মঙ্গলবার, ২৯ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Whitney Houston's mom: 'She knew better'

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

The loss of a child is devastating for a parent, and Whitney Houston's mother Cissy is no different. But while she remains in mourning for the loss of her talented daughter last January, Cissy is very tough-minded about the decisions Whitney made that sent her down the path toward her early death from accidental drowning, heart failure and cocaine use.

"Good mothers and good fathers and good families don't always have great children," she told TODAY's Savannah Guthrie Monday, in advance of the publication of her book "Remember Whitney: My Story of Love, Loss, and the Night the Music Stopped."?

"Bad people have good children. ... It's all their responsibility when they get to a certain age to choose their way," she continued. "She was taught, she knew the way."

'Remembering Whitney': The icon's mother pays tribute?

Houston clearly felt -- and still feels -- a lot of love for her late daughter ("she and I were very, very close. She knew I loved her") but in speaking with Guthrie, she didn't want to apportion blame.

"I don't know too much about Bobby Brown," she said when asked about Whitney's ex-husband. "I don't want to talk about him. ... I know he didn't help her. I don't blame him. ... Everybody is responsible for their own actions up to a point. She was raised, she knew better, and whatever took her to that position, I really don't know."

Still, in a later interview with TODAY's Al Roker, Houston went a bit further, saying marrying Brown "wasn't the greatest idea in the world" and that "he did hurt her in a lot of ways. ... She was in love, I guess."

Cissy said she did what she could to try and pull her daughter back from the brink, but suggested that the confusing world of the music business, being called "Whitey" early on and then the marriage match to Brown led to her daughter seeking self-medication.

"She was giving, loving. She -- just didn't like confusion; turned away from that as much as she could," Cissy told Roker, adding that "I really do" believe that's what led to her drug use.

In the end, whatever caused the death of Whitney Houston at age 48, the loss will never be fully repaired for her mother. "I miss her so much I can't even express it," she said, but added that she doesn't necessarily think that her daughter went before her time.

"I trust in God," said Houston. "His ways are not our ways so we have to go with that and there's nothing I can do about it."

Related content:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/01/28/16736581-cissy-houston-on-whitney-she-was-raised-well-she-knew-better-than-to-use-drugs?lite

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Egypt in show of defiance against Islamist leader

A protester part of the Black Bloc, holds the Egyptian national flag during clashes with riot police near Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013. An unpredictable new element has entered Egypt?s wave of political unrest, a mysterious group of black-masked young men calling themselves the Black Bloc. They present themselves as the defenders of protesters against the rule of President Mohammed Morsi, but Islamists have used them to depict the opposition as a violent force wrecking the nation. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

A protester part of the Black Bloc, holds the Egyptian national flag during clashes with riot police near Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013. An unpredictable new element has entered Egypt?s wave of political unrest, a mysterious group of black-masked young men calling themselves the Black Bloc. They present themselves as the defenders of protesters against the rule of President Mohammed Morsi, but Islamists have used them to depict the opposition as a violent force wrecking the nation. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

An Egyptian protester covers his face during clashes with riot police, not seen, near Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013. Health and security officials say a protester has been killed in clashes between rock-throwing demonstrators and police near Tahrir Square in central Cairo. The officials say the protester died Monday on the way to the hospital after being shot. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Egyptian protesters run for cover during clashes with riot police near Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013. Health and security officials say a protester has been killed in clashes between rock-throwing demonstrators and police near Tahrir Square in central Cairo. The officials say the protester died Monday on the way to the hospital after being shot. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Former Egyptian presidential candidate, Hamdeen Sabahi, left, speaks during a press conference following the meeting of the National Salvation Front as former director of the U.N.'s nuclear agency and Nobel peace laureate, Mohamed El Baradei, right, listens in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013. Egypt?s main opposition coalition has rejected the Islamist president?s call for dialogue to resolve the country?s political crisis, unless their conditions are met. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

Former director of the U.N.'s nuclear agency and Nobel peace laureate, Mohamed El Baradei speaks during a press conference following the meeting of the National Salvation Front in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Jan. 28, 2013. Egypt?s main opposition coalition has rejected the Islamist president?s call for dialogue to resolve the country?s political crisis, unless their conditions are met. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

(AP) ? Protesters battled police for hours in Cairo on Monday and thousands marched through Egypt's three Suez Canal cities in direct defiance of a night-time curfew and state of emergency, handing a blow to the Islamist President Mohammed Morsi's attempts to contain five days of spiraling political violence.

Nearly 60 people have been killed in the wave of unrest, clashes, rioting and protests that have touched cities across the country but have hit the hardest in the canal cities, where residents have virtually risen up in outright revolt.

The latest death came on Monday in Cairo, where a protester died of gunshot wounds as youths hurling stones battled all day and into the night with police firing tear gas near Qasr el-Nil Bridge, a landmark over the Nile next to major hotels. In nearby Tahrir Square, protesters set fire to a police armored personnel carrier, celebrating as it burned in scenes reminiscent of the 2011 revolution that ousted Hosni Mubarak.

"I will be coming back here every day until the blood of our martyrs is avenged," said 19-year-old carpenter Islam Nasser, who wore a Guy Fawkes mask as he battled police near Tahrir square.

Angry and at times screaming and wagging his finger, Morsi on Sunday declared a 30-day state of emergency and a nighttime curfew on the three Suez Canal cities of Suez, Ismailiya and Port Said and their provinces of the same names. He said he had instructed the police to deal "firmly and forcefully" with the unrest and threatened to do more if security was not restored.

But when the 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew began Monday evening, crowds marched through the streets of Port Said, beating drums and chanting, "Erhal, erhal," or "Leave, leave" ? a chant that first rang out during the 18-day uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak in 2011 but is now directed at Morsi.

"We completely reject Morsi's measures. How can we have a curfew in a city whose livelihood depends on commerce and tourism?" said Ahmed Nabil, a schoolteacher in the Mediterranean coastal city.

In Suez and Ismailiya, thousands in the streets after curfew chanted against Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group from which he hails. In Suez, residents let off fireworks that lit the night sky.

"Oh Morsi, Suez has real men," they chanted.

In Ismailiya, residents organized street games of soccer to emphasize their contempt for the curfew and state of emergency.

On Morsi's orders over the weekend, army troops backed with tanks and armored vehicles have deployed in Port Said and Suez ? the two cities worst hit by the violence ? to restore security, but they did not intervene to enforce the curfew on Monday night.

The commander of the Third Field Army in charge of Suez, Maj. Gen. Osama Askar, said his troops would not use force to ensure compliance. Army troops in Port Said also stood by and watched as residents ignored the curfew.

Adding to Morsi's woes nearly seven months into his turbulent presidency, the main political opposition coalition on Monday rejected his invitation for a dialogue to resolve the crisis, one of the worst and deadliest to hit Egypt in the two years since Mubarak's ouster.

Nevertheless, the dialogue went ahead late Monday afternoon. A list of participants released later by the presidential palace showed that Morsi presided over an inaugural session made up almost entirely of fellow Islamists whose support for him has never been in question.

The violence first erupted Thursday and accelerated Friday when protests marking the two-year- anniversary of the start of the anti-Mubarak uprising turned to clashes around the country that left 11 dead, most of them in Suez.

The next day, riots exploded in Port Said after a court convicted and sentenced to death 21 defendants ? mostly locals ? for a mass soccer riot in the city's main stadium a year ago. Rioters attacked police stations, clashed with security forces in the streets and shots and tear gas were fired at protester funerals in mayhem that left 44 people dead over the weekend.

The official MENA news agency said three more people died on Monday, succumbing to wounds sustained on Saturday, taking to 47 the number of people killed in the city over the past three days.

Earlier Monday, thousands in Port Said turned out for the funerals of some of those killed over the weekend. Witnesses later reported clashes in the city. The armed forces later said troops have repulsed an attack by six gunmen on motorbikes on the city's main prison.

In Cairo, white clouds of tear gas hung over Qasr el-Nil Bridge from early Monday morning and through the evening, wafting into nearby districts. The fighting was reminiscent of scenes two years ago to the day, when police and protesters battered each other on the same bridge in the most violent day of the 2011 uprising.

"People died to gain their freedom, social justice, bread. Now after 29 years of the despotic Mubarak, we're ruled by a worse regime: religious fascist, more dangerous," said Mohammed Saber, a 65-year old engineer who came to watch the clashes with his wife and children.

The clashes intensified in Monday evening. A group of protesters, including black masked youth, flashed the V-for-victory signs as they jubilantly milled around the burning police vehicle in Tahrir.

Outside Cairo, protesters marched, pelted police with rocks or cut off roads and railway lines in nearly a half dozen cities, including the Mediterranean city of Alexandria, the country's second largest.

The geographical spread of the unrest and the tenacity of the protesters have showcased the depth of opposition to Morsi's rule outside the ranks of the Brotherhood and other Islamist groups.

However, it will take the mostly liberal and secular opposition time and effort to translate this popular resentment of the Islamists into electoral power and seriously challenge them at the ballot box. The Islamists have dominated elections for both houses of parliament late in 2011 and early 2012. Morsi narrowly won the presidency with under 52 percent of the vote.

The major opposition parties grouped in the National Salvation Front, led by reform leader and Nobel Peace Laureate Mohamed ElBardei, are seeking to leverage the turmoil roiling the country to break the Islamists' hold on power and force Morsi to make concessions.

ElBardei and other front leaders said they would only accept his invitation to join a national dialogue to resolve the crisis if he agreed first to form a national unity government and a commission to rewrite what they see as contentious parts of an Islamist-backed constitution adopted in a referendum last month.

The rejection of Morsi's offer is likely to lend more weight to ElBaradei and his colleagues in the Salvation Front at a time when protesters on the streets are increasingly showing their independence from politicians, voicing a wide range of non-political grievances.

The Front has painted the explosion of unrest as a backlash against attempts by Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists to monopolize power in Egypt. It says the instability is proof that Morsi doesn't have enough legitimacy to bring security or achieve reforms alone.

"We support any dialogue if it has a clear agenda that can shepherd the nation to the shores of safety," said ElBaradei, flanked by former Arab league chief Amr Moussa and leftist Hamdeen Sabahi.

The Front later issued a statement in which it said failure by Morsi to meet its conditions should be cause for early presidential elections, now scheduled for 2016.

It also called for mass, nationwide protests on Friday.

___

Associated Press writer Amir Makar contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-28-Egypt/id-324752980de04b13b62144e80010fd97

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সোমবার, ২৮ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Chainsaw Javelins Are The Most Ludicrously Awesome Slingshot Ammo Ever

Joerg Sprave specializes in absurd slingshots with absurd ammunition, but now he's reached what might be the pinnacle of abnormal ammo: chainsaw javelins. Where can you go from here? More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/rdO8z0iEPrw/chainsaw-javelins-are-the-most-ludicrously-awesome-slingshot-ammo-ever

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babylaoui: underbelly arlyn: Tourism & Recreation: Extreme Sport

A recent article in Leisure Opportunities reports that Manx tourism officials are looking to diversify the economy of the Isle of Man by pushing extreme sport tourism. Director of Manxtreme.com, Simon Crellin, is working with tourism officials to push sports such as sea kayaking, mountain biking, open-water swimming and coasteering, making the most of the island?s natural resources such as mountains, coastline and mountain bike trails. The island already has a busy calendar of events, including the Sleepwell end2end mountain bike race ? a 75km cycle across the island?s natural trails and the Manx Mountain Marathon, a 31 mile fell race. As well as maximising these existing competitions, others will be organised too. This June, a triathlon is being organised to coincide with the TT races. It will include an open-water swim, the equivalent of three laps of the TT course on a bike and a full marathon. The end will be at the TT Grandstand.

Source: http://recreationsporttourism.blogspot.com/2013/01/extreme-sport-tourism.html

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Source: http://miltonkanna.blogspot.com/2013/01/babylaoui-underbelly-arlyn-tourism.html

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Wickliffe, OH Heating Tip - Apple Heating & Cooling

According to the EPA, heating and cooling your home can account for up to 50% of your energy bills. This will be especially true with older systems and forced air systems with leaky air ducts. If you are looking for ways to save energy in your?Wickliffe, OH home, one way you could be wasting money is through an older heating system and leaky air ducts. Call the heating experts at Apple Heating & Cooling?if you would like to discuss your options for a heating upgrade or our comprehensive duct services.

Even if you are thinking about upgrading your heating system, keep in mind you won?t get as much out of your new system if you are losing energy through leaky ducts. Taking a whole-house approach means making sure your ducts are properly sealed and insulated, especially ductwork that is installed in exposed places. This also means making sure your entire home is also properly sealed and insulated. You can also install programmable thermostats to set back your heating system at night or while you are away.

We offer routine HVAC maintenance, duct cleaning, duct sealing, duct design, and duct rehabilitation. Poor duct design can also lead to inefficiency, so call us, even if we didn?t install the original ductwork. We can take care of any issues with air ducts in your home.

When you do upgrade after other home improvements, make sure that you get a heating system with a high AFUE (Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency) rating. While the minimum AFUE rating for any heating system on the market today is 80%, look for models at 90% or above. You can also look for the Energy Star label, since these models will be above 90% AFUE.

Call the Wickliffe, OH?heating specialists at Apple Heating & Cooling?for all your ductwork and heating upgrade needs!

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Source: http://www.appleheating.com/blog/heating-service/wickliffe-oh-heating-tip-ways-you-could-be-wasting-money-this-winter/

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Macmillan tests selling e-books to libraries in two-year stretches

Macmillan tests selling ebooks to libraries in twoyear stretches

Major publishers are taking wildly different approaches to resolving the woes surrounding e-book lending at libraries: they're experimenting with both the short-yet-cheap subscription as well as an expensive option to pay only once for perpetual use. Sure enough, we're now seeing the middle road. Macmillan plans to run a pilot project in the first quarter of the year that will charge libraries $25 per copy for a selection of 1,200 back catalog Minotaur Books titles, but give buyers better than usual lending rights for either two years or 52 loans, depending on the popularity. They'll only have permission to lend to one person at a time for each copy, although Macmillan's comments to LibraryJournal leave the door open to changing terms should the pilot struggle to gain traction. As it stands, the strategy could be expensive for libraries if they have to pay over and over again for a perennial favorite. It might, however, be palatable for those book lending outfits already planning to go all-digital.

Comments

Via: Ars Technica

Source: LibraryJournal

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/li3AiQVbgHY/

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রবিবার, ২৭ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Obama Violates Constitution? Court Rules Recess Appointments Invalid

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/01/obama-violates-constitution-court-rules-recess-appointments-inva/

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Assistance Ray Lewis Jersey From Your Health and fitness Pro ...

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Apple releases iOS 6.1 beta 5 for iPhone and iPad

Apple releases iOS 6.1 beta 5 for iPhone and iPad

Apple has released iOS 6.1 beta 5 for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. This comes just a day before beta 4 was set to expire, and represents one of the longest gaps between beta releases in iOS' history. Furthermore, beta 5 still hasn't shown up over-the-air (OTA), so rather than the faster, more convenient delta-update-in-place, if you want beta 5 now, now, now, you'll have to download it from developer.apple.com and do a complete update via iTunes or Xcode.

As always, this beta is intended for registered developers so they can try out new application program interfaces (API) and make sure their apps are compatible before iOS 6.1 goes into general availability (GA), presumably sometime in the next couple of months.

(If anyone gets the OTA, let us know. It's spoiled us and made us lazy!)

Update: There's still no OTA, and this build has characteristics common to a gold master (GM) seed, including no expiration date. So whether this was a GM that Apple show stoppered for some reason and had to release simply to avoid the previous beta from expiring, or its something more, we'll have to wait and see.

Either way, if you want it, you'll have to get it via iTunes or Xcode.

Source: developer.apple.com



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/pomL0n1hPQc/story01.htm

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We Are What We Are: Sundance Review - The Hollywood Reporter

PARK CITY ? In the deliciously seasoned genre treat, We Are What We Are, director Jim Mickle and his screenwriting partner Nick Damici take the bones of the 2010 Mexican film of the same name, about a family of ritualistic cannibals, and reassemble them into an entirely different creature. Exchanging impoverished urban anxiety for rural creepiness in upstate New York, this reimagining serves up chilling contemporary American Gothic that slowly crescendos into an unexpected burst of gloriously pulpy Grand Guignol. You may never look at a bowl of beef stew the same way again.

Picked up for U.S. release soon after its Sundance premiere by eOne Distribution, the film is that rare modern horror movie that doesn?t simply fabricate its scares with the standard bag of post-production tricks. Instead it builds them via a bracing command of traditional suspense tools ? foreboding atmosphere, methodical plotting, finely etched characters and a luscious orchestral score that effectively plays against the ominous tone of some scenes while dramatically heightening the tension of others. This is polished film craft.

One of Mickle and Damici?s smartest moves is to flip the gender of the surviving family figurehead from Jorge Michel Grau?s original. Instead of losing their father at the start of the movie, it?s the Parker kids? mother (Kassie Depaiva) who dies in an accident while picking up groceries in the backwoods Catskills town during the beginning of a torrential rainstorm.

That shifts the film?s dynamics to center on teenage sisters Iris (Ambyr Childers) and Rose (Julia Garner), who are expected to continue the woman?s sacred role of preparing the family meal. Staging the most macabre element of the story in scenes that evoke classic American family tradition ? the pioneer look of the Parkers? supper clothes, the solemnity of grace before meals, the folk songs heard playing softly ? makes it all the more disturbing. It also helps convey that the arcane ways of this unwholesome brood go back a long time.

But while grieving patriarch Frank Parker (Bill Sage) refuses to change plans for their mysterious ritual, which begins with three days of fasting, Iris and Rose have increasing qualms. Their young brother Rory (Jack Gore) is just hungry. In a scene that?s both shockingly funny and horrifying, he confesses as much when he bites the thumb of their kind neighbor, Marge (Kelly McGillis), who babysits him during his mother?s funeral.

While the townspeople are busy dealing with post-storm flood damage, a distraught couple reports that their daughter has gone missing. At the same time, Doc Barrow (Michael Parks) performs an autopsy on Mrs. Parker that yields surprising findings about her condition. More inexplicably, his dog sniffs out what appears to be a human bone washed up in the creek. When the sheriff (Damici) shows little interest in his discovery, the doctor gets Deputy Anders (Wyatt Russell) on board. Back in town after training and eager to advance his high school crush on Iris, Anders is more than willing to go poking around the Parkers? property.

Making the family a part of the community and not the usual isolated weirdos adds an interesting layer. This is particularly so with the two girls, whose blond hair and alabaster skin give them an angelic appearance. They can be abrupt and suspicious when cornered, but their extreme distress the first time we see them doing their grisly duty reveals how deeply troubled they are by the warped scriptures laid down by their father.

Both actresses are terrific. A sweet-faced beauty, Childers? Iris shows the internal struggle of a girl who can picture a normal life, even if she somehow knows that prospect has been bred out of her nature. Garner ? memorable in Martha Marcy May Marlene, which this film at times recalls in its stretches of glowering stillness ? has a watchful intensity that foreshadows her resourceful behavior when the situation grows more dangerous.

Also serving as editor, Mickle modulates the tension with only one or two pardonable detours into ghoulish excess en route to the climactic carnage. He intercuts effectively among the family?s frictions, the doc?s investigation, and flashes of late 18th century action prompted by Rose?s reading of the family journal.

The showdown between Doc Barrow and Frank is right out of a Western. In a role that easily could have toppled over into fire-breathing quasi-religious fanaticism, Sage drags Frank?s menace from the depths of a somber man, all but broken by the death of his wife. Yet his eruptions of monstrous rage are scary indeed. And Parks? timeworn intelligence makes it seem less of a stretch that this small-town medic could be such an ace in the research department, his persistence fueled by lingering pain from the unexplained disappearance of his own daughter.

Among the smaller roles, Russell brings a nice relaxed manner to Anders? touching scenes with Iris; Gore strikes the right balance in a child who?s both innocent and haunted, his young face transformed at times into a ravaged death mask; and McGillis brings salt-of-the-earth warmth to her brief appearances.

Russell Barnes? production design and Elisabeth Vastola?s costumes cleverly support the evidence of the Parkers as descendants of another time and way of life.

The film was shot in locations still recovering in the wake of widespread flooding following Hurricane Irene in 2011, a reality echoed in the power outages that hit the town in this story after the storm. Cinematographer Ryan Samul casts a subtle graveyard gloom over the exteriors, bringing muted tones and a malevolent eye even to some gorgeous scenic shots.

We Are What We Are sustains not only suspense, but also internal logic. The Walking Dead showed that a comic book about a zombie apocalypse could yield muscular American survival drama with non-stereotypical characters. In a comparable way, Mickle and his collaborators have taken one of the more lurid horror subgenres, the predatory cannibal movie, and treated it with stylistic restraint, narrative integrity and even moments of gentle lyricism.

The film grips from start to finish, offering a slyly subversive reflection on clans ? cultists, fundamentalists, or just plain crazies ? who impose their diseased thinking from one generation to the next.

Venue: Sundance Film Festival (Park City at Midnight; eOne Distribution)

Cast: Bill Sage, Ambyr Childers, Julia Garner, Jack Gore, Kelly McGillis, Wyatt Russell, Michael Parks, Nick Damici, Kassie Depaiva, Odeya Rush

Production companies: Memento Films International, in association with Uncorked Productions, The Zoo

Director: Jim Mickle

Screenwriters: Nick Damici, Jim Mickle, based on the screenplay ?Somos lo Que Hay,? by Jorge Michel Grau

Producers: Rodrigo Bellott, Andrew D. Corkin, Linda Moran, Nicholas Shumaker, Jack Turner

Executive producers: Emilie Georges, Tanja Meissner, Brett Fitzgerald, Mo Noorali, Rene Bastian, Jacob Pechenick

Director of photography: Ryan Samul

Production designer: Russell Barnes

Music: Philip Mossman, Darren Morris, Jeff Grace

Costume designer: Elisabeth Vastola

Editor: Jim Mickle

Sales: WME, Memento Films

No rating, 105?minutes.

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/we-are-what-we-are-415662

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শনিবার, ২৬ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

2013-01-25 After 5 Happy Hour @ Park Hyatt | HCMCLife, Nightlife ...

EVENT:
DATE: Friday 25 Jan,2013
LOCATION: Park Hyatt


2 Lam Son Square St, District 1,HCMC

TIME: 7PM-10PM
Reward yourself after a hard day of work with 51% off your food and drink bill at 2 Lam Son. Select a drink from the spectrum of signature martinis, local and imported beers, premium wines and spirits and complement it with Mini Cheese Burgers, Home-made pizza or other savoury snack from the food menu.

This special offer is available everyday from 5 pm to 8pm, so share this reward with friends and schedule your next happy hour rendezvous.

Discount does not apply to bottle purchases of wine or spirits.

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Source: http://hcmclife.com/2013-01-25-after-5-happy-hour-park-hyatt/

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Pentagon cinching in its belt ahead of budget cuts

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon has begun laying off many of its 46,000 temporary and contract workers and delaying maintenance on aircraft and ships to slow spending due to fears it may be hit by new budget cuts, Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said on Friday.

The Pentagon also plans to formally notify Congress in the next few weeks that if further budget cuts take place on March 1, it will furlough most of its 800,000 full-time civilian employees, probably by asking them to take a day off per week for the last 22 weeks of the fiscal year, Carter said.

"Obviously this is a terrible thing to have to do to our employees and to the mission," Carter said. "But it's necessary because it'll save $5 billion and we have to find that money."

The cost-cutting steps come as the Pentagon tries to deal with budget uncertainty caused by the threat of $45 billion in across-the-board spending reductions on March 1 and Congress's failure to appropriate defense funding for the 2013 fiscal year.

The Pentagon currently is absorbing $487 billion in cuts to projected defense spending over 10 years that were agreed in the Budget Control Act of 2011. That law also required the additional across-the-board cuts by January 1, 2013, unless Congress agreed to an alternative.

Lawmakers failed to reach a new deal but did agree to postpone the across-the-board cuts until March 1 to give themselves more time. But March 1 is five months into the fiscal year, giving the Pentagon less time to absorb any cuts.

Defense officials had long resisted taking action in response to the threat of additional reductions, saying they were put in place to try to force Congress to reach an alternative.

But Carter said the congressional debate on U.S. financial issues in late December had been sobering, with little discussion of how cuts would affect the Pentagon or its mission. Postponing the decision for another two months reduced the time the department would have to respond.

"When we were marching up to January 1 we had more runway, more time to absorb cuts if we had to absorb cuts," Carter said. "Now we're running out of time and so for those two reasons, our risk calculus has to change ... and we need to begin acting."

Carter asked the military services two weeks ago to take steps to reduce their rate of spending. He said he asked them for detailed plans by February 1 on what they are doing to reduce short-term spending before the $45 billion in new cuts are due to go into effect on March 1.

He also asked for detailed long-term planning by February 8 on how the services will implement the $45 billion in across-the-board cuts if they go into effect.

BUDGET MESS

Congressional failure to allocate funding for defense for the 2013 fiscal year has complicated the Pentagon's budget mess. The department is currently operating on a continuing resolution that maintains funding at 2012 levels until March 27.

"The problem is that the money is in the wrong pots," Carter said. He said the Pentagon had planned to spend considerably more for operations and maintenance in 2013 than it did in 2012.

"We don't have enough money to operate the forces in the way we thought we were going to," Carter said. "That's the problem. And that's a more than $10 billion problem. And we're running out of time to eat that $10 billion and that's the reason that we need to act now."

To slow the rate of spending, the department has put a freeze on civilian hiring, he said. Usually the department hires 1,000 to 2,000 civilians a week, more than 44 percent of them military veterans and 86 percent of them living and working across the country, not in Washington.

The department's 46,000 temporary and contract employees are "all now subject to release," Carter said, meaning they will either be let go now or will not have their contracts extended. The only exception would be if they are performing jobs critical to the war or the department's basic mission.

The department also is cutting back on base and equipment maintenance, which costs about $15 billion per year. He said the Navy would cancel maintenance on 30 ships that had been planned for the third and fourth quarters this year.

"They're not going to sign those contracts with the shipyards that do that work," Carter said.

Carter said the Pentagon would have to do "more draconian things" if Congress allows the $45 billion in cuts to go into effect, likely leading to "a pervasive crisis in readiness."

He said the Army projected that if the cuts occur, two-thirds of its active brigades and all of its reserve brigades would be operating at reduced readiness. Funds for training would primarily be used to prepare troops deploying to Afghanistan, while others would largely do without, he said.

Most Air Force flying units would be at reduced readiness by the end of the year, he said. The Navy would have to cut back steaming days by 30 percent to 35 percent, affecting its presence in the Gulf and Asia-Pacific region. He said the cuts might affect the U.S. ability to keep two carriers in the Gulf.

(Reporting by David Alexander; Editing by Vicki Allen and Doina Chiacu)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pentagon-cutting-jobs-maintenance-due-budget-fears-official-170708494--business.html

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Jefferson Parish close to final deal to finish Performing Arts Center ...

We're not interested in going change order by change order. We're interested in a global resolution." Jefferson Parish President John Young

Jefferson Parish is nearing a final agreement with the builder of its troubled Performing Arts Center, in a deal that could add roughly $7 million to $9 million to the tab and at least nine more months of work. That would put the center's final cost more than $25 million over budget and its timeline four years behind schedule.

Jefferson Parish President John Young and two Parish Council members confirmed Friday that the parish and LaPlace contractor Joe Caldarera are nearing a deal that would set a drop-dead date to finish the building in late 2013. Under the deal, which both sides are still negotiating, Caldarera would have to pay "substantial" fines for every day late after the deadline, officials said.

The agreement, which would require Parish Council approval, would also spell out a final payment to Caldarera to settle pending invoices for work already completed and other "justified" items still to be done. The amount of that payment, however, is still in flux.

Young declined to comment on specifics of the possible agreement. Councilmen Chris Roberts and Paul Johnston, who have been briefed on the negotiations, said Caldarera is asking for a final payment of more than $13 million dollars. But Johnston, whose district includes the Metarie location of the arts center, and Roberts both insisted the parish intends to pay less than $10 million.

"We don't want to have an almost-done facility," Roberts said. "But we're also not going to pay for unjustified charges."

"We're not going to go to $10 million," Johnston said.

Contractor wants $13 million more

Caldarera and his attorney, Joel Chaisson, were not available for comment Friday.

Roberts said the $13 million Caldarera is seeking includes a large amount in charges for delays in the project, which has been plagued by design errors and construction problems. The parish officials made it clear, however, that they don't want to pay delay costs.

When construction of the arts center began in early 2007, the project was supposed to cost $26 million and be completed by late 2009. Design errors soon complicated things, and construction problems compounded the problems. Caldarera began billing the parish for extra charges almost from the start. During early excavation to build the center's foundation, Caldarera billed the parish an extra $655,000 to clear unforeseen "underground obstructions."

The cost additions skyrocketed from there, with the administration of then-Parish President Aaron Broussard endorsing most of the extra charges and the Parish Council approving them. All along, parish officials groused about the project's rising costs and expressed hopes that no more extra charges would be added -- only to face yet another cost addition down the road. That has brought the total payments for the project to about $44 million.

Young replaced Broussard in 2010, after the former president resigned in an unrelated corruption scandal. Young said Friday that his goal is to stop the parade of cost additions, or so-called change orders, in the project. That's why, he said, his administration has not brought any new change order to the council, even as Caldarera's bills continued to pile up.

"We're not interested in going change order by change order. We're interested in a global resolution," Young said.

Parish may be short of money, again?

A key issue is how the parish will pay for that final resolution. The state last year approved $6 million in additional money for the center. The parish also recently settled its suit against designer Wisznia and Associates for $1.3 million.

But it's unclear where the parish would find the extra money if the final agreement is higher than the $7.3 million Jefferson has on hand. Roberts and Johnston said they're waiting to see any proposals from Young's administration on that issue. Young declined to discuss details, citing the ongoing negotiations.

But Young added: "Any resolution would be conditioned upon the availability of funds."

Time is pressing, also. Officials said the building doesn't have electricity and as such lacks air conditioning. That may not be a problem in winter, but could quickly damage installed sheetrock and other materials once the weather warms up in spring and summer.

"We have to get this thing behind us and get that building finished and open this year," Johnston said.

Source: http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2013/01/jefferson_parish_close_to_fina.html

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শুক্রবার, ২৫ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

Why Geithner's Treasury leadership proved divisive

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama has saluted the outgoing Timothy Geithner as one of the best U.S. Treasury secretaries ever. He's surely been among the most contentious.

Not since the Great Depression had an administration inherited so many grave financial threats at once. To many, Geithner deserves credit for helping steady the banking system and helping restore investor confidence. Yet his toughest critics say Geithner's policies consistently favored big banks over ordinary struggling Americans.

When Geithner became Treasury secretary in January 2009, the economy had sunk into a deep recession. Unemployment was surging. Stock prices were sinking. The financial system was teetering.

Geithner, whose last day in office is Friday, was an administration point man on all these issues. Here's a look at some of the crises the Treasury confronted on his watch:

? BANK BAILOUTS

In the bleakest days of the financial crisis in 2008, the Bush administration got Congress to approve a $700 billion government bailout fund: the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

By the time Geithner took office, billions had been handed out to the biggest banks. Many were considered at risk of failing because of their huge investments in subprime mortgages that were souring.

Opponents charged that TARP, a taxpayer-funded bailout, let banks evade responsibility for reckless gambles. Geithner countered that the banking system had to be stabilized. The bailout was deemed necessary to get credit, the essential lubricant for an economy, flowing again.

In the end, the banking system was bolstered with the help of TARP and a separate Geithner initiative requiring the largest banks to undergo "stress tests." The tests calmed investors by showing that the banks could withstand an even worse downturn.

TARP distributed $245 billion to banks. So far, it's brought back $268 billion for a return of $23 billion.

Critics argue that under Geithner, the government failed to ensure that banks would use their TARP money to lend more to businesses and homeowners.

Geithner's approach won't prevent future crises, opponents further argue. They say big banks still feel free to make risky bets because of an implicit guarantee: that if their gambles fail, the government will save them, and the banks' executives won't be held accountable.

"Secretary Geithner protected the interest of the largest financial institutions, and we will pay a very heavy price for that," said Neil Barofsky, who was the government's top watchdog for TARP.

Many private economists are less critical. They say Geithner achieved the fundamental goal of stabilizing the U.S. financial system without damaging the economy.

"The effort was a success and vitally necessary for ending the Great Recession and starting a recovery," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.

? AIG BAILOUT

Geithner and the administration endured intense criticism for giving bailout aid outside the banking system to American International Group.

The insurance giant represented everything the public detested about the government bailouts: Its rescue was the costliest at $182 billion. It spent $440,000 on spa treatments for executives only days after its rescue. It gave millions in bonuses to top executives, including those who'd made the risky bets that had unraveled AIG.

Geithner, who led the Federal Reserve Bank of New York before heading Treasury, was involved in the decision to save AIG in September 2008 and oversaw its bailout as Treasury secretary. Some of the rescue money went to fully repay banks that had invested in AIG. Critics called this a giveaway to banks that should have had to accept less than full payment.

Geithner and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke have said that letting AIG fail would have threatened the entire U.S. financial system, in part because of AIG's outsize role in selling credit default swaps. These swaps were insurance-like guarantees on mortgage bonds. They required AIG to pay billions once the housing market went bust.

Supporters note that the government ended up profiting on its investment. AIG has repaid all the bailout money, and the government made $22.7 billion more than it provided.

? AUTO BAILOUTS

Government bailouts of General Motors and Chrysler became a political issue in 2012. Republican Mitt Romney opposed rescuing the two companies. Obama countered that the bailout saved jobs at automakers, parts companies and other businesses. Both companies are now selling more cars, hiring workers and earning profits.

But unlike with the bank and AIG bailouts, the government is expected to lose money on the auto bailouts ? up to $24 billion out of the $80 billion it provided.

The auto industry rescue was begun under the Bush administration but expanded under Obama. Administration officials have said the effort saved more than 1 million jobs and came as the economy was enduring a severe crisis. Geithner was involved in crafting the auto bailout and selling it to Congress.

Private economists generally view the auto bailout favorably. "There are certainly those who argue that it could have been done in a less expensive manner, but the auto bailouts did save U.S. jobs," said David Wyss, an economics professor at Brown University.

? HOUSING CRISIS

The Bush administration took control of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in September 2008. The two have continued under government control in what became the costliest of the bailouts.

The government has given $187 billion to Fannie and Freddie and been repaid $55 billion for a net cost so far of $132 billion. The money was supplied so the two can continue to play a key role: buying or guaranteeing mortgages and packaging them into bonds to be resold to investors. This system expands the availability of mortgages.

The future of Fannie and Freddie remains hazy. Geithner's Treasury proposed several options for their future but didn't push any.

Under Geithner, Treasury compiled a mixed record of helping homeowners at risk. Of $50 billion in TARP money earmarked to reduce foreclosures, only $6 billion has been tapped. As of November, 1.1 million homeowners have received permanent loan modifications through the administration's main foreclosure-prevention program. An additional 1.5 million have been helped by the Federal Housing Administration.

The administration's initial program to ease mortgage payments for the most troubled homeowners became a source of derision. Homeowners called it a bureaucratic mess. Treasury officials countered that the administration had inherited a foreclosure crisis for which it had to devise solutions on the fly.

Critics say Geithner should have taken a harder line in forcing mortgage servicers to modify home loans. They also say he should have pushed hard to let struggling homeowners reduce their loan principal.

But Geithner's supporters say he had to deal with congressional Republicans who felt the government shouldn't be helping people escape their debts.

? FINANCIAL REGULATION

In 2010, Congress passed what the Obama administration hailed as the stiffest restrictions on banks and Wall Street since the Great Depression. The legislation, named for Sen. Christopher Dodd and Rep. Barney Frank, both Democrats, contained proposals crafted by Geithner.

It authorized the government to break up companies considered a risk to the financial system. It created an agency to safeguard consumers. And it aimed to tighten scrutiny of complex financial instruments that had previously escaped regulatory oversight and had fueled the crisis.

Geithner said the bill would reduce the risk of another crisis. But critics saw the legislation as flawed. Republicans said it created obstacles to the smooth operation of financial markets. And liberals said Geithner didn't go far enough to try to curb the worst abuses. They complained that he caved to pressure from banks to weaken the reforms.

The argument will likely continue long after Geithner's exit. Since taking control of the House in the 2010 election, Republicans have sought to dismantle Dodd-Frank.

Democrats are pushing for studies of how much benefit large banks enjoy from being deemed "too big to fail." Many Democrats want to require struggling financial firms to be dismantled rather than having taxpayers save them.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/why-geithners-treasury-leadership-proved-divisive-081252777--finance.html

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India: 35-year term not enough for Mumbai plotter

NEW DELHI (AP) ? India expressed disappointment Friday with the 35-year sentence given to an American who admitted his role in the 2008 Mumbai attack, saying he deserved more prison time for the terrorism that killed 166 people in the country's financial capital.

David Headley was sentenced Thursday in a U.S. federal court in Chicago. External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid said he would have possibly received a "more serious and severe" sentence had he been tried in India.

"The 35-year sentence is a beginning. We will continue our efforts to ensure that he is extradited and brought to India for trial," Khurshid told reporters.

Headley, 52, was born in the U.S. to a Pakistani father and an American mother and changed his birth name from Daood Gilani. He admitted that he helped plan the attack and videotaped targets that were later attacked.

In the three-day rampage, 10 gunmen from a Pakistani-based militant group fanned out across Mumbai, attacking a crowded train station, a landmark hotel and a Jewish center, among other targets.

Headley was arrested in the U.S. in 2009 and entered into a plea bargain with U.S. investigators under which he provided information about terror networks.

The U.S. State Department on Friday defended the handling of the case, saying that from Washington's perspective, it was a "very positive example" of U.S.-Indian counterterrorism collaboration.

The department ruled out Headley's extradition.

"He's been tried, convicted, and will serve in the United States," spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-25-India-Mumbai%20Attacks/id-48784d9e353043839ac12686e91f676b

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Nicki Minaj Storms Off American Idol! (Video)

Nicki Minaj storms off American Idol after another heated fight with Mariah Carey and it was all caught on camera. The feud between these two dueling divas escalated last night and ended with Minaj wondering if she should even be on show. Fans of AI got an extra special treat last night, a front row seat to the feud between Nicki and Mariah. We have been hearing the rumors that these two have been at each others throats since day one but this is the first fans have really got to see it. Minaj was none too happy and Carey wasn’t her only target fellow judges Keith Urban and Randy Jackson were also on her list. The drama went down at the auditions in Charlotte, North Carolina shortly after Idol hopeful Summer Cunningham made her debut. The 20-year old sang ‘Lean on Me’ but it wasn’t her rendition of the song that sparked the feud, it was her words that annoyed Urban. Summer said that she had “done the country thing” during her attempt at a musical career. Keith didn’t take too kindly to that remark and declared ?I always get thrown when people say they have ?done the country [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RightCelebrity/~3/wFnak5UpBCw/

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৪ জানুয়ারী, ২০১৩

JLL predict strong year for Midlands commercial property | Search ...

JLL predict strong year for Midlands commercial property

Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), the provider of global real estate services, has tipped the Midlands? commercial property market to outperform all but the South-East in its latest report released this week.

Unveiled at a specially arranged event in Birmingham on Monday, the report details JLL?s predictions for the country?s property markets in 2013. Projections suggest that GDP growth is likely to be in the region of 1.3% in the West Midlands, whilst the East Midlands has a similarly healthy outlook for growth of 1.2%.

Jon Neale, head of research at JLL UK, suggested that the regional centres of ?Birmingham and Nottingham have forecasted stronger growth than many of their counterparts?, having been tipped for growth levels of 1.4% and 1.8% respectively.

Having stated that ?the Midlands appeared to be more confident about business prospects than those further North?, Neale was quick to sound a note of caution on the over-reliance on prospective growth in the industrial sector, adding: ?The region needs to nurture start-ups and ensure the prosperity created from manufacturing is used to develop emerging and hi-tech industries to provide sustainable long-term growth.?

However, having witnessed significant job losses in the predominant industrial sector as a result of the financial crisis, JLL said that their predictions were buoyed as a result of recovery in the occupational markets and continuation of talks on speculative funding for industrial projects.

Allan Wilson, JLL?s head of capital markets for the Midlands, said: ?We are already seeing evidence of speculative development in the South-East in very selective markets. ?No spec funding was witnessed in our region in 2012, but we saw a number of funds backing developers on land deals and Jones Lang LaSalle acted on two deals putting equity backers together with developers.

?The next phase will be to see spec funding but scheme choice will be highly selective, prime only and likely to be led by one of the specialist warehouse developers.?

Guy Grainger, the recently appointed chief executive of JLL, indicated during his speech that ? in spite of the recession ? the Midlands? commercial property market would continue to play a vital role in in bolstering the local economy, but most likely in a different guise.

He said: ?Retail is changing with the UK embracing on-line retailing more than any other country in the world, but far from doing away with bricks and mortar, retailers are looking at omni-channel distribution and for the first time Amazon will add a store into its mix.

?Towns and cities need to adapt in the same way retailers have adapted to changing consumer demands and look at developing the public realm, adding more leisure facilities and making parking simpler and more low cost to attract people. ?

Ian Cornock, Midlands lead director at JLL, stated that governmental support for significant infrastructural developments is likely to come to fruition in 2013, with analysts anxious to observe whether the projects will have a tangible effect on the regional property market.

He said: ??In the short term we would see the positive effects in Birmingham of the first phase of New Street opening, the extension of the Metro and the new runway at Birmingham Airport and in the long term we have HS2.

?However the blighting of land along the route would need to be resolved sooner rather than later, so that important proposed developments could proceed such as UK Mail?s ?25m expansion of its depot at Washwood Heath.?In Nottingham, we have phase two of NET Tram, the dualling of the A453 and redevelopment of Nottingham train station.?

The Midlands? office space market is likely to grow as a result of such projects, whilst a combination of high property prices in the South-East and the advent of flexi-working technologies have led bosses to adapt a more pragmatic approach towards commercial occupation.

One such example is the recent sale of Linwood Grove ? previously a WWII bomb aimers? training premises ? on Martin Moor, Lincolnshire. Adjoining the former Lancaster Bomber base of RAF Metheringham, the building was once used to suspend trainee bomb aimers from the ceiling to study aerial photographs.

It has since been converted into a mixed-use office space and light industrial unit, which has been purchased for lease by local estate agents Hodgson Elkington. Director Sam Elkington said in a statement that he was pleased to help preserve piece of national heritage.

Written by Ben Parkinson

Ben Parkinson is a copywriter and online content producer for Search Office Space. He is an avid writer and social media marketer, with a penchant for music and literature when he's not documenting the flexible office industry.

He began his interest in professional writing through his work with leading festival news site Virtual Festivals, before taking on a blogger role for online new music publication There Goes The Fear.

In his professional life he has produced online content and corporate literature for a number of colleges, including London Graduate School and Kensington College of Business, before joining the SOS team.

Tel: +44 (0)20 8909 5151
Email: benjamin@searchofficespace.com
Twitter: @parkinson_b

Source: http://www.searchofficespace.com/news/jll-predict-strong-year-for-midlands-commercial-property/

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Researchers map emotional intelligence in the brain

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

A new study of 152 Vietnam veterans with combat-related brain injuries offers the first detailed map of the brain regions that contribute to emotional intelligence ? the ability to process emotional information and navigate the social world.

The study found significant overlap between general intelligence and emotional intelligence, both in terms of behavior and in the brain. Higher scores on general intelligence tests corresponded significantly with higher performance on measures of emotional intelligence, and many of the same brain regions were found to be important to both. (Watch a video about the research.)

The study appears in the journal Social Cognitive & Affective Neuroscience.

"This was a remarkable group of patients to study, mainly because it allowed us to determine the degree to which damage to specific brain areas was related to impairment in specific aspects of general and emotional intelligence," said study leader Aron K. Barbey, a professor of neuroscience, of psychology and of speech and hearing science at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois.

A previous study led by Barbey mapped the neural basis of general intelligence by analyzing how specific brain injuries (in a larger sample of Vietnam veterans) impaired performance on tests of fundamental cognitive processes.

In both studies, researchers pooled data from CT scans of participants' brains to produce a collective, three-dimensional map of the cerebral cortex. They divided this composite brain into 3-D units called voxels. They compared the cognitive abilities of patients with damage to a particular voxel or cluster of voxels with those of patients without injuries in those brain regions. This allowed the researchers to identify brain areas essential to specific cognitive abilities, and those that contribute significantly to general intelligence, emotional intelligence, or both.

They found that specific regions in the frontal cortex (behind the forehead) and parietal cortex (top of the brain near the back of the skull) were important to both general and emotional intelligence. The frontal cortex is known to be involved in regulating behavior. It also processes feelings of reward and plays a role in attention, planning and memory. The parietal cortex helps integrate sensory information, and contributes to bodily coordination and language processing.

"Historically, general intelligence has been thought to be distinct from social and emotional intelligence," Barbey said. The most widely used measures of human intelligence focus on tasks such as verbal reasoning or the ability to remember and efficiently manipulate information, he said.

"Intelligence, to a large extent, does depend on basic cognitive abilities, like attention and perception and memory and language," Barbey said. "But it also depends on interacting with other people. We're fundamentally social beings and our understanding not only involves basic cognitive abilities but also involves productively applying those abilities to social situations so that we can navigate the social world and understand others."

The new findings will help scientists and clinicians understand and respond to brain injuries in their patients, Barbey said, but the results also are of broader interest because they illustrate the interdependence of general and emotional intelligence in the healthy mind.

###

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: http://www.uiuc.edu

Thanks to University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for this article.

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

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/126414/Researchers_map_emotional_intelligence_in_the_brain

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Ray Romano to perform at Garden of Laughs event

NEW YORK (AP) ? While everybody loves Raymond, it's stand-up comedy that Ray Romano loves most.

The 55-year-old actor-comedian says performing live is his passion, so he jumped at the chance to participate in the "Garden of Laughs" event at The Theater at Madison Square Garden on Saturday.

"It's great to see some of the guys that I started doing stand-up with, like Brian Regan and Wanda (Sykes)," Romano said. "And Bob Costas is hosting."

Adam Ferrara and Darrell Hammond are also scheduled to perform in the comedy event, which will benefit the Garden of Dreams Foundation.

Romano, who starred in the long-running TV series "Everybody Loves Raymond" and the short-lived "Men of a Certain Age," says he feels more comfortable onstage.

"Yeah, I love to act and explore different characters, but I'm still learning and finding out if I'm good at all," Romano said of his work in front of the camera.

"When I do stand-up, I'm in my element. This is what I am a pro at doing."

Romano joked about the upcoming benefit: "I want to know when I'm going on. Because I don't want to go last."

He calls performing with old friends a "win-win situation."

"I'm a fan of all of them. I started with Brian. If I was going to pick one guy whom I have the most in common, it's him. Brian and I are friends. We both started around the same time," he said.

That experience dates back to their days at the Comedy Cellar in New York's Greenwich Village.

"I did 15 shows a week when I lived in New York. I did five shows on a Friday and seven shows on a Saturday. It was everything I did and it was my sole source of income," Romano said.

Then came "Everybody Loves Raymond," in which Romano played a sportswriter and family man. The sitcom wrapped up in 2005 after nine seasons and is now widely seen in syndication around the world.

"It's pretty baffling to hear how successful it is in Australia and Israel. Mainly because I was in it," he said. "It's because the story was very relatable because it's family. Family is the same no matter what language you speak."

Romano feels that same theme shines through in the animated "Ice Age" film series, in which he voices a wooly mammoth named Manny. Romano says he's proud to have each of his children perform a speaking line in each movie in the series.

But now it's back to the stage, and Romano couldn't be happier.

"A ballplayer reaches a certain age that he can no longer hit the ball out of the park. Then he retires. But with stand-up he can keep doing it. Yes, you have to learn to adjust and you have to be more current and hopefully you hold up for some time."

Madison Square Garden President and CEO Hank Ratner says the Garden of Dreams Foundation has conducted events and programs for more than 215,000 children and their families, including those facing homelessness, extreme poverty, illness and foster care.

___

Online:

http://www.GardenofDreamsFoundation.org

___

John Carucci covers entertainment for The Associated Press. Follow him at ?http://www.twitter.com/jcarucci_ap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ray-romano-perform-garden-laughs-event-170253334.html

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