Friday, January 6, 2012

NBA Notebook: Utah's Howard fined for flagrant

Utah Jazz swingman Josh Howard has been fined $25,000 for a flagrant foul in a game against the San Antonio Spurs.

NBA executive vice president of basketball operations Stu Jackson announced the fine Monday.

Howard was initially called for a Flagrant Foul One against San Antonio's James Anderson in Utah's 104-89 loss to the Spurs Saturday night, but the league upgraded the call to a Flagrant Foul Two.

Howard, who considered signing with San Antonio in the offseason, was called for the flagrant with 3.3 seconds remaining in the third quarter.

Knicks

New York forward Amare Stoudemire missed his second game in a row against Toronto because of a sprained left ankle. Stoudemire said he was feeling better after a few days of treatment and hopes to play Wednesday. Coach Mike D'Antoni wants Stoudemire at 100 percent before he plays again, so rookie Josh Harrellson got his second consecutive start. Stoudemire was hurt Thursday in a loss to the Los Angeles Lakers and missed the Knicks' 114-92 victory Saturday in Sacramento. Harrellson replaced him and had 14 points and 12 rebounds.

Celtics

Boston center Jermaine O'Neal is sidelined because of a tight left hamstring. Celtics coach Doc Rivers said the club's trainer suggested O'Neal sit out the game against Washington. Rivers said he might be able to play against New Jersey Wednesday. "With the hamstring you don't want to take any chances. With today and tomorrow, he might be able to play the next game," Rivers said. The 6-foot-11 O'Neal was injured in Sunday's win at Washington.

Nets

Power forward Kris Humphries missed New Jersey's game against the Indiana Pacers because of a sore left shoulder. Sheldon Williams replaced him in the starting lineup. The Nets did not say how Humphries hurt his shoulder. He was averaging 12.4 points and 10.0 rebounds in five games.

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

First published on January 3, 2012 at 12:00 am

Source: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/12003/1200941-275.stm?cmpid=sportsother.xml

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

For decades, candidates have started with Iowa

A pedestrian walks past satellite uplink trucks parked outside of the Polk County Convention Center in Des Moines, Iowa, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2012, as the news media set up for coverage of the Iowa Caucus results Tuesday evening. (AP Photo/J. David Ake)

A pedestrian walks past satellite uplink trucks parked outside of the Polk County Convention Center in Des Moines, Iowa, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2012, as the news media set up for coverage of the Iowa Caucus results Tuesday evening. (AP Photo/J. David Ake)

(AP) ? Since the 1840s, political activists in Iowa have gathered on dark winter nights to take care of party business. Only for the past 40 years has anyone outside the state taken notice of these Iowa caucuses.

Everything changed in 1972 when Democrats moved their meeting to January, making Iowa's presidential preference vote the first in the nation. Noticing the change, candidate George McGovern gave Iowa extra attention, then finished a surprising second and went on to win his party's nomination.

Republicans moved up their caucus in 1976, and candidates have paid rabid attention to Iowa ever since.

Politicians aspiring to the White House begin visiting Iowa to make connections with local politicians and activists months or even years before caucus night. Their hope is that by winning the caucuses ? or simply beating expectations ? they'll also win a burst of publicity that will help fundraising and improve their chances in New Hampshire and other early-voting states.

For Republicans, the nation's attention is technically all that's at stake Tuesday. While Democrats choose delegates who are expected to support the selected candidates at the party's national convention, Republicans handle that at county and district conventions later in the year. That means the GOP's caucuses are essentially a nonbinding straw poll.

The parties hold caucus meetings for all of the state's 1,774 precincts ? at schools, churches and even some private homes. Because some places hold multiple caucus meetings, Republicans will gather Tuesday night in about 800 locations in all 99 of the state's counties.

Anyone who so chooses can speak in support of a candidate at a Republican caucus meeting. Ballots are then passed out and participants privately mark their choices. Those ballots are counted and the results called into party headquarters, where they are posted online immediately.

People can register with the party when they arrive, and all those who will be 18 by the general election can participate. But the commitment to attend in person ? there is no absentee or early voting ? means the caucuses draw a relatively small slice of Iowa's roughly 3 million residents. Only about 17 percent of eligible voters took part in the record-setting turnout year of 2008.

That year, Barack Obama's repeated trips to Iowa paid off with a Democratic caucus win over Hillary Rodham Clinton and John Edwards. In the Republican caucus, Mike Huckabee finished first and Mitt Romney second. Eventual GOP nominee John McCain finished in fourth place, just behind Fred Thompson.

This year, the focus is entirely on Republicans, but there will be Democrats caucusing Tuesday. The crowds will undoubtedly be much smaller, since Obama has no competition for the Democratic nomination.

For those Democrats who do attend, the process is more complicated that the GOP's simple secret-ballot straw poll. Democrats break into preference groups at their caucus meetings, publicly declaring which candidate they favor. Candidates must get support from 15 percent of those attending to receive votes, and activists try to win over those whose candidates have fallen short of the 15 percent threshold.

The results are then reported to party headquarters, where they are run through a formula that changes the value of votes based on a county-by-county analysis of Democratic performance in the last gubernatorial and presidential elections.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-03-Iowa%20Caucus-History/id-c80f71d48d5849d4b45883958922ad71

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Not So Evil: Google Penalizes Chrome?s PageRank For Policy Violation

Google Medal of Honor"I love the name of honor, more than I fear death" - Julius Caesar. Google does too, apparently. The company has lowered the PageRank of its Chrome download page after violating its own paid link policy?during a sponsored blog post campaign for the browser by Google's ad agency Unruly Media.?Google's head of webspam Matt Cutts responded to criticism of the campaign last night, saying his team "has taken manual action to demote?www.google.com/chrome?for at least 60 days". Some accuse Google of lying about not knowing it was buying sponsored blog posts through Unruly. I argue it might have thought it was buying StumbleUpon Paid Discovery or other legitimate ads.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/cBPADU5v72w/

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Small Business Lending At Near 4-Year High


* Rising borrowing points to underlying economic strength

* Loan delinquencies ebbing

By Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON, Jan 2 (Reuters) - (Reuters) - Borrowing by small U.S. businesses hit its highest level in nearly four years in November, pointing to underlying strength in the economy.

The Thomson Reuters/PayNet Small Business Lending Index, which measures the overall volume of financing to small businesses, surged 10.2 points to 106.4, the highest level since February 2008. The index was up 18 percent from November 2010.

"We are entering a new phase of the business cycle," said PayNet founder Bill Phelan. "Businesses are betting on the future with increased investment spending."

PayNet tracks borrowing by millions of small U.S. businesses and provides risk-management tools to the commercial lending industry.

The survey adds to other data suggesting the economy gathered momentum in the final three months of 2011, which should help it to better handle the headwinds from the debt crisis in Europe and fights over budget policy in Washington.

Fourth-quarter economic growth is seen exceeding a 3 percent annual pace, an acceleration from 1.8 percent in the third quarter.

The Thomson Reuters/PayNet small business lending index has some leading correlation with gross domestic product, preceding changes in the overall economy by two to five months.

"It (surge in borrowing) tells us there will be growth for at least the next quarter," said Phelan. "There is underlying strength in the economy that is not being reported elsewhere."

While Europe's fiscal troubles appear not to have affected the flow of credit to small businesses, they pose a big threat to the economy's growth prospects in 2012. Added to that is the uncertainty over fiscal policy in the United States.

The survey also found that small businesses are getting better at managing their debt, with loan delinquencies continuing to drop.

Accounts in moderate delinquency, or those behind by 30 days or more, dropped five basis points to 1.50 percent in November. Those behind 90 days or more in payments, or in severe delinquency, slipped 1 basis point to 0.39 percent.

Accounts 180 days or more, or in default and unlikely ever to be paid, fell six basis points to 0.58 percent.

"We are now in this new phase of growth and low risk. The key question is how long is this phase going to last?" said Phelan.

(Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Neil Stempleman)

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/02/us-small-business-lending_n_1179244.html

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Monday, January 2, 2012

With focus on Iowa, Huntsman continues NH effort (AP)

NASHUA, N.H. ? Republican presidential hopeful Jon Huntsman said Monday that his intense focus on New Hampshire is paying off and went after rival Mitt Romney in unusually sharp language.

But Huntsman, the former Utah governor, is still being met by some blank looks with the primary just eight days away.

Watching Huntsman enter a Nashua diner surrounded by television cameras, voter Jimmy Pacheco at first mistook the former Utah governor for New Hampshire Gov. John Lynch, and not a flicker of recognition crossed his face when he heard Huntsman's name. But by the time Huntsman reached his booth, the former truck driver greeted him like an old friend, complimented him on his "pretty wife" and said afterward that he probably would vote for Huntsman.

Noting that Huntsman is skipping Iowa's Tuesday caucuses and staking his hopes on a strong showing in New Hampshire's Jan. 10 primary, Pacheco said, "He cares about us."

Two minutes earlier, Pacheco had said he was leaning toward Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, who has long been the front-runner in New Hampshire.

After stopping by several Nashua businesses and restaurants, Huntsman told reporters that New Hampshire is a place where an underdog can come from behind and beat expectations.

"It happens time and time again here in New Hampshire. It's where message matters, it's where grass-roots politics is rewarded, and this is a state that is finely tuned to finding leaders and then sending them south," he said.

While he lags far behind Romney in polls, the usually positive Huntsman went after Romney by name while speaking to voters in Dover later in the day.

"You can do what the establishment wants you to do. You've got a good candidate in Mitt Romney," Huntsman said. "If you have 47 members of Congress supporting you, as he just announced today, you think you're going to be to do what needs to be done in terms of reforming Congress? No how, no way."

He also suggested Romney couldn't reform the banking system because he's receiving too many donations from Wall Street.

"We cannot afford a status quo presidency," Huntsman said.

At another restaurant, GOP voter Matt Dobski said he was closer to backing Huntsman after meeting him but remained undecided. He said he likes Romney but doesn't like the health care law he enacted in Massachusetts, finds former House Speaker Newt Gingrich too polarizing, and thinks Texas Rep. Ron Paul is too extreme.

Huntsman, in contrast, "is probably one of the only candidates who's been consistent in all his policies and what's needed to change America," Dobski said. "That's important because, right now, everybody's waffling to say what they need to say to get votes. ... So a guy like Huntsman could really come through and steal the show, if he gets the media exposure he needs."

After having the state to himself last week, Huntsman soon will have plenty of company. Only seven days separate the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary

Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann plan to head straight to South Carolina after Iowa and then return to New Hampshire for two debates just before the primary.

Huntsman downplayed those debates, saying there have been too many already.

"I think with each passing debate, they're less and less important," he said. "People see them more as show business."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120103/ap_on_el_pr/us_huntsman

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Facebook To Boost Privacy After Investigation

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Facebook To Boost Privacy After Investigation ??



?????Sunday 1st January, 2012??Source: Sky News ??
A three-month probe at the group's international headquarters in Dublin found that Facebook users were at risk of unknowingly publicising personal details.
The Irish data protection commissioner warned the social networking website that it must simplify its privacy policies, which were found to be overly complicated and lacking transparency.
The ...

Breaking News
Sunday 1st January, 2012


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Sunday, January 1, 2012

A new ?Grand Project?? Eurasian Union and the re-Integration of the Post-Soviet Space

Read more on:? Eurasian Union, Post Soviet Space, Eurasec, Putin

12:47 30/12/2011

?Socio-political logic? would suggest that there are significant reasons to consider further (re-)integration of the post-Soviet space. Politics, however, is much less logical. Or rather, it tends to be guided by a different logic. This is why the process has not yet been successful.

Let?s briefly consider the most obvious potential advantages of closer integration. The first is the change in the size of the market (from 140 to more than 220 million people) and the potential economic benefits (proved - to some degree at least ? by the EU and NAFTA) from lowering or eliminating trade barriers and banking restrictions. The second is demographics. Quite simply, the Russian population is getting older and smaller while central Asia and Ukraine has a surplus of able-bodied and under-employed youth. Thirdly, meaningful political integration (even at a low level) may increase the region?s competitive geo-strategic position (particularly given the current political and economic shifts which are moving the center of world gravity towards Asia). In theory, then, integration should definitely be an attractive idea. In practice, however, recent attempts at re-integration of the post-Soviet space (maybe with the exception of the customs union) have not been very successful. And future plans for re-integration ? if implemented in a similar fashion as the previous attempts ? will most likely fail as well.

What went wrong, then? Let?s begin with the ?idea? itself. So far initiatives at re-integration have been the exclusive domain of the Russian leaders and have therefore been based on strong political will and almost nothing more. It is not enough to propose ?something right? without backing it with specific policies; without careful calculations of what other players gain or lose; without huge resources ready to be directed into new projects; without support from business community. What can be done domestically in Russia through the creation of new realities out of pure political will cannot be replicated internationally, even with much weaker partners. Russia is great at generating ideas, but not in their implementation.

There is a lot more to this than just lacking sound policies. From the perspective of the ?states to be re-integrated,? Russia has not yet created an attractive development model for the post-Soviet space for them to link into. The Russian developmental state model, which was quite successfully used from 2000 until about 2007, is not showing the same vigor it once did. Endemic corruption and a politicized and bureaucratized economy cannot be as attractive as, for instance, the Chinese (foreign investor-friendly) or Brazilian (including poorer social strata into a market economy) models. Nor is Russia an attractive political model to be emulated. For some, like Uzbekistan, it is too soft and open, and for others, like Ukraine and the Baltic states, it is not democratic enough. Also, economically speaking, most of the Central Asian states have, like Russia, primarily resource-based economies. As such, they could just as easily be competitive as complementary. Like Russia, they are deindustrializing, and have relatively weak agricultural sectors. If they are to develop, they need to modernize, but the sources (technology, management, institutions) and resources (FDI) for that modernization will most likely not come from Russia. What Russia has that they have not to modernize? Before answering that key question a small detour is needed.

It is hard to imagine a genuine enthusiasm for the integration projects by most post-soviet leaders unless they will get out of this process tangible effects that can be sold politically to their own population and elites.

Thus the issue is whether Russia will be willing (or able) to pay an initial, very high price for re-integration in order to bring at least some economic and social stability to her periphery. A shift eastwards may also engender opposition from some elites, as most of the Russian elite is ?culturally? European. It is much easier to say that Asia is the future than it is to convince members of the elite to buy mansions in Bishkek instead of Paris and send their children to the University of Guangzhou instead of Cambridge.

On the other hand, it should be easier to convince the Central Asian states to join a re-integration project as they should ? on paper ? gain more than they will lose. The answer to the question of what Russia has that is attractive to others post-Soviet states (in particular in Central Asia) as a strong pro-integrative factor is ? paradoxically ? culture.

The Soviet period imposed a different (urbanized/industrialized) civilization that replaced regional cultural nomadic cultures of the Central Asian states. It is hard now for these states to reproduce a lost cultural identity and, thus, they remain closer to Russia than to other cultures. The paradox today is that Russia, being in search of its own identity, is none the less perceived as having an identity strong enough to be attractive to others. In that, Russia trumps other potential competitors in the region, and if that will be supported by a more attractive ?integration model? than proposed so far re-integration may really happen. The point is that culture matters as integrative tool, and here Russia has spare soft power to project eastward.

Does Russia have a choice, then, between European and Eurasian Union? In fact, in the short to medium term, she does not even have that option. The only viable strategic choice is in the Far East-Eurasian direction. Even midget in scope EU devised Eastern Partnership is failing. EU is politically not ready and economically unable to make a deal with Russia to bring her closer to EU as President Medvedev asked for; staying alone in not an option either as then Russia is carrying the risk of becoming lonely (and increasingly alienated).

There are two regions that developmentally/strategically matter today ? Siberia/Asia and Arctic. If Russia will be able to - technologically and socially - develop the Russian East (new resources, food, energy) and link it with Central Asia (resources and population) and with the Far East (capital, market and technologies), then the country can dramatically boost its status in the world.

The road to Russia?s future can only go through Siberia and Asia.

Piotr Dutkiewicz is Professor of Political Science, Director of the Center for Governance and Public Policy at Carleton University, Ottaw, member of the Valdai Discussion Club Advisory Board.

?

Views expressed are of individual Members and Contributors, rather than the Club's, unless explicitly stated otherwise.

Source: http://valdaiclub.com/near_abroad/36840.html

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