firm.
The price of Sears shares jumped 18.7 percent on Thursday, to $61.80, even as the company reported weak financial results.
Critics say that under Mr. Lampert the company has not spent solenoid valve enough to update its stores and that now, in the face of intense competition, Sears is in danger of permanently falling out of shoppers’ favor.
In a letter to shareholders, Mr. Lampert said: “We made it through the financial crisis and the housing crisis. Now we intend to make it through our current challenges and restore confidence in the company.”
For the year, Sears reported a loss of $3.14 billion, a number that included $2.7 billion of charges, compared with a profit of $133 million for 2010. The fourth quarter had a $2.44 billion loss, compared with a profit of $382 million the previous year.
The company also reported an annual decline in revenue, its fifth in a row. Such trends are a stark reminder that Sears’s problems have deepened since it came under Mr. Lampert’s control.
As Sears’s problems have persisted, all eyes are on its cash flows as concrete vibrating screed investors weigh its chances of survival. The company tacitly acknowledged the attention on its cash on Thursday.
It does not normally hold conference calls to discuss financial results, but Lou D’Ambrosio, Sears’s chief executive, said one of the reasons it did so after the latest earnings release was “to make our funding strategy clear.”
Analysts are also keeping an eye on Sears’s suppliers, as well as the companies, called factors, that make cash advances to the suppliers based on the goods they sell to Sears. If vendors and factors become wary of Sears’s creditworthiness, the retailer may have to pay suppliers cash upfront for goods, which could be a huge drain on liquidity.
“The focus of the call was for the vendors, and steps taken were all focused on near-term cash generation,” said Gary Balter, a retail analyst with Credit Suisse.
Sears said it had $277 million of adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda. But Ms. Ross Gilbert said that excluded $383 million of cash contributions to tomato paste its pensions. Including that would put Ebitda deep in negative territory. And if Sears’s top line continues to decline, the loss could be even deeper this year.
But Sears also has sizable cash sources. It had about $2.5 billion available on two credit lines at the end of January, though the company may draw much of that this fall as it spends large amounts stocking its stores ahead of the holidays.
This is where the property sales announced Thursday become important. If they all occur, and Sears succeeds in cutting costs and slashing inventory, the company could have a sizable cash cushion in the fall. That would bolster confidence and perhaps persuade suppliers not to demand upfront cash payments for their goods.
But the danger is that Sears may be selling some of its best properties, which could mean even worse operating results in the future. On the conference call on Thursday, a Sears executive declined to ac power cord say what proportion of its stores was profitable.
One of the asset sales appears to be in the bag. General Growth Properties, a mall operator, has agreed to buy 11 Sears properties, which will raise $270 million.
However, the other deal — which aims to raise as much as $500 million and is slated for later this year — is less straightforward. In effect, Sears aims to sell its smaller Hometown and Outlet stores to any interested Sears shareholders. The company said Mr. Lampert’s hedge funds expected to participate and exercise their rights in full.
The big question now is how many more of these types of sales Sears could do. More than 120 properties cannot be sold because they are effectively locked in an insurance subsidiary. Others may be harder to sell because metal stamping they are in less attractive malls.
Furthermore, agreements with Sears’s creditors may contain restrictions on assets sales. A Sears spokeswoman said, “The domestic credit agreement contains customary limitations on asset sales.” But she added, “We do not believe our debt agreements place material restrictions on us that would prevent us from taking value-adding actions, such as those announced today.”
Maryland Senate approved a same-sex marriage bill
The Maryland Senate voted Thursday evening to legalize same-sex marriage, the latest sign of growing national recognition of such unions among gay and lesbian couples.
Six states and the District of Columbia already issue same-sex marriage licenses -- Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York and Vermont. Five states -- Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey and Rhode Island -- allow civil unions that sheet metal stamping provide rights similar to marriage.
"All children deserve the opportunity to live in a loving, caring, committed, and stable home, protected equally under the law," O'Malley said in a statement after the vote.
New Jersey lawmakers approved same-sex marriage this month, but Gov. Chris Christie vetoed the legislation. He has said voters should decide the issue in a statewide referendum.
The flurry of activity is a stark change from two decades ago, when the issue of same-sex marriage first gained national attention. Just a decade ago, no states allowed such unions.
In 1996, when Congress defined marriage solely as a union between a man and a woman, 68% of Americans opposed same-sex marriage, with just 27% in favor, according to polling by Gallup. By May 2011, the ac power cord lines had crossed, with 53% of Americans in favor and 45% opposed, according to the organization.
The Maryland vote comes less than two weeks after Washington legislators voted to legalize same-sex marriage. That measure will take effect in the summer if it survives a likely court challenge.
Voters in Minnesota and North Carolina, meanwhile, will consider proposals in November to ban gay marriage in those states. New Hampshire lawmakers may also consider a repeal of its same-sex marriage law, according to the National Organization for Marriage, which opposes same-sex marriage. Lawsuits seeking to expand civil unions or turn back laws banning same-sex marriages are working through the courts in at least 12 states, including Hawaii, Minnesota and California, the organization said.
In November, the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press reported a more divided public -- 46% in favor of same-sex marriages and 44% opposed. But Pew also said the tomato paste uptick in support seems to be gaining steam, having jumped 9 percentage points in two years.
"There's no question that with so many Americans having changed their minds and opened their hearts as they've heard the stories of real couples and thought about why marriage matters, we now have tremendous momentum towards ending marriage discrimination," said Evan Wolfson, president of Freedom to Marry, which favors recognizing a right to marriage for gay couples.
Same-sex marriage became a national issue in 1993, after the Hawaii Supreme Court ruled that a ban on same-sex marriages violated the state constitution.
Legislation was introduced recently to allow same-sex marriages in Illinois, and bills from 2011 remain technically active in Hawaii and Minnesota, said Jack Tweedie of the National Council of State Legislatures. It's unclear whether any will see significant action, he said.
An effort is also underway to put a proposal to legalize same-sex concrete vibrating screed marriage on the November ballot in Maine, where voters previously overturned a 2009 state law authorizing same-sex marriage.
In California, meanwhile, a federal appeals court recently ruled against a voter-passed referendum that outlawed same-sex marriage. It said such a ban was unconstitutional and singled out gays and lesbians for discrimination. The case appears to be eventually headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Citing the 31 states in which voters have approved measures defining solenoid valve marriage as a union between a man and a woman, National Organization for Marriage President Brian Brown said he doesn't believe polls saying that a majority of Americans now support same-sex marriage.
Brown said Democratic legislatures -- not voters -- have been behind most of the recent action on same-sex marriage. Upcoming ballot initiatives will give voters an opportunity to refute the polling, and Brown says they will.
"The reality is that in these 31 states, everywhere we've had a vote, is that voters have said they believe marriage is an institution between a man and a woman," Brown said.
"What you will see is that there will be a vote in states representing all the different regions of this country and people are going to have the chance to say, Digital thermometer emphatically, 'No'," Brown said.
Six states and the District of Columbia already issue same-sex marriage licenses -- Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York and Vermont. Five states -- Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey and Rhode Island -- allow civil unions that sheet metal stamping provide rights similar to marriage.
"All children deserve the opportunity to live in a loving, caring, committed, and stable home, protected equally under the law," O'Malley said in a statement after the vote.
New Jersey lawmakers approved same-sex marriage this month, but Gov. Chris Christie vetoed the legislation. He has said voters should decide the issue in a statewide referendum.
The flurry of activity is a stark change from two decades ago, when the issue of same-sex marriage first gained national attention. Just a decade ago, no states allowed such unions.
In 1996, when Congress defined marriage solely as a union between a man and a woman, 68% of Americans opposed same-sex marriage, with just 27% in favor, according to polling by Gallup. By May 2011, the ac power cord lines had crossed, with 53% of Americans in favor and 45% opposed, according to the organization.
The Maryland vote comes less than two weeks after Washington legislators voted to legalize same-sex marriage. That measure will take effect in the summer if it survives a likely court challenge.
Voters in Minnesota and North Carolina, meanwhile, will consider proposals in November to ban gay marriage in those states. New Hampshire lawmakers may also consider a repeal of its same-sex marriage law, according to the National Organization for Marriage, which opposes same-sex marriage. Lawsuits seeking to expand civil unions or turn back laws banning same-sex marriages are working through the courts in at least 12 states, including Hawaii, Minnesota and California, the organization said.
In November, the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press reported a more divided public -- 46% in favor of same-sex marriages and 44% opposed. But Pew also said the tomato paste uptick in support seems to be gaining steam, having jumped 9 percentage points in two years.
"There's no question that with so many Americans having changed their minds and opened their hearts as they've heard the stories of real couples and thought about why marriage matters, we now have tremendous momentum towards ending marriage discrimination," said Evan Wolfson, president of Freedom to Marry, which favors recognizing a right to marriage for gay couples.
Same-sex marriage became a national issue in 1993, after the Hawaii Supreme Court ruled that a ban on same-sex marriages violated the state constitution.
Legislation was introduced recently to allow same-sex marriages in Illinois, and bills from 2011 remain technically active in Hawaii and Minnesota, said Jack Tweedie of the National Council of State Legislatures. It's unclear whether any will see significant action, he said.
An effort is also underway to put a proposal to legalize same-sex concrete vibrating screed marriage on the November ballot in Maine, where voters previously overturned a 2009 state law authorizing same-sex marriage.
In California, meanwhile, a federal appeals court recently ruled against a voter-passed referendum that outlawed same-sex marriage. It said such a ban was unconstitutional and singled out gays and lesbians for discrimination. The case appears to be eventually headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Citing the 31 states in which voters have approved measures defining solenoid valve marriage as a union between a man and a woman, National Organization for Marriage President Brian Brown said he doesn't believe polls saying that a majority of Americans now support same-sex marriage.
Brown said Democratic legislatures -- not voters -- have been behind most of the recent action on same-sex marriage. Upcoming ballot initiatives will give voters an opportunity to refute the polling, and Brown says they will.
"The reality is that in these 31 states, everywhere we've had a vote, is that voters have said they believe marriage is an institution between a man and a woman," Brown said.
"What you will see is that there will be a vote in states representing all the different regions of this country and people are going to have the chance to say, Digital thermometer emphatically, 'No'," Brown said.
Putin to arouse Russia's enemy in a campaign speech
In a short but fiery presidential campaign speech, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Thursday called on voters to prepare for battle to protect the country's future.
Putin, who presents himself as a defender of Russia, has about 50% support nationwide and is expected to win his third presidential term in the March 4 election, in part because there are no strong opponents on the indoor-outdoor thermometer ballot. Large antigovernment protests have been held recently in response to parliamentary elections won by Putin's party that many considered damaged by fraud.
In his speech Thursday, Putin did not specify who or what Russia would face in battle, though he has described protest leaders as agents of the West. He spoke of the 1812 battle of Borodino and quoted from a school curriculum poem by Mikhail Lermontov: "'Let's die near Moscow like our brothers!' And to die we promised and the oath of loyalty we kept."
"We won't allow anybody to interfere with our internal affairs and we won't allow anybody to impose his will on us because we have a will of our own!" Putin told the crowd, largely made up of government workers brought near the Luzhniki soccer stadium in chartered buses. "The battle of Russia is continuing! Victory will be ours!"
Some in the crowd praised the prime minister and former president and carried signs with slogans such as "Putin Is Our President" or "Putin Is the Best," while others showed little enthusiasm, at times hesitating to say why they were solenoid valve attending a pro-Putin rally. Some said they were reminded of the Soviet era, when national holidays meant every enterprise and organization was ordered to provide a certain number of people equipped with paper flowers, balloons, banners and posters of leaders.
Government opponents and foreign influences are threatening to weaken Russia, Putin told tens of thousands of people at a rally in Moscow held on Defender of the Fatherland Day, a national holiday known as Red Army Day during the Soviet era.
The rally participants marched through the winter sludge before entering the soccer stadium. Men with harmonicas mixed with the crowd, playing popular songs.
Svetlana Petrova, a social worker from a Moscow suburb, said she was not ordered to attend the vibrating screed rally. "No, I volunteered!" she said, giggling. Her colleagues laughed.
One young municipal worker from Zelenograd, an industrial town northwest of Moscow, who gave his name only as Nikolai, said he and his fellow workers were offered an extra day off to compensate for the time they spent demonstrating for Putin.
Yevgeny Krasilich, an engineer from Mosgortrans, a Moscow city-owned company in charge of municipal transportation, said that under Putin his salary was constantly growing and that he had bought an apartment, a tomato paste dacha and a car. Krasilich, a father of two and grandfather of three, said his company brought at least 5,000 members of its 30,000-person workforce to the rally.
"I am happy with everything and I want my life to go on the same way," Krasilich said. "Putin is our only hope and guarantee!"
Alexei Stebennikov, who is unemployed, said Putin is a great talker and that he doesn't drink or smoke and thus sets a good example for youths.
In front of them were Cossacks dressed in trench coats and mutton fur hats and a big group of middle-aged men and women representing the Industrial Wastes company. They were drinking hot tea from plastic glasses and carrying portraits of a very youngish-looking Putin.
Boris Dubin, a senior researcher with the independent Levada Center polling organization, said Putin's approach Thursday stemmed from the protests after the December parliamentary elections and showed the ac power cord authoritarian leader's increasing reliance on the rhetoric of confrontation and war.
Denis Grishin, a municipal worker from central Moscow who said he was enlisted by the administration to come to the rally after his night shift, was holding a banner which read in English: "In Putin we trust." Grishin said he didn't know the meaning of the banner, which was handed to him by one of the organizers, and did not want to vote for Putin.
"The recent mass public protests … demonstrated that Putin's positions are no longer as reliable as they used to be and this victory will not be accepted by many," Dubin said. "Putin is flexing his war sheet metal stamping muscles today to a crowd which doesn't want war and which doesn't see any danger to the country and they don't fall for such rhetoric."
Putin, who presents himself as a defender of Russia, has about 50% support nationwide and is expected to win his third presidential term in the March 4 election, in part because there are no strong opponents on the indoor-outdoor thermometer ballot. Large antigovernment protests have been held recently in response to parliamentary elections won by Putin's party that many considered damaged by fraud.
In his speech Thursday, Putin did not specify who or what Russia would face in battle, though he has described protest leaders as agents of the West. He spoke of the 1812 battle of Borodino and quoted from a school curriculum poem by Mikhail Lermontov: "'Let's die near Moscow like our brothers!' And to die we promised and the oath of loyalty we kept."
"We won't allow anybody to interfere with our internal affairs and we won't allow anybody to impose his will on us because we have a will of our own!" Putin told the crowd, largely made up of government workers brought near the Luzhniki soccer stadium in chartered buses. "The battle of Russia is continuing! Victory will be ours!"
Some in the crowd praised the prime minister and former president and carried signs with slogans such as "Putin Is Our President" or "Putin Is the Best," while others showed little enthusiasm, at times hesitating to say why they were solenoid valve attending a pro-Putin rally. Some said they were reminded of the Soviet era, when national holidays meant every enterprise and organization was ordered to provide a certain number of people equipped with paper flowers, balloons, banners and posters of leaders.
Government opponents and foreign influences are threatening to weaken Russia, Putin told tens of thousands of people at a rally in Moscow held on Defender of the Fatherland Day, a national holiday known as Red Army Day during the Soviet era.
The rally participants marched through the winter sludge before entering the soccer stadium. Men with harmonicas mixed with the crowd, playing popular songs.
Svetlana Petrova, a social worker from a Moscow suburb, said she was not ordered to attend the vibrating screed rally. "No, I volunteered!" she said, giggling. Her colleagues laughed.
One young municipal worker from Zelenograd, an industrial town northwest of Moscow, who gave his name only as Nikolai, said he and his fellow workers were offered an extra day off to compensate for the time they spent demonstrating for Putin.
Yevgeny Krasilich, an engineer from Mosgortrans, a Moscow city-owned company in charge of municipal transportation, said that under Putin his salary was constantly growing and that he had bought an apartment, a tomato paste dacha and a car. Krasilich, a father of two and grandfather of three, said his company brought at least 5,000 members of its 30,000-person workforce to the rally.
"I am happy with everything and I want my life to go on the same way," Krasilich said. "Putin is our only hope and guarantee!"
Alexei Stebennikov, who is unemployed, said Putin is a great talker and that he doesn't drink or smoke and thus sets a good example for youths.
In front of them were Cossacks dressed in trench coats and mutton fur hats and a big group of middle-aged men and women representing the Industrial Wastes company. They were drinking hot tea from plastic glasses and carrying portraits of a very youngish-looking Putin.
Boris Dubin, a senior researcher with the independent Levada Center polling organization, said Putin's approach Thursday stemmed from the protests after the December parliamentary elections and showed the ac power cord authoritarian leader's increasing reliance on the rhetoric of confrontation and war.
Denis Grishin, a municipal worker from central Moscow who said he was enlisted by the administration to come to the rally after his night shift, was holding a banner which read in English: "In Putin we trust." Grishin said he didn't know the meaning of the banner, which was handed to him by one of the organizers, and did not want to vote for Putin.
"The recent mass public protests … demonstrated that Putin's positions are no longer as reliable as they used to be and this victory will not be accepted by many," Dubin said. "Putin is flexing his war sheet metal stamping muscles today to a crowd which doesn't want war and which doesn't see any danger to the country and they don't fall for such rhetoric."
Monday, February 20, 2012
The national debt higher than the expected $ 1 trillion in 10 years
President Obama rolled out an election-year budget on Monday that would delay action to reduce the national debt in favor of fresh spending on Democratic priorities aimed at rebuilding the American middle class.
In his final budget request before facing voters in November, Obama called for $350?billion in new stimulus to maintain lower payroll taxes, bolster domestic manufacturing, lure jobs back indoor-outdoor thermometer from overseas, hire teachers, retrain workers and fix the nation’s crumbling infrastructure. There would be only modest trims to federal health programs and no changes to Social Security, the biggest drivers of future borrowing, despite last year’s raucous political debate over the federal debt.
Federal agency budgets would be face limits agreed to during last year’s budget battles, forcing belt-tightening at the Pentagon and the lowest spending on domestic agencies as a percentage of the economy in at least a decade.
Obama said his proposal would save at least $4?trillion over the next 10 years and stabilize government borrowing. But Republicans blasted the budget as insufficient, with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) deriding it as “a campaign document.”
Instead, Obama would reduce deficits by raising taxes by nearly $2?trillion over the next decade on corporations and the wealthy, in part by letting expire George W. Bush-era tax cuts on household income over $250,000 a year. And the president is encouraging lawmakers to rewrite the tax code to remove the alternative minimum tax for middle-class solenoid valve families and require millionaires to pay at least 30?percent of their annual income to the Internal Revenue Service.
Despite the savings, budget deficits would be markedly higher than they would under a debt-reduction plan Obama submitted to Congress in September, staying well above $600?billion a year for most of the next decade. The portion of the debt held by outside investors would climb to $18.7?trillion by 2021, or 76.5 percent of the overall economy — twice the size of the debt before the recession hit in 2007 and $1?trillion higher than the president’s September forecast.
Administration officials blamed that increase in large part on gloomier economic projections, which tend to depress tax collections, increase government spending and drive up deficits. Since the budget was prepared, job growth has proved stronger than expected, officials said, adding that the picture would look brighter today.
But White House economic adviser Gene Sperling acknowledged that the administration added “our aspirations” to the $3.8?trillion request for fiscal 2013. New initiatives would increase 10-year deficit concrete vibrating screed projections by about $350?billion. They include an extra $125?billion for road and rail projects, as well permanently extending tax breaks that provide families up to $10,000 for college tuition and reward businesses for conducting research in the United States.
In an unusually partisan budget message to Congress, Obama wrote that “reining in our deficits is not an end in itself” but “a necessary step to rebuilding a strong foundation so our economy can grow and create good jobs.” Drawing a sharp contrast with his Republican opponents, Obama said his approach “rejects the ‘you’re on your own’ economics that have led to a widening gap between the richest and poorest Americans.”
GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney called Obama’s plan “an insult to the American taxpayer” that would not take “meaningful steps tomato paste toward solving our entitlement crisis.”
The budget marks the second year in a row Obama has ignored calls to restructure Social Security and Medicare, the nation’s major entitlement programs. Last year, he declined to endorse the recommendations of a bipartisan fiscal commission he appointed to develop a electric winch debt-reduction strategy. He and other Democrats have refused to consider deep cuts to benefits unless Republicans reevaluate their stand against higher taxes.
“Today, we are seeing signs that our economy is on the mend. But we are not out of the woods yet. Instead, we are facing a make-or-break moment for the middle class, and for all those who are fighting to get there,” Obama wrote. “This is the defining issue of our time.”
Republicans charged that the president had met his debt-reduction goals with tax increases and accounting gimmicks while ignoring the massive cost increases that are looming on the horizon as the nation’s population ages.
“Instead of an America built to last, this is a plan for an America drowning in debt,” House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (Wis.) told reporters. “All we’re getting is more gas thermocouple spending, more borrowing.”
Administration officials noted that the changes would increase projected savings significantly compared with the 2012 budget request, which offered $1?trillion less in 10-year deficit reduction.
“This is a Democratic budget that has savings in Medicaid. It has some savings from new beneficiaries in Medicare in 2017,” Sperling told reporters. “It has a lot of very tough choices.”
Some independent budget analysts applauded the White House for sticking to its previous goal of slicing $4?trillion from future borrowing. But others expressed disappointment power supply cord that the White House didn’t move the conversation forward.
The budget released Monday would trim spending on federal health-care programs by about $360?billion over the next decade, primarily by reducing payments to drug companies and other providers. Starting in 2017, Obama also proposes to raise Medicare premiums for new retirees and seniors with higher incomes, start charging co-payments for home health-care services, and penalize patients who buy Medigap policies to take care of Medicare co-payments and deductibles.
“Their plan isn’t actually big enough yet to fix the problem,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. “It has a lot of good components. But they haven’t done enough to make sure that plan becomes the beginning of a national discussion so that we actually get the job done.”
In a preemptive attack issued hours before the budget was made public, Romney signaled that overhauling entitlement sheet metal stamping programs would be a key issue in November if he wins the GOP nomination. He has called for far-reaching changes to Social Security and Medicare that would transform the retirement landscape for future retirees by raising the Social Security eligibility age, reducing checks for higher-income seniors and replacing the open-ended Medicare entitlement with limited federal payments that could be used to buy private insurance.
In his final budget request before facing voters in November, Obama called for $350?billion in new stimulus to maintain lower payroll taxes, bolster domestic manufacturing, lure jobs back indoor-outdoor thermometer from overseas, hire teachers, retrain workers and fix the nation’s crumbling infrastructure. There would be only modest trims to federal health programs and no changes to Social Security, the biggest drivers of future borrowing, despite last year’s raucous political debate over the federal debt.
Federal agency budgets would be face limits agreed to during last year’s budget battles, forcing belt-tightening at the Pentagon and the lowest spending on domestic agencies as a percentage of the economy in at least a decade.
Obama said his proposal would save at least $4?trillion over the next 10 years and stabilize government borrowing. But Republicans blasted the budget as insufficient, with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) deriding it as “a campaign document.”
Instead, Obama would reduce deficits by raising taxes by nearly $2?trillion over the next decade on corporations and the wealthy, in part by letting expire George W. Bush-era tax cuts on household income over $250,000 a year. And the president is encouraging lawmakers to rewrite the tax code to remove the alternative minimum tax for middle-class solenoid valve families and require millionaires to pay at least 30?percent of their annual income to the Internal Revenue Service.
Despite the savings, budget deficits would be markedly higher than they would under a debt-reduction plan Obama submitted to Congress in September, staying well above $600?billion a year for most of the next decade. The portion of the debt held by outside investors would climb to $18.7?trillion by 2021, or 76.5 percent of the overall economy — twice the size of the debt before the recession hit in 2007 and $1?trillion higher than the president’s September forecast.
Administration officials blamed that increase in large part on gloomier economic projections, which tend to depress tax collections, increase government spending and drive up deficits. Since the budget was prepared, job growth has proved stronger than expected, officials said, adding that the picture would look brighter today.
But White House economic adviser Gene Sperling acknowledged that the administration added “our aspirations” to the $3.8?trillion request for fiscal 2013. New initiatives would increase 10-year deficit concrete vibrating screed projections by about $350?billion. They include an extra $125?billion for road and rail projects, as well permanently extending tax breaks that provide families up to $10,000 for college tuition and reward businesses for conducting research in the United States.
In an unusually partisan budget message to Congress, Obama wrote that “reining in our deficits is not an end in itself” but “a necessary step to rebuilding a strong foundation so our economy can grow and create good jobs.” Drawing a sharp contrast with his Republican opponents, Obama said his approach “rejects the ‘you’re on your own’ economics that have led to a widening gap between the richest and poorest Americans.”
GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney called Obama’s plan “an insult to the American taxpayer” that would not take “meaningful steps tomato paste toward solving our entitlement crisis.”
The budget marks the second year in a row Obama has ignored calls to restructure Social Security and Medicare, the nation’s major entitlement programs. Last year, he declined to endorse the recommendations of a bipartisan fiscal commission he appointed to develop a electric winch debt-reduction strategy. He and other Democrats have refused to consider deep cuts to benefits unless Republicans reevaluate their stand against higher taxes.
“Today, we are seeing signs that our economy is on the mend. But we are not out of the woods yet. Instead, we are facing a make-or-break moment for the middle class, and for all those who are fighting to get there,” Obama wrote. “This is the defining issue of our time.”
Republicans charged that the president had met his debt-reduction goals with tax increases and accounting gimmicks while ignoring the massive cost increases that are looming on the horizon as the nation’s population ages.
“Instead of an America built to last, this is a plan for an America drowning in debt,” House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (Wis.) told reporters. “All we’re getting is more gas thermocouple spending, more borrowing.”
Administration officials noted that the changes would increase projected savings significantly compared with the 2012 budget request, which offered $1?trillion less in 10-year deficit reduction.
“This is a Democratic budget that has savings in Medicaid. It has some savings from new beneficiaries in Medicare in 2017,” Sperling told reporters. “It has a lot of very tough choices.”
Some independent budget analysts applauded the White House for sticking to its previous goal of slicing $4?trillion from future borrowing. But others expressed disappointment power supply cord that the White House didn’t move the conversation forward.
The budget released Monday would trim spending on federal health-care programs by about $360?billion over the next decade, primarily by reducing payments to drug companies and other providers. Starting in 2017, Obama also proposes to raise Medicare premiums for new retirees and seniors with higher incomes, start charging co-payments for home health-care services, and penalize patients who buy Medigap policies to take care of Medicare co-payments and deductibles.
“Their plan isn’t actually big enough yet to fix the problem,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. “It has a lot of good components. But they haven’t done enough to make sure that plan becomes the beginning of a national discussion so that we actually get the job done.”
In a preemptive attack issued hours before the budget was made public, Romney signaled that overhauling entitlement sheet metal stamping programs would be a key issue in November if he wins the GOP nomination. He has called for far-reaching changes to Social Security and Medicare that would transform the retirement landscape for future retirees by raising the Social Security eligibility age, reducing checks for higher-income seniors and replacing the open-ended Medicare entitlement with limited federal payments that could be used to buy private insurance.
New York Nightclub Brawl Sends Monaco Prince to the Hospital
A brawl at a Manhattan nightclub over the weekend ended with Monaco's Prince Pierre Casiraghi in the hospital and a New York man facing assault charges.
The incident occurred around 2 a.m. Saturday at the Double Seven Nightclub, when according to indoor-outdoor thermometer police 24-year-old Casiraghi, the grandson of Grace Kelly, got into a confrontation with 47-year-old Adam Hock, a former nightclub owner.
Casiraghi reportedly approached Hock, leading to a physical confrontation. Hock, who according to the New York Post was sitting with friends including supermodels Natasha Poly, Valentina Zalyaeva and Anja Rubik, allegedly punched Casigraghi and three friends who came to his aid.
"Pierre's face looked broken, with deep cuts and blood everywhere," a witness told the New York Post. "He looked like he solenoid valve needed plastic surgery."
Hock was arrested and charged with four counts of third-degree assault.
Hock's lawyer, Sal Strazzullo, said his client acted in self defense and was trying to protect the people he was sitting with.
"The complaint speaks for itself, when it comes to four men allegedly saying that my client was the vibrating screed attacker," Strazzullo told ABCNews.com. "It was four men against one."
Aaron Richard Golub, who is representing the Casiraghi and his friends, disputes the idea that Hock was protecting his friends.
"This incident was tomato paste entirely unprovoked," Golub told ABCNews.com. "It was a one sided incident [and] not from my client's side."
According to Golub, Casiraghi was treated for his injuries at a New York hospital over the weekend and then released.
The incident occurred around 2 a.m. Saturday at the Double Seven Nightclub, when according to indoor-outdoor thermometer police 24-year-old Casiraghi, the grandson of Grace Kelly, got into a confrontation with 47-year-old Adam Hock, a former nightclub owner.
Casiraghi reportedly approached Hock, leading to a physical confrontation. Hock, who according to the New York Post was sitting with friends including supermodels Natasha Poly, Valentina Zalyaeva and Anja Rubik, allegedly punched Casigraghi and three friends who came to his aid.
"Pierre's face looked broken, with deep cuts and blood everywhere," a witness told the New York Post. "He looked like he solenoid valve needed plastic surgery."
Hock was arrested and charged with four counts of third-degree assault.
Hock's lawyer, Sal Strazzullo, said his client acted in self defense and was trying to protect the people he was sitting with.
"The complaint speaks for itself, when it comes to four men allegedly saying that my client was the vibrating screed attacker," Strazzullo told ABCNews.com. "It was four men against one."
Aaron Richard Golub, who is representing the Casiraghi and his friends, disputes the idea that Hock was protecting his friends.
"This incident was tomato paste entirely unprovoked," Golub told ABCNews.com. "It was a one sided incident [and] not from my client's side."
According to Golub, Casiraghi was treated for his injuries at a New York hospital over the weekend and then released.
Spain sending military planes to retrieve treasure
Spain said Monday it will soon send hulking military transport planes to Florida to retrieve 17 tons of treasure that U.S. undersea explorers found but ultimately lost in American courts, a find experts have electric winch speculated could be the richest shipwreck treasure in history.
The Civil Guard said agents would leave within hours to take possession of the booty, worth an estimated euro380 million ($504 million), and two Spanish Hercules transport planes will bring it back. But it was not exactly clear when — Monday or Tuesday — the planes and the agents would leave Spain.
Last week, a federal judge ordered Tampa-based Odyssey Marine Exploration to give Spanish officials access to the silver coins and other artifacts beginning Tuesday.
Odyssey found them in a Spanish galleon, the Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes, in 2007 off Portugal. Spain argued successfully in court that it never relinquished ownership of the ship or its contents.
The Spanish Culture Ministry said Monday the coins are classified as national heritage ac power cord and as such must stay inside the country and will be displayed in one or more Spanish museums. It ruled out the idea of the treasure being sold to ease Spain's national debt.
Besides its debt woes, Spain is saddled with a nearly dormant economy and a 23 percent jobless rate.
Odyssey made an international splash in 2007 when it recovered the 594,000 coins and other artifacts from the Atlantic Ocean near the Straits of Gilbraltar. At the time, experts said the coins could be worth as much as $500 million to collectors, which would have made it the richest shipwreck treasure in history.
The company said in earnings statements that it has spent $2.6 million salvaging, transporting, sheet metal stamping storing and conserving the treasure.
Odyssey fought Spain's claim to the treasure, arguing that the wreck was never positively identified as the Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes. And if it was that vessel, then the ship was on a commercial trade trip — not a sovereign mission — at the time it sank, meaning Spain would have no firm claim to the cargo, Odyssey argued. International treaties generally hold that warships sunk in battle are protected from treasure seekers.
The Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes was sunk by British warships in the Atlantic while sailing digital thermometer back from South America with more than 200 people on board.
The Civil Guard said agents would leave within hours to take possession of the booty, worth an estimated euro380 million ($504 million), and two Spanish Hercules transport planes will bring it back. But it was not exactly clear when — Monday or Tuesday — the planes and the agents would leave Spain.
Last week, a federal judge ordered Tampa-based Odyssey Marine Exploration to give Spanish officials access to the silver coins and other artifacts beginning Tuesday.
Odyssey found them in a Spanish galleon, the Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes, in 2007 off Portugal. Spain argued successfully in court that it never relinquished ownership of the ship or its contents.
The Spanish Culture Ministry said Monday the coins are classified as national heritage ac power cord and as such must stay inside the country and will be displayed in one or more Spanish museums. It ruled out the idea of the treasure being sold to ease Spain's national debt.
Besides its debt woes, Spain is saddled with a nearly dormant economy and a 23 percent jobless rate.
Odyssey made an international splash in 2007 when it recovered the 594,000 coins and other artifacts from the Atlantic Ocean near the Straits of Gilbraltar. At the time, experts said the coins could be worth as much as $500 million to collectors, which would have made it the richest shipwreck treasure in history.
The company said in earnings statements that it has spent $2.6 million salvaging, transporting, sheet metal stamping storing and conserving the treasure.
Odyssey fought Spain's claim to the treasure, arguing that the wreck was never positively identified as the Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes. And if it was that vessel, then the ship was on a commercial trade trip — not a sovereign mission — at the time it sank, meaning Spain would have no firm claim to the cargo, Odyssey argued. International treaties generally hold that warships sunk in battle are protected from treasure seekers.
The Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes was sunk by British warships in the Atlantic while sailing digital thermometer back from South America with more than 200 people on board.
Election hinges on New Hampshire, where Obama has 59.4 percent chance of victory
As though New Hampshire wasn't already overprivileged enough in the broken primary system, the state may be the one to tip the scales in the general election to solenoid valve either party. According to The Signal's elections model, which orders the states from most to least likely to go to the Republican candidate, a GOP win in New Hampshire gives the challenger 270 votes to Obama's 268. If the president wins, he carries the election with 272 votes to his opponent's 266.
Our model, which I developed with Yahoo Labs economist Patrick Hummel by analyzing data from the past 10 elections, gives Obama a 59.4 percent likelihood of winning in the Granite State. This number is slightly higher than our prediction in our first post about our equations last week because the Real Clear Politics average of presidential approval polls has increased from 48 to 49 percent. The most likely outcome is still that Obama will win by 303 votes, carrying Ohio and Virginia as well as New Hampshire. As we noted before, however, elections are just as subject to chance as football games, and if the tomato paste contest were held 100 times, we'd expect the Republican to win about forty times.
What if Obama wins Ohio but loses New Hampshire? The math is easy enough to tally, but in fact this is something our model does not allow. That is because prominent research on presidential models demonstrates that the most efficient way to predict state outcomes is to rank them in the order that they fall from one candidate to the other, rather than consider them as 50 independent contests. Since Virginia is more likely to vote Republican than either Ohio or New Hampshire, for example, if it votes Democratic then we assume the other two did as well.
Of course, in reality the states do not line up like dominos. Instead, they are independent elections in which we can draw correlations from regional or ideological ties that lead some states to move in tandem. While it's very difficult to imagine scenario where the Republican wins Delaware, a reliably Democratic state, and loses Oklahoma, a staunch conservative bastion, we can easily imagine the electric winch dice falling in a way that gives Virginia to the Democrats while Ohio and New Hampshire go Republican. More work needs to be done to identify all these relationship with any precision, as the noted paper makes clear. We'll be launching a predictions game at The Signal later this year that we hope will help produce this data.
We should note that, while this model does not use prediction market data--that seems like cheating--its prediction of a 59.4 percent likelihood of an Obama victory is nearly exactly where the spread currently sits. And of course, there is still a lot of campaign left. If we had had this model ready to publish just a few weeks ago, it would ac power cord have pointed toward a more likely Republican victory, as Obama's job approval ratings were significantly lower. While the model currently predicts a second term for the president, his position is precarious. Drop his approval rating three percentage points, to 46 percent, and New Hampshire flips columns and the Republican wins 52.9 percent of the time.
Our model, which I developed with Yahoo Labs economist Patrick Hummel by analyzing data from the past 10 elections, gives Obama a 59.4 percent likelihood of winning in the Granite State. This number is slightly higher than our prediction in our first post about our equations last week because the Real Clear Politics average of presidential approval polls has increased from 48 to 49 percent. The most likely outcome is still that Obama will win by 303 votes, carrying Ohio and Virginia as well as New Hampshire. As we noted before, however, elections are just as subject to chance as football games, and if the tomato paste contest were held 100 times, we'd expect the Republican to win about forty times.
What if Obama wins Ohio but loses New Hampshire? The math is easy enough to tally, but in fact this is something our model does not allow. That is because prominent research on presidential models demonstrates that the most efficient way to predict state outcomes is to rank them in the order that they fall from one candidate to the other, rather than consider them as 50 independent contests. Since Virginia is more likely to vote Republican than either Ohio or New Hampshire, for example, if it votes Democratic then we assume the other two did as well.
Of course, in reality the states do not line up like dominos. Instead, they are independent elections in which we can draw correlations from regional or ideological ties that lead some states to move in tandem. While it's very difficult to imagine scenario where the Republican wins Delaware, a reliably Democratic state, and loses Oklahoma, a staunch conservative bastion, we can easily imagine the electric winch dice falling in a way that gives Virginia to the Democrats while Ohio and New Hampshire go Republican. More work needs to be done to identify all these relationship with any precision, as the noted paper makes clear. We'll be launching a predictions game at The Signal later this year that we hope will help produce this data.
We should note that, while this model does not use prediction market data--that seems like cheating--its prediction of a 59.4 percent likelihood of an Obama victory is nearly exactly where the spread currently sits. And of course, there is still a lot of campaign left. If we had had this model ready to publish just a few weeks ago, it would ac power cord have pointed toward a more likely Republican victory, as Obama's job approval ratings were significantly lower. While the model currently predicts a second term for the president, his position is precarious. Drop his approval rating three percentage points, to 46 percent, and New Hampshire flips columns and the Republican wins 52.9 percent of the time.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Paul McCartney received his star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame
He brought several Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member pals along for the ride, including Neil Young, who gave McCartney a cheery introduction, Eagles guitarist Joe Walsh and power supply cord pop music power couple Elvis Costello and Diana Krall. Jazz great Herbie Hancock was there as well as musician-producer Don Was and former Electric Light Orchestra leader/Traveling Wilburys member Jeff Lynne. McCartney's wife, Nancy, and son, James, also attended the ceremony.
"I'm so proud to be doing this," he added. "As a musician, as a songwriter, Paul's craft and his art are truly at the top of his game, the way Charlie Chaplin was an actor. He has an ability to put melodies and feelings and chords together, but it's the soul that he puts into everything he does that makes me feel so good and so happy to be here."
Although Starr, the only other surviving Beatle, lives in Southern California, McCartney said, "Ringo's a little under the weather, so he's not here." The comment drew sighs of disappointment from onlookers.
"Let me tell you a little bit about our friend Paul here just as a musician," said Young, wearing a black gas thermocouple leather Buffalo Springfield tour jacket. "When I was in high school and the Beatles came out, I loved the Beatles and I tried to learn how to play like them, and no one could figure out what Paul was doing on the bass. Not only was he playing differently because he plays left-handed, he played notes that no one had put together before -- in a way that made us stand in awe of this great musician."
"When I was growing up in Liverpool and listening to Buddy Holly and the other rock 'n' roll greats, I never thought I'd ever come to get a star on the Walk of Fame," said McCartney, 69 -- a sentiment probably shared by members of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, who had been after him to accept the award ever since it was approved for him in 1993. "But here we are today," he said.
Many fans who showed up in Hollywood brought various bits of memorabilia in hopes of snagging an autograph: One teenage girl had a worn LP copy of his first solo album, 1970's "McCartney." Others leaned across metal electric winch police barricades with copies of "A Hard Day's Night," "Beatles for Sale," "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," books, photos and a plethora of other items.
"Today," not coincidentally, was the 48th anniversary of the Beatles' game-changing U.S. television debut on "The Ed Sullivan Show." The ceremony also came synergistically just two days after the release of McCartney's latest album, "Kisses on the Bottom," a collection of mostly pre-rock pop songs he loved as a child, supplemented by two originals.
Always the Beatle most attuned to business matters, he closed his succinct speech by telling fans and others "around the world that I send you all hugs and kisses on the bottom."
It's a particularly busy week for McCartney: After the star ceremony, he was slated to do a live performance in one of Capitol's recording studios to be streamed live at 7 tonight on iTunes and Apple TV. On Friday, he's the guest of honor at the Recording Academy's annual MusiCares Person of the Year all-star tribute gala and fundraiser. And Sunday, he's on tomato paste tap to perform during the Grammy Awards telecast.
Only one succeeded: On his way back into the Capitol building, McCartney spotted Fullerton 18-year-old Paul Madariaga holding up a Hofner bass guitar like the one McCartney first popularized nearly half a century ago when he was just out of his teens. McCartney gave a nod and the instrument was handed to him. The world’s most famous bassist hoisted it aloft, as he often does at the end of his concerts, scribbled his name across the front with a hastily solenoid valve supplied Sharpie and passed it back to Madariaga.
"I'm so proud to be doing this," he added. "As a musician, as a songwriter, Paul's craft and his art are truly at the top of his game, the way Charlie Chaplin was an actor. He has an ability to put melodies and feelings and chords together, but it's the soul that he puts into everything he does that makes me feel so good and so happy to be here."
Although Starr, the only other surviving Beatle, lives in Southern California, McCartney said, "Ringo's a little under the weather, so he's not here." The comment drew sighs of disappointment from onlookers.
"Let me tell you a little bit about our friend Paul here just as a musician," said Young, wearing a black gas thermocouple leather Buffalo Springfield tour jacket. "When I was in high school and the Beatles came out, I loved the Beatles and I tried to learn how to play like them, and no one could figure out what Paul was doing on the bass. Not only was he playing differently because he plays left-handed, he played notes that no one had put together before -- in a way that made us stand in awe of this great musician."
"When I was growing up in Liverpool and listening to Buddy Holly and the other rock 'n' roll greats, I never thought I'd ever come to get a star on the Walk of Fame," said McCartney, 69 -- a sentiment probably shared by members of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, who had been after him to accept the award ever since it was approved for him in 1993. "But here we are today," he said.
Many fans who showed up in Hollywood brought various bits of memorabilia in hopes of snagging an autograph: One teenage girl had a worn LP copy of his first solo album, 1970's "McCartney." Others leaned across metal electric winch police barricades with copies of "A Hard Day's Night," "Beatles for Sale," "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," books, photos and a plethora of other items.
"Today," not coincidentally, was the 48th anniversary of the Beatles' game-changing U.S. television debut on "The Ed Sullivan Show." The ceremony also came synergistically just two days after the release of McCartney's latest album, "Kisses on the Bottom," a collection of mostly pre-rock pop songs he loved as a child, supplemented by two originals.
Always the Beatle most attuned to business matters, he closed his succinct speech by telling fans and others "around the world that I send you all hugs and kisses on the bottom."
It's a particularly busy week for McCartney: After the star ceremony, he was slated to do a live performance in one of Capitol's recording studios to be streamed live at 7 tonight on iTunes and Apple TV. On Friday, he's the guest of honor at the Recording Academy's annual MusiCares Person of the Year all-star tribute gala and fundraiser. And Sunday, he's on tomato paste tap to perform during the Grammy Awards telecast.
Only one succeeded: On his way back into the Capitol building, McCartney spotted Fullerton 18-year-old Paul Madariaga holding up a Hofner bass guitar like the one McCartney first popularized nearly half a century ago when he was just out of his teens. McCartney gave a nod and the instrument was handed to him. The world’s most famous bassist hoisted it aloft, as he often does at the end of his concerts, scribbled his name across the front with a hastily solenoid valve supplied Sharpie and passed it back to Madariaga.
Romney's negative ads could cost him voters
Santorum's lament has already been sung — with encores — by former House speaker Newt Gingrich, who has twice been on the receiving end of millions of dollars of attack indoor-outdoor thermometer advertising from Romney and his supporters. Now, however, it's not just Romney's rivals who are saying Romney is all negative, all the time. As he trains his sights on Santorum, he faces increasing complaints that his focus on rubbishing his opponents, successfully, is coming at the expense of a compelling message and his own appeal to voters.
The Romney campaign began pointing the dagger at Santorum immediately after an embarrassing loss in three state contests Tuesday, when Romney began tagging Santorum as a Republican who had helped the party "lose its way" by "spending too much, borrowing too much, and earmarking too much." Santorum and Gingrich "are the very Republicans who acted like Democrats" when it came to spending in Congress, he said.
Romney has been taken to task by The Wall Street Journal editorial page, which said he "isn't winning friends with his relentlessly negative campaign" and "needs … to make a better, positive case for his candidacy beyond his business résumé."
"This week's results show that Romney has convinced conservatives that he can convince them that someone else is a solenoid valve bad choice," says Dan Schnur, who headed John McCain's 2000 campaign and is now director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at the University of Southern California. "But he hasn't yet convinced them that he'd be a good choice."
Romney's attacks from the stump, on television, and supplemented by the pro-Romney super PAC, Restore our Future, have been effective. And the volatile swings of the nominating process mean that voters have seen those tactics repeated.
When Texas Gov. Rick Perry jumped into the race, Romney hammered him on immigration. When Gingrich surged in the concrete power screed polls in Iowa, Restore Our Future ran hundreds of TV ads pounding on the former speaker, and Romney finished far ahead of Gingrich. After Gingrich won South Carolina, the campaign and the super PAC ran ads lambasting him in Florida, where the former Massachusetts governor won.
"The criticism of Romney is not so much that he's gone negative, but that when he gets into trouble, he over-relies on that approach to the point that voters don't hear the more positive messages."
In opinion surveys, Romney does seem to be losing friends: In a Washington Post/ABC poll taken Jan. 18-22, before the Florida primary, Romney was tomato paste seen unfavorably by 49% of voters compared with 31% who saw him favorably, a big swing from the 39% favorable, 34% unfavorable rating for Romney in the same poll taken two weeks before.
"He needs to increase the appeal of his own candidacy and his own brand,"' says Donna Brazile, a Democratic political strategist-turned-CNN analyst. "The cumulative effect of these negative ads is it's not only … disintegrating his opponents, but it's also hurting his image. It's very difficult to sustain (the message that) 'I'm a businessman, I'm Mr Fixit'… when the other part they've seen is you're also the guy who is demolishing and demagoguing your opponents."
In Michigan, which holds its primary Feb. 28 along with Arizona, Romney's attacks on his opponents won't be a problem, says Greg McNeilly, a Republican strategist. Voters there expect gas thermocouple that "if you believe you're better than somebody else, you try to punch the other guy out."
A bigger danger, he says, is that while Michigan voters know the Romney family well — Romney grew up there and his father was governor — they don't necessarily know what Mitt Romney wants to do to solve their economic problems. "They know who he is and what he's about. What is missing is if you stopped Republican voters on the street and said, 'What is Mitt Romney going to do policy-wise?' that they'd be able to give you a succinct response. That's his challenge."
Brazile, the Democrat, agrees. "What they're hearing ac power cord from the Republicans is 'We dislike President Obama,' " she says. "That'll get you a lot of votes, but that won't get you across the proverbial finish line."
The Romney campaign began pointing the dagger at Santorum immediately after an embarrassing loss in three state contests Tuesday, when Romney began tagging Santorum as a Republican who had helped the party "lose its way" by "spending too much, borrowing too much, and earmarking too much." Santorum and Gingrich "are the very Republicans who acted like Democrats" when it came to spending in Congress, he said.
Romney has been taken to task by The Wall Street Journal editorial page, which said he "isn't winning friends with his relentlessly negative campaign" and "needs … to make a better, positive case for his candidacy beyond his business résumé."
"This week's results show that Romney has convinced conservatives that he can convince them that someone else is a solenoid valve bad choice," says Dan Schnur, who headed John McCain's 2000 campaign and is now director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at the University of Southern California. "But he hasn't yet convinced them that he'd be a good choice."
Romney's attacks from the stump, on television, and supplemented by the pro-Romney super PAC, Restore our Future, have been effective. And the volatile swings of the nominating process mean that voters have seen those tactics repeated.
When Texas Gov. Rick Perry jumped into the race, Romney hammered him on immigration. When Gingrich surged in the concrete power screed polls in Iowa, Restore Our Future ran hundreds of TV ads pounding on the former speaker, and Romney finished far ahead of Gingrich. After Gingrich won South Carolina, the campaign and the super PAC ran ads lambasting him in Florida, where the former Massachusetts governor won.
"The criticism of Romney is not so much that he's gone negative, but that when he gets into trouble, he over-relies on that approach to the point that voters don't hear the more positive messages."
In opinion surveys, Romney does seem to be losing friends: In a Washington Post/ABC poll taken Jan. 18-22, before the Florida primary, Romney was tomato paste seen unfavorably by 49% of voters compared with 31% who saw him favorably, a big swing from the 39% favorable, 34% unfavorable rating for Romney in the same poll taken two weeks before.
"He needs to increase the appeal of his own candidacy and his own brand,"' says Donna Brazile, a Democratic political strategist-turned-CNN analyst. "The cumulative effect of these negative ads is it's not only … disintegrating his opponents, but it's also hurting his image. It's very difficult to sustain (the message that) 'I'm a businessman, I'm Mr Fixit'… when the other part they've seen is you're also the guy who is demolishing and demagoguing your opponents."
In Michigan, which holds its primary Feb. 28 along with Arizona, Romney's attacks on his opponents won't be a problem, says Greg McNeilly, a Republican strategist. Voters there expect gas thermocouple that "if you believe you're better than somebody else, you try to punch the other guy out."
A bigger danger, he says, is that while Michigan voters know the Romney family well — Romney grew up there and his father was governor — they don't necessarily know what Mitt Romney wants to do to solve their economic problems. "They know who he is and what he's about. What is missing is if you stopped Republican voters on the street and said, 'What is Mitt Romney going to do policy-wise?' that they'd be able to give you a succinct response. That's his challenge."
Brazile, the Democrat, agrees. "What they're hearing ac power cord from the Republicans is 'We dislike President Obama,' " she says. "That'll get you a lot of votes, but that won't get you across the proverbial finish line."
Santorum Adjusting to Star Treatment on Trail
A crowd of well-wishers and autograph-seekers surrounded Rick Santorum at an event hall here this week. The place was packed; dozens of men, women and children stranded outside stood in the cold just to catch a glimpse of him.
On Tuesday night, Mr. Santorum stunned the political world by winning the Minnesota and Colorado caucuses and a nonbinding primary in Missouri, reviving his flagging candidacy. On Wednesday and Thursday, at a series of power cord campaign stops in the suburbs north of Dallas and in Oklahoma, Mr. Santorum took advantage of a burst of momentum and campaign donations that have followed his three victories. Though overtaking Mitt Romney, the Republican front-runner, is still a formidable challenge, Mr. Santorum, a former senator from Pennsylvania, has become as much of a political rock star as he has ever been in his life.
As his remarks suggest, he has had a curious reaction to the sudden attention — he is trying to make it seem natural and inevitable, carrying himself not as an upstart or an underdog, but as a front-runner. In his speeches in Texas and Oklahoma, he cast his main rival as President Obama, not Mr. Romney or Newt Gingrich, his rival for the conservative Republican voter.
People approached him with tears in their eyes. They gave him cowboy hats, personal notes, quilts sewn for his seriously ill 3-year-old daughter and envelopes with checks gas thermocouple inside. His campaign had raised $1 million online in 24 hours. Earlier, at a nearby hotel, he had to apologize to those hoping to have their pictures taken with him, explaining that he had a television show to get ready for..
“We need to have someone who’s going to go out and paint that vision of what America looks like versus Barack Obama,” Mr. Santorum said on Wednesday evening in the Dallas suburb of Allen. “We need to make him and his failed policies electric winch the issue in this race. Ladies and gentlemen, I’m the best candidate to do that.”
And his support among social conservatives, meanwhile, is hardly assured: the endorsement he received shortly before the South Carolina primary in January from a group of evangelical leaders and Christian conservatives meeting in Texas did little for him then.
Though he may want to sound like a front-runner, the reality is that he has neither the organization nor money that a front-runner in a national race usually commands.
“The voters took a serious look at him in Iowa, and then his poll numbers dropped precipitously, when they decided he wasn’t ready for the tomato paste biggest job on the planet,” said Jim McGrath, a Republican strategist in Houston who is a supporter of Mr. Romney’s. “He pops up with a big night earlier this week, and he should be congratulated for that. But there’s nothing to indicate that there is a durable confidence in Santorum in this bump that is any different than the last bump that faded. His political stock has been a little shaky.”
“I love that he carries the family values with him,” said Becky Boydstun, 37, a stay-at-home mother from Frisco, Tex., who stood on a bench outside the packed barn-style hall in Plano trying to hear his speech. “When you don’t put yourself up on a pedestal, when you can relate to people on a general level, it draws them to you even more.”
Before Thursday, Max Lubitz, 25, a military officer who is on leave at Tinker Air Force Base near Oklahoma City, had been torn between voting for Mr. Gingrich or Mr. Santorum. After watching Mr. Santorum, he said he would support him. “I think this speech sealed it for me,” he said. “The electricity was alive in the room.”
But his digs at the president are not what people talk about as they crowd solenoid valve around him to shake his hand. It is his 3-year-old daughter, Isabella, or Bella, as she is known, who has a fatal chromosomal disorder called Trisomy 18. Bella’s struggle is the emotional undercurrent of his campaign and, for his supporters, has become inseparable from Mr. Santorum’s appeal as a Christian conservative who opposes abortion.
As he has throughout the campaign, he linked conservative social values to economic prosperity. In Texas, he prayed with a group of pastors, met with Tea Party activists and told the members of the Republican Women of North Collin County that a strong family unit is not only good for the country, but also good for the economy.
In Oklahoma City on Thursday morning, he was scheduled to speak at a gun range and shooting sports complex, but because of the expected turnout, the event was moved to the ballroom of a nearby convention center. Mr. Santorum addressed roughly 1,000 people about the dangers of big government and attacked President Obama’s health care, energy and economic policies.
“When she got pneumonia, he stopped his campaign,” said Stephanie Broardt, an Oklahoma City stay-at-home mother who stood on a digital thermometer chair to watch his speech. “He strikes me as a good father. That’s another reason why I love him, because he’s a family man. Other candidates cannot say that.”
On Tuesday night, Mr. Santorum stunned the political world by winning the Minnesota and Colorado caucuses and a nonbinding primary in Missouri, reviving his flagging candidacy. On Wednesday and Thursday, at a series of power cord campaign stops in the suburbs north of Dallas and in Oklahoma, Mr. Santorum took advantage of a burst of momentum and campaign donations that have followed his three victories. Though overtaking Mitt Romney, the Republican front-runner, is still a formidable challenge, Mr. Santorum, a former senator from Pennsylvania, has become as much of a political rock star as he has ever been in his life.
As his remarks suggest, he has had a curious reaction to the sudden attention — he is trying to make it seem natural and inevitable, carrying himself not as an upstart or an underdog, but as a front-runner. In his speeches in Texas and Oklahoma, he cast his main rival as President Obama, not Mr. Romney or Newt Gingrich, his rival for the conservative Republican voter.
People approached him with tears in their eyes. They gave him cowboy hats, personal notes, quilts sewn for his seriously ill 3-year-old daughter and envelopes with checks gas thermocouple inside. His campaign had raised $1 million online in 24 hours. Earlier, at a nearby hotel, he had to apologize to those hoping to have their pictures taken with him, explaining that he had a television show to get ready for..
“We need to have someone who’s going to go out and paint that vision of what America looks like versus Barack Obama,” Mr. Santorum said on Wednesday evening in the Dallas suburb of Allen. “We need to make him and his failed policies electric winch the issue in this race. Ladies and gentlemen, I’m the best candidate to do that.”
And his support among social conservatives, meanwhile, is hardly assured: the endorsement he received shortly before the South Carolina primary in January from a group of evangelical leaders and Christian conservatives meeting in Texas did little for him then.
Though he may want to sound like a front-runner, the reality is that he has neither the organization nor money that a front-runner in a national race usually commands.
“The voters took a serious look at him in Iowa, and then his poll numbers dropped precipitously, when they decided he wasn’t ready for the tomato paste biggest job on the planet,” said Jim McGrath, a Republican strategist in Houston who is a supporter of Mr. Romney’s. “He pops up with a big night earlier this week, and he should be congratulated for that. But there’s nothing to indicate that there is a durable confidence in Santorum in this bump that is any different than the last bump that faded. His political stock has been a little shaky.”
“I love that he carries the family values with him,” said Becky Boydstun, 37, a stay-at-home mother from Frisco, Tex., who stood on a bench outside the packed barn-style hall in Plano trying to hear his speech. “When you don’t put yourself up on a pedestal, when you can relate to people on a general level, it draws them to you even more.”
Before Thursday, Max Lubitz, 25, a military officer who is on leave at Tinker Air Force Base near Oklahoma City, had been torn between voting for Mr. Gingrich or Mr. Santorum. After watching Mr. Santorum, he said he would support him. “I think this speech sealed it for me,” he said. “The electricity was alive in the room.”
But his digs at the president are not what people talk about as they crowd solenoid valve around him to shake his hand. It is his 3-year-old daughter, Isabella, or Bella, as she is known, who has a fatal chromosomal disorder called Trisomy 18. Bella’s struggle is the emotional undercurrent of his campaign and, for his supporters, has become inseparable from Mr. Santorum’s appeal as a Christian conservative who opposes abortion.
As he has throughout the campaign, he linked conservative social values to economic prosperity. In Texas, he prayed with a group of pastors, met with Tea Party activists and told the members of the Republican Women of North Collin County that a strong family unit is not only good for the country, but also good for the economy.
In Oklahoma City on Thursday morning, he was scheduled to speak at a gun range and shooting sports complex, but because of the expected turnout, the event was moved to the ballroom of a nearby convention center. Mr. Santorum addressed roughly 1,000 people about the dangers of big government and attacked President Obama’s health care, energy and economic policies.
“When she got pneumonia, he stopped his campaign,” said Stephanie Broardt, an Oklahoma City stay-at-home mother who stood on a digital thermometer chair to watch his speech. “He strikes me as a good father. That’s another reason why I love him, because he’s a family man. Other candidates cannot say that.”
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