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Organic Baby

A newborn's head is very large in proportion to the rest of the body, and the cranium is enormous relative to his or her face. While the adult human skull is about 1/8 of the total body length, the newborn's is about 1/4. At birth, many regions of the newborn's skull have not yet been converted to bone, leaving "soft spots" known as fontanels. The two largest are the diamond-shaped anterior fontanel, located at the top front portion of the head, and the smaller triangular-shaped posterior fontanel, which lies at the back of the head. Later in the child's life, these bones will fuse together in a natural process. A protein called noggin is responsible for the delay in an infant's skull fusion.

Newborns can respond to different tastes, including sweet, sour, bitter, and salty substances, with a preference toward sweets.

Organic Baby

Trott, Pietersen steer England towards Test safety

CENTURION, South Africa (AFP) –
Jonathan Trott and Kevin Pietersen steered England towards safety with a century partnership on the fifth and final day of the first Test against South Africa at SuperSport Park on Sunday.

England, set 364 to win, were 169 for three at tea.

Trott, who came to the wicket after the dismissal of nightwatchman James Anderson in the third over of the day, was unbeaten on 53 after facing 148 balls.

Pietersen was more aggressive in making 80 not out off 136 deliveries but the batsmen showed no serious intention of trying to chase down an unrealistic victory target. The pair had added 142 for the fourth wicket.

South African hopes were raised early in the day when Anderson gloved Friedel de Wet down the legside to wicketkeeper Mark Boucher.

Alastair Cook defended resolutely for 79 minutes and 56 balls, scoring 12 runs, before he too was caught off a glove, when a ball from left-arm spinner Paul Harris went to Graeme Smith at leg gully off his glove and pad.

But Trott and Pietersen dug in on a pitch which did not provide as much unpredictable bounce as it had on the previous two days.

Only one delivery truly misbehaved, a ball from De Wet which shot through low and trapped Pietersen, on 39, plumb in front of his stumps. But umpire Steve Davis no-balled De Wet for overstepping.

When he was on 31 Trott played a ball from Harris onto his boot and it was caught by Smith at a wide slip.

The umpires sought a review and Trott was given not out when it showed the ball had made contact with the ground before bouncing to Smith. In the same over Pietersen, on 57, pushed a ball from Harris dangerously close to Hashim Amla at short leg.

In virtually the only other alarm for England, Morne Morkel had a loud shout for leg before against Trott turned down by Davis when the batsman was on 45. After a discussion the South Africans decided not to call for a television review and replays showed the ball would have missed leg stump.

With the other bowlers unable to break through, Jacques Kallis came into the attack shortly before tea.

He had said before the match he did not expect to bowl because he was recovering from a rib injury. He bowled three unthreatening overs.

SCOREBOARD

South Africa, first innings, 418

England, first innings, 356

South Africa, second innings, 301-7 dec

England, second innings

(overnight 11-1)

A. Strauss c Boucher b Morkel 1A. Cook c Smith b Harris 12J. Anderson c Boucher b De Wet 10J. Trott not out 53K. Pietersen not out 80Extras (b6, lb1, nb6) 13Total (3 wkts, 60 overs) 169
Bowling:

Ntini 11-4-34-0Morkel 15-2-38-1Harris 17-6-42-1De Wet 11-3-36-1 Duminy 3-1-7-0Kallis 3-1-5-0
Match position: England require 195 to win with seven wickets remaining in the second innings

Toss: England

Umpires: Aleem Dar (PAK), Steve Davis (AUS).

TV umpire: Amish Saheba (IND).

Match referee: Roshan Mahanama (SRI).

Parks and Recreation Software

Computer software is often regarded as anything but hardware, meaning that the "hard" are the parts that are tangible while the "soft" part is the intangible objects inside the computer. Software encompasses an extremely wide array of products and technologies developed using different techniques like programming languages, scripting languages or even microcode or a FPGA state. The types of software include web pages developed by technologies like HTML, PHP, Perl, JSP, ASP.NET, XML, and desktop applications like OpenOffice, Microsoft Word developed by technologies like C, C++, Java, C#, etc. Software usually runs on an underlying software operating systems such as the Linux or Microsoft Windows. Software also includes video games and the logic systems of modern consumer devices such as automobiles, televisions, toasters, etc.

The term "software" was first used in this sense by John W. Tukey in 1958. In computer science and software engineering, computer software is all computer programs. The theory that is the basis for most modern software was first proposed by Alan Turing in his 1935 essay Computable numbers with an application to the Entscheidungsproblem.

Parks and Recreation Software

Aiken takes name off voter list, ending NC probe

RALEIGH, N.C. – A North Carolina election board has determined there's evidence showing former "American Idol" runner-up Clay Aiken may have voted illegally in Wake County this fall. But officials don't plan further action.
The county elections board voted unanimously Wednesday to end its investigation at a preliminary hearing because Aiken wrote a letter asking officials to remove him from their voting rolls, making the issue moot.
The local Republican Party chairman filed a complaint because Aiken voted in Wake County elections even though he has a house in adjoining Chatham County. Aiken has criticized local school board candidates.
Wake County GOP Chairman Claude Pope said after the hearing he was happy with the outcome.
Aiken didn't attend the meeting.

European stocks drop further amid debt worries

LONDON (AFP) –
European equities fell further on Wednesday, extending recent heavy losses amid mounting anxiety about government debt in Dubai and Greece, and ahead of a key budget statement in London, dealers said.

In late morning deals, London's benchmark FTSE 100 index lost 0.17 percent to stand at 5,214.60 points.

Frankfurt's DAX 30 slid 0.37 percent to 5,668.30 points and in Paris the CAC 40 shed 0.25 percent to 3,775.68.

The DJ Euro Stoxx 50 index of top eurozone shares dipped 0.38 percent to 2,838.48 points.

"Worries about sovereign credit risk and the ongoing global debt crisis are rattling the markets," said VTB Capital economist Neil MacKinnon.

All three main European markets had nosedived on Tuesday as traders were gripped by concerns about Dubai's debt crisis, more ratings gloom for Greece and shrinking German industrial output.

Added to the mix, Wall Street slumped Tuesday as recovery concerns festered after Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke's sobering assessment of the US economy.

"A weak day's trading on Wall Street and serious concerns about Greece's public finances and Dubai's debt restructuring ensured London ended deep in the red Tuesday," said Spreadex analyst Simon Rossington.

"Fears over the solvency of Greece reached new levels after Fitch downgraded its outlook on the country by one rating to 'negative'.

"Fellow ratings agency Standard & Poor's has already warned the Mediterranean country that it may have its credit rating cut."

The Fitch ratings agency had on Tuesday downgraded Greece's long-term debt ratings as well as those on four of the country's largest banks, describing prospects for Greek public finances as negative.

And on Wednesday, Fitch placed all rated structured finance transactions in Greece on negative watch.

"The recession that has been raging in Europe since the middle of 2008 has exposed those countries with weak government finances," said Rabobank analysts in a note to clients.

"The situation in Greece has been made worse by credibility problems, because its projected government deficit has exploded since a new government took over in October."

Elsewhere, London investors will focus Wednesday on the British government's latest plans for taxation and spending.

The Labour administration will announce a budget statement which it hopes will help fix public finances and revive its fortunes ahead of an election expected next year, amid reports it will slap a "supertax" on bankers' bonuses.

British finance minister Alistair Darling will unveil his pre-budget report at 1230 GMT, against the backdrop of Britain's worst recession on record.

"Darling?s main challenge is to rein in the budget whilst at the same time trying not to hurt the economy," Rabobank analysts added.

Ratings agency Moody's had warned Tuesday that Britain and the United States needed to take action on public debt to protect their cherished AAA ratings.

Across in the Middle East on Wednesday, Dubai share prices plunged 6.39 percent and Abu Dhabi shed 2.82 percent, even as the United Arab Emirates said it was coping with the global economic crisis.

UAE stocks have tumbled since real estate giant Nakheel, part of state-owned conglomerate Dubai World, sought a six-month freeze on a 3.5-billion-dollar Islamic bond debt on November 25, raising fears of a Dubai debt default.

Obama rights record questioned ahead of Nobel prize

WASHINGTON (Reuters) –
Two leading international human rights groups gave U.S. President Barack Obama mixed reviews on his human rights record on Wednesday, a day before he is slated to accept the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo.

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International urged Obama to use his acceptance speech on Thursday to renew U.S. leadership on human rights after its position was undermined by abuses committed during the Bush administration's war on terrorism.

In awarding Obama the Peace Prize, the Nobel Committee said in October the president had made extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation and that it hoped this would strengthen democracy and human rights.

Obama has adopted a pragmatic style of foreign policy, winning praise for showing a willingness to talk to states such as Iran and North Korea, which his predecessor George W. Bush once dubbed part of an "axis of evil" and sought to isolate.

But Amnesty and Human Rights Watch said this pragmatism had sometimes come at the expense of speaking out about human rights in countries like China, Washington's biggest creditor and a major player in efforts to tackle the financial crisis.

"He has created a false choice between having to speak out forcefully on human rights or being pragmatic and getting results on other issues," Amnesty International USA Executive Director Larry Cox told Reuters in an interview.

Amnesty and Human Rights Watch give Obama high marks for acting swiftly to announce the closure of the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, an end to the CIA's secret detention program, adopting a multilateral approach to diplomacy, and reaching out to the Muslim world.

But they fault him for failing to do enough to address specific human rights cases.

QUIET DIPLOMACY

"He has spoken out on some cases, like (Nobel peace laureate) Aung San Suu Kyi, but he has not raised forcefully enough issues of human rights in China, for example, where it would have demonstrated real commitment on our part not to let other needs prevent us from speaking out very forcefully," Cox said.

Human Rights Watch Associate Director Carroll Bogert said the administration appeared to have made the calculation that the United States would be a stronger player in the international arena if it downplayed human rights.

"I think the calculation is there that raising human rights will weaken the U.S. position. That's a miscalculation. The quiet approach makes him (Obama) look weak," Bogert said.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton raised eyebrows in February after saying the Obama administration would press China on human rights but this would not "interfere" with their work on the global financial crisis and climate change.

Obama himself was widely criticized at home and abroad after he avoided directly raising specific criticism and cases concerning China during his trip there last month.

In an interview with Reuters before the China trip, Obama strongly rejected criticism that he was backsliding on human rights and said his public statements had consistently espoused the values of freedom of speech, the press and religion.

Amnesty's Cox said Obama should use his Nobel speech to "say the United States after many, many decades, has failed to provide that kind of leadership (on human rights), and now wants once again to provide that leadership.

Human Rights Watch's Bogert said Obama should emphasize that his "policy of dialogue with unsavory regimes will not weaken America's voice for human rights."

(Editing by Patricia Wilson and Eric Beech)

WHO: Smoking kills 5 million every year

LONDON – Tobacco use kills at least 5 million people every year, a figure that could rise if countries don't take stronger measures to combat smoking, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.
In a new report on tobacco use and control, the U.N. agency said nearly 95 percent of the global population is unprotected by laws banning smoking. WHO said secondhand smoking kills about 600,000 people every year.
The report describes countries' various strategies to curb smoking, including protecting people from smoke, enforcing bans on tobacco advertising, and raising taxes on tobacco products. Those were included in a package of six strategies WHO unveiled last year, but less than 10 percent of the world's population is covered by any single measure.
"People need more than to be told that tobacco is bad for human health," said Douglas Bettcher, director of WHO's Tobacco-Free Initiative. "They need their governments to implement the WHO Framework Convention."
Most of WHO's anti-tobacco efforts are centered on the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, an international treaty ratified by nearly 170 countries in 2003. The convention theoretically obliges countries to take action to reduce tobacco use, though it is unclear if they can be punished for not taking adequate measures, since they can simply withdraw from the treaty.
Other experts questioned how effective WHO's strategies were.
"It's like the well-intentioned blind leading the blind," said Patrick Basham, director of the Democracy Institute, a London and Washington-based think tank. He said WHO's policies were based more on hope than evidence.
Basham said measures like increasing taxes on tobacco products and banning advertising don't address the root causes of why people smoke. Smoking levels naturally drop off — as they have in Western countries — when populations become richer and better-educated.
Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death and WHO estimates that, unless countries take drastic action, tobacco could kill about 8 million people every year by 2030, mostly in developing countries.
Basham said officials should focus on anti-poverty measures to stem the smoking problem, though that is beyond WHO's mandate as a health agency.
"The cynical view is that the anti-tobacco lobby has itself now become an industry and we will never be able to do enough to stop smoking," Basham said. "Tobacco use will change, but it has very little to do with the kinds of things WHO is promoting."

US charges 5 with foreclosure scam in Philly area

PHILADELPHIA – Five people were charged with using a supposed mortgage-rescue program to steal nearly $15 million in home equity from homeowners facing foreclosure in suburban Philadelphia.
The federal indictment Tuesday accuses the owners of Axxium Mortgage, J&J Realty and two lawyers in the alleged scheme.
According to prosecutors, they defrauded at least 35 homeowners in Bucks and Montgomery counties by finding "investors" to buy their homes while the owners rented them back and tried to save money in hopes of repurchasing them.
Instead, the owners lost their homes — and whatever equity they had in them, an amount that sometimes topped $100,000 and in one case reached $500,000, authorities said.
The defendants include Axxium co-owners Edward McCusker of New Hope and John Bariana of Mullica Hill, N.J.; McCusker's wife Jacqueline; and lawyers Jeffrey Bennett of Springfield and Stephen Doherty of Doylestown.
McCusker used forged documents to get mortgages in the name of the straw purchasers, and then steered any proceeds from the sale to the defendants, sometimes through shell companies, the indictment charges.
The closings were held at Bennett and Doherty's title company in Doylestown.
McCusker and Bariana obtained mortgages for 10 homes, while the defendants also recruited and paid others to act as straw purchasers, authorities said. Bariana and Jacqueline McCusker owned J&J Realty, charged with similar conduct.
The charges in the case mirror those in a related civil suit filed last year on behalf of some alleged victims against Doherty, Bennett and others.
Bariana's lawyer, Ronald DeSimone, declined comment. Lawyers for the others did not immediately return messages Tuesday, and a message left at the Bennett & Doherty law firm was not immediately returned.

Police illegally execute hundreds in Nigeria: Amnesty

ABUJA (AFP) –
Police in Nigeria routinely and illegally kill with impunity hundreds of suspects each year, global rights group Amnesty International said Wednesday.

"The Nigeria Police Force is responsible for hundreds of extrajudicial executions, other unlawful killings and enforced disappearances every year," the London-based Amnesty said.

"The majority of cases go uninvestigated and unpunished," it said in a damning report.

The report, based on research carried out between 2007 and 2009, is based on evidence given in interviews with relatives of people who were executed by the police or disappeared in police custody. Amnesty also interviewed lawyers, judges, justice and health officials and local rights organisations.

Unlawful killings and enforced disappearances in Nigeria "are not random", it said. "In a country where bribes guarantee safety, those who cannot afford to pay are at risk of being shot or tortured to death".

Nigeria ranks low on the international corruption perception index and it is notorious for its high crime rate, especially armed robbery.

"The police exploit public anger at the high crime rates in the country to justify their actions...They do not only shoot people, Amnesty International has recorded cases of suspects who were tortured to death while in detention," it said.

Amnesty said that disregard for human rights is "prevalent" in the police and enforced disappearances in Nigeria are "rife".

Many of those who go missing have been extrajudicially executed, it said.

World AIDS Day warning on heterosexual transmission

PRETORIA (AFP) –
Calls for an end to discrimination against sufferers rang out on World AIDS Day on Tuesday as South Africa, the country worst affected by the pandemic, rolled out a new battleplan to beat the virus.

With more than 33 million people round the world carrying the virus, China said the incidence among homosexuals was gaining pace while there were warnings in Europe that heterosexual contacts had become the chief transmission route.

And French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy lent her star power to the global campaign against AIDS by calling for greater efforts to beat mother-to-child HIV transmission.

In China President Hu Jintao called on people in the world's most populous nation not to discriminate against those with HIV.

You "must care more and better for AIDS patients and people living with HIV, and in particular guide society into not discriminating against them," Hu told AIDS prevention volunteers in Beijing, comments broadcast by state television.

Levels of stigma and discrimination against sufferers remain high in large parts of Asia such as South Korea where many foreign workers are forced to undergo mandatory HIV tests to secure visas.

In an annual report released last week, the UN said that around two million people died of the disease in 2008, bringing the overall toll to around 25 million since the virus was first detected three decades ago.

Almost 60 million people have been infected by the HIV virus since it was first recorded, the UNAIDS agency said in its report, putting the total number of people currently living with the virus at 33.4 million. Related article: Uganda memory books tell of stark AIDS truths

South Africa remains the world's worst-hit country, a status which many campaigners have attributed to a history of "denialism" within government.

President Jacob Zuma, who was then head of the National AIDS Council, provoked ridicule three years ago when he said that he had showered to wash away the risk of AIDS after having sex with an HIV-positive woman.

But since then, Zuma has been trying to reshape his image and used World AIDS Day to announce a raft of new measures to rein in the disease that has hit 5.7 million of South Africa's 48 million people.

"Let today be the dawn of a new era. Let there be no more shame, no more blame, no more discrimination and no more stigma," he said in his speech.

The most eye-catching announcement from Zuma was that all babies with HIV would receive anti-retroviral treatment.

"All children under one year of age will get treatment if they test positive," Zuma said.

He also announced expanded treatment for pregnant women, in a bid to prevent the transmission of HIV to their children.

And he said that he planned to be tested again and urged the public to follow his lead.

"I am making arrangements for my own test. I have taken HIV tests before, and I know my status. I will do another test soon," he said. "I urge you to start planning for your own tests."

China's health ministry said homosexual transmission of the disease was gaining pace and called for health authorities nationwide to step up prevention work.

"Sexual contact continues to be the main channel of transmission with the speed of homosexual transmission clearly increasing," the health ministry said.

"This is a new situation that we need to pay attention to."

By the end of October 2009, China had 319,877 registered cases of HIV/AIDS, including 48,000 new cases this year, while nearly 50,000 people have died in China to AIDS, the ministry said.

The ministry has estimated that up to 740,000 people in China live with HIV.

But in a sign the epidemic is mutating differently in other parts of the world, authorities in the Ukraine said heterosexual contacts had become the chief transmission route for the HIV virus.

"Heterosexual contact has become the chief transmission path as the number of new cases transmitted through drug consumption has dropped," the UNAIDS coordinator in Ukraine Anna Shakarishvili told reporters.

Ukraine is one of Europe's worst affected countries. Some 340,000 people aged over 15 years are considered HIV-positive, which amounts to 0.86 percent of the adult population, government statistics showed.

UNAIDS website

Promotional Items

Almost anything can be branded with a company’s name or logo and used for promotional purposes. Common items include t-shirts, caps, keychains, bumper stickers, pens, mugs or mouse pads. The largest product category for promotional products is wearable items, which make up more than 30% of the total.[citation needed]

Jasper Meeks, a printer in Coshocton, Ohio, is considered by many to be the originator of the industry when he convinced a local shoe store to supply book bags imprinted with the store name to local schools. Henry Beach, another Coshochton printer and a competitor of Meeks picked up on the idea and soon the two men were selling and printing bags for marbles, buggy whips, card cases, fans, calendars, cloth caps, aprons and even hats for horses.

click here

Philippines charges clan heir with 25 murder counts

GENERAL SANTOS, Philippines (AFP) – Philippine prosecutors on Tuesday filed 25 counts of murder against the heir to a political clan accused of leading the election-related massacre of 57 people last week, officials said.

The charges against Andal Ampatuan Jnr were filed in a court in the southern city of Cotabato which has jurisdiction over the massacre site, said prosecutor Edilberto Jamora.

Texas Sales Tax Audit

A sales tax is a consumption tax charged at the point of purchase for certain goods and services. The tax is usually set as a percentage by the government charging the tax. There is usually a list of exemptions. The tax can be included in the price (tax-inclusive) or added at the point of sale (tax-exclusive).

This prevents so-called tax "cascading" or "pyramiding," in which an item is taxed more than once as it makes its way from production to final retail sale. There are several types of sales taxes: Seller or Vendor Taxes, Consumer Excise Taxes, Retail Transaction Taxes, or Value Added Taxes.

Texas Sales Tax Audit

Former Cal player sentenced in fraud case

SANTA ANA, Calif. – A former University of California lineman who spent time in the Tennessee Titans' camp in 2001 has been sentenced to 57 months in federal prison for his role in a $5 million Ponzi scheme.
Reed Diehl was sentenced in Orange County federal court Monday. The 31-year-old was indicted last year following an FBI investigation.
He pleaded guilty in July to three counts of wire fraud and one count of money laundering. He admitted that he cheated investors by promising high rates of returns on investments, including multimillion dollar condominium projects in Mexico.
Prosecutors say Diehl's bond was revoked in January after he tried to enter into a real estate transaction for a $3.5 million house using a false name and someone else's Social Security number.

Supreme Court seeks White House views on hiring illegals (McClatchy Newspapers)

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration will enter the politically tricky immigration arena, courtesy of the Supreme Court .

On Monday, the court asked the administration for its views in a challenge to an Arizona law that punishes companies for hiring illegal aliens. Other states with large immigrant populations will watch the next steps closely, because their own laws and ballot measures could be on the line.

"This case involves a question of exceptional national importance: whether state legislatures and municipal governments may override Congress' judgment concerning United States immigration policy," attorney Carter Phillips wrote in a legal brief.

Phillips noted that "in the first three months of 2009 alone, over 1,000 immigration-related bills and resolutions were introduced, in all 50 states" and "at least 150 of these bills related specifically to employment." He called the result "a cacophony."

A famed Supreme Court litigator, Phillips represents the U.S. Chamber of Commerce . The business group is challenging the Arizona law as part of a coalition of corporate, labor and immigrant groups that range from the American Civil Liberties Union to the Arizona Farm Bureau Federation .

The challenged law, written in 2006, allows private complaints to be filed against employers. Those found to have "knowingly or intentionally" hired illegal immigrants could have their Arizona state business licenses suspended or revoked.

The law "reflects rising frustration with the United States Congress' failure to

enact comprehensive immigration reform," the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in a ruling that upheld the law.

In a closed-door conference Friday whose outcome was released Monday, the justices agreed to ask Obama's solicitor general, Elena Kagan , to submit a brief outlining the administration's views. The justices will review this brief before they decide whether to take up the case.

For the Obama administration, the legal challenge now dubbed Chamber of Commerce v. Candelaria poses some potentially thorny questions.

During last year's presidential campaign, then-candidate Barack Obama declared that the proliferation of state immigration laws "underscores the need for comprehensive immigration reform so local communities do not continue to take matters into their own hands.''

The Arizona governor who signed the state law was Janet Napolitano , who now serves the Obama administration as the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security .

Congress first imposed penalties for hiring illegal immigrants under the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act. The federal law explicitly pre-empts state action, save for regulations that cover business "licensing."

Twenty-one years later, the Arizona legislature approved the Legal Arizona Workers Act. The law also requires Arizona employers to participate in an electronic employee-verification program called E-Verify. In other states, E-Verify participation is strictly voluntary.

The law hasn't yet been enforced. The so-called "facial challenge" that the Supreme Court is considering asserts that there's no way the state law can be enforced without violating federal law.

Arizona officials had hoped to avoid the court challenge.

"Although no one disputes the general importance of immigration policy, that does not mean every dispute about a state or local measure regarding illegal immigrants merits this court's review," Arizona Solicitor General Mary R. O'Grady said in a legal brief.

MORE FROM MCCLATCHY

Follow the latest legal affairs news at McClatchy's Suits & Sentences

Sotomayor shows she's no Clarence Thomas as Supreme Court opens

Health care not done, GOP changes subject back to immigration

Haitians press Obama on immigration goals

Plus Size Lingere

The concept of lingerie being visually appealing is relatively recent. Up through the first half of the 20th century women selected underwear for three major purposes: to alter their shape (first with corsets and later with girdles or bras), for reasons of hygiene, or for modesty. Women's underwear was often very large and bulky. As the 20th century progressed underwear became smaller and more form fitting. In the 1960s 'controversial' lingerie manufacturers such as Frederick's of Hollywood begin to glamorize lingerie and the idea of lingerie having a sexual appeal slowly developed.

Stays went away in the late 18th cetury, but the corset remained. Corsets in the early 19th century lengthened to the hip, the lower tabs replaced by gussets at the hip. Room was made for the bust in front with more gussets, and the back lowered. The shoulder straps disappeared in the 1840s for normal wear.(Waugh 77)

Plus Size Lingere

Droid Offers iPhone Solid Competition (NewsFactor)

Motorola's new smartphone -- dubbed Droid in the U.S. and Milestone in Europe -- may be the strongest competitor yet to Apple's iPhone. Slated to arrive in America on Nov. 6, Droid runs on Verizon's 3G network and Google's Android operating system, and promises a rich universe of apps free from Apple's oft-criticized approval process.

Motorola announced the new phone with a striking advertising campaign knocking the iPhone as the "iDon't." The ads issue zingers such as, "iDon't have a real keyboard," "iDon't allow open development," and "iDon't run simultaneous apps."

Droid may have these things -- iPhone's lack of a physical keyboard has been an irritant since its initial release -- but it's not clear that these features will really matter to customers. For instance, David Worthington wrote on Technologizer.com, "Those points resonate with me, because I'm a member of the tech punditocracy . . . Apple's draconian policies don't really affect my overall experience. I haven't met too many disaffected iPhone users, probably because the user experience -- while imperfect -- is pretty great."

Is Verizon Network Enough?

One thing that potentially would make a difference is the network. AT&T has come under withering criticism from iPhone users for its weak 3G network. "Verizon's network has much better coverage than AT&T when it comes to next-generation voice and data, so this does give them an edge over AT&T," said Tim Bajarin, principal analyst with Creative Strategies. "And there is a lot of pent-up demand for a top-notch smartphone that is similar to if not equal to Apple's iPhone."

But if the Droid is the best iPhone competitor yet, it still falls short of Apple's "gold standard," Bajarin said. That means the primary market for Droid will be existing Verizon customers. "I believe that Droid is a good option for Verizon customers, but it is still not in the same class of an iPhone," Bajarin explained.

"The iPhone has become the gold standard in smartphones and with its 85,000 apps and growing customer interest. Verizon and Motorola will get solid interest, but Apple will still have the edge in this smartphone war," he added.

European Rollout

While Verizon customers may well gravitate to a good smartphone that offers an iPhone-like experience and a universe of third-party applications, the reality, Bajarin said, is that "Verizon customers really want the iPhone. Since the likelihood of that happening is minimal, this is at least a solid alternative."

In other Droid news, Motorola announced the phone would be available in Italy and Germany as the Milestone, with service to be provided by O2. The two phones are quite similar, with a 3.7-inch touch screen, five-megapixel camera and slide-out QWERTY keyboard, but the European phone will use High-Speed Packet Access instead of EV-DO, as in the U.S., and will have 8GB of storage instead of 16GB.

In the U.S., the Droid will be priced at $299.99 with a new two-year commitment, but a $100 mail-in rebate will bring the price down to $199.99. Pre-release reviews have been promising. One review site called the phone "the most powerful and fastest Google Android device to date," featuring a "gorgeous display and the benefits of Android 2.0," but complained that the keyboard "feels flat" and that music and video capabilities lag behind the iPhone.

Fantasy Basketball

There are two types of drafting used to select players – the snake draft and the auction draft. In a snake draft, the first round is drafted in order. In the second round, the draft order is reversed so that the manager who made the last pick in the first round gets the first pick in the second round. The order is reversed at the end of each round so that the manager with the first overall pick does not maintain this advantage in every round. In an auction draft, each manager has a set budget (commonly $260, an amount borrowed from fantasy baseball) that he/she must use to fill out the team's roster. Players are put up for auction by managers, and the manager willing to pay the most for the player "drafts" that player. The advantage of an auction is that all managers have equal access to all players (not the case in a snake draft). The disadvantages are that it typically takes longer than a snake draft, and can be intimidating for newer/inexperienced managers who may be relying on rankings from websites to draft.

"Roster size" refers to the number of players that may be assigned to any given team. The roster size is the same for all teams in the league. "Roster composition" refers to the number of players from each position (point guard, shooting guard, small forward, power forward, and center) that a given team may use. Some leagues require as few as five players per team (one from each position), challenging the player to assemble the best starting lineup from week to week. Other leagues may allow as many as twelve or fifteen players per team. These leagues usually designate one or more "bench" positions. Statistics accumulated by players assigned to the bench do not count for the team, but no other team may claim a player on another team's bench for their own team. Leagues with larger roster sizes challenge players to manage their rosters internally. Some leagues have a feature where players can communicate through the site. Yahoo Fantasy Basketball has a "Smack Talk" feature which allows players to talk to one another whenever they want. They can trash talk their opponents during the game or even during the day before the games ever start.

Fantasy Basketball

AIDS: Are the wilderness years over for vaccine research?

PARIS (AFP) –
Scientists looking for a vaccine against the AIDS virus can be forgiven for wondering at times whether they made the right career decision.

For more than a quarter-century, their quest has been littered with setbacks while colleagues who work on HIV treatment have been showered with success.

Promising avenues have led to dead ends and long, costly trials of prototypes have ended in failure, saddling the vaccine field with a reputation for lucklessness.

But two pieces of good news have suddenly boosted morale.

Even though a vaccine still lies over the horizon, at least a path has now emerged for getting there, say experts interviewed at the AIDS Vaccine 2009 conference, ending in Paris on Thursday.

On September 3, researchers in the United States discovered two potent antibodies -- the frontline troops in the immune system -- that expose what may prove to be a viral Achilles' heel.

On September 24, US and Thai researchers unveiled the results of the biggest vaccine trial ever.

Tested among more than 16,000 Thais, shots of ALVAC and AIDSVAX vaccines offered 31.2-percent protection against the risk of infection by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

This is far too weak to make it a vaccine for public use.

And nagging questions arise: why does the vaccine's effect seem to wane over time? Why does it seem to be less effective among people who are most at risk from HIV infection? And could it work in Africa, epicentre of a pandemic that has claimed 25 million lives and left some 33 million others infected?

Even so, the trial is scientific gold.

It proved at last that the immune system can be taught to recognise and devise a shield, even partially, against a notorious shape-shifting foe.

"We now have a proof of concept. It's the first time we've been able to show that," said Anthony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).

"ALVAC/AIDSVAX is not in itself the answer. It's a start on the road to a vaccine, whereas, before, we didn't even know where the road was."

"The Thai tests have provided a vital pick-me-up," agreed Jean-Francois Delfraissy, director of France's National Agency for AIDS Research (ANRS).

Seth Berkley, head of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI), said the research pipeline, which previously wheezed out tiny drips, was now becoming a small but steady flow.

"There's a lot of excitement," he said. "You've got the first data about protection. You've also got extremely potent antibodies that are showing new targets and there's a lot more of that coming, that field's exploding right now."

Berkley also noted that the two vaccines in the Thai trial were designed some 15 years ago. Smarter vaccines have since emerged, using different viral parts to prime the immune system and novel methods to deliver them.

Berkley pointed at progress -- among lab monkeys, not humans -- on so-called cell-mediated vaccines, in which immune cells are primed to clear out the AIDS virus after infection.

"What is happening now has sort of revitalised optimism," said Muhammad Bakari of the Muhimbili University College of Health and Allied Sciences in Tanzania.

"If you borrow the example from antiretrovirals, people thought it would take many, many years to get these drugs but the speed was much, much faster than what was thought initially. So I think we should be optimistic."

Bakari's team reported very encouraging results from an early trial, gathering 60 Tanzanian policeman, who were given either a Swedish candidate vaccine called DNA/MVA, or a placebo.

All those who were given the primer and booster showed a very strong immune response, "as high as any" in previous vaccine trials, he said.

At this early stage, the vaccine is tested for safety, not for efficacy, and delivery and dosage may have to be modified, but the results should warrant arguing for a wider trial, he said.

French scientist Francoise Barre-Sinoussi, who co-won the 2008 Nobel Prize for Medicine, cautioned that a vaccine breakthrough still depended on answering fundamental questions about HIV and the pathways of infection.

With vaccines, "you are only looking for a single piece of the jigsaw puzzle. A single piece never gives you the whole picture. It's all the pieces of the puzzle put together that give the answer."

'To Kill a Mockingbird' actress dies in NC

HIGHLANDS, N.C. – Actress Collin Wilcox-Paxton, who portrayed the false accuser in the movie classic "To Kill a Mockingbird," died of brain cancer just months after the diagnosis. She was 74.
Her husband, Scott Paxton, confirmed Thursday that she died Oct. 14 in Highlands in the southwest part of the state. No funeral was held. Instead, the family held a service before her death.
"It's pretty special being at your own memorial," said her husband of more than 30 years.
She was diagnosed Aug. 11 with three brain tumors, he said.
The actress played Mayella Ewell in the movie based on Harper Lee's Pulitzer-winning novel. Her role as the young white woman who accuses a black man of beating and raping her in her home was brief but memorable.
She angrily breaks down as actor Gregory Peck, the defense attorney, suggests she lied to avoid being abused by her racist father. The black defendant is convicted anyway and later killed.
In the late 1950s and '60s, she had roles in several Broadway plays, making her debut in 1958 in the family drama "The Day the Money Stopped." While the production was short-lived, The New York Times said she "scatters little sparks of humorous vitality throughout her scenes."
She had guest appearances in many early television series, such as "Gunsmoke," "The Fugitive," "The Waltons" and "Little House on the Prairie."
Her roles in the 1990s included television series and movies that were filmed near her hometown in the North Carolina mountains. They included "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil," which director Clint Eastwood filmed in Savannah, Ga., and the inspirational TV series "Christy," about a teacher in the early 1900s in remote Appalachia.
She is also survived by her three children and three grandchildren.

Jackson's mom changes lawyers in estate case

LOS ANGELES – A shakeup in Katherine Jackson's legal team left her unrepresented during a hearing to clarify the power two attorneys have over her son's estate, but it didn't stop the judge from issuing orders upholding those powers and adding new ones.
The new authority given the administrators by Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff on Thursday included not having to seek permission from the judge to make routine decisions on various administrative matters involving the estate of Michael Jackson.
Katherine Jackson has hired a new attorney, Adam Streisand, to represent her in the probate case, but Beckloff was told he did not attend the Thursday hearing because of a paperwork problem.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Jackson's mother is replacing the attorneys handling her interests in her son's multimillion-dollar estate case.
Katherine Jackson's personnel attorney, L. Londell McMillan, declined to say who would take over the case.
The change was expected to be discussed at a court hearing Thursday.
That hearing was called after attorneys for estate administrators and Katherine Jackson sought clarification of a ruling made by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff.
Beckloff granted co-administrators John Branca and John McClain authority to start handling numerous creditors' claims and lawsuits filed against Jackson's estate. Attorneys for both sides disagreed about how Beckloff's ruling should be worded.
Katherine Jackson is one of the primary beneficiaries of her son's estate and the legal guardian of his children. Her former attorneys had been considering mounting a challenge to the authority of the men administering the estate.
Burt Levitch, the attorney who argued Katherine Jackson's positions at most of the hearings held in the case, declined comment.
McMillan praised Levitch's work, but said the Jackson family was discussing a new approach to resolve lingering issues about the estate. He declined to elaborate.

Clinical Trials Update: Oct. 16, 2009 (HealthDay)

(HealthDay News) -- Here are the latest clinical trials, courtesy
of ClinicalConnection.com:

Healthy Volunteers (Ages 18+)

This study is enrolling people 18 and older who are
non-smokers. Participation will include a clinic visit from Nov. 8 to Nov.
10, with a second stay from Nov. 15 to Nov. 17.
The research site is
in Baltimore, Md.

More information
Please see http://www.clinicalconnection.com/clinical_trials/condition/healthy_volunteers.aspx.

-----
Alzheimer's Disease

This study will evaluate an investigational medication
for behavior and personality changes in people with Alzheimer's disease.

The research site is in Norristown, Penn.

More information
Please see http://www.clinicalconnection.com/clinical_trials/condition/alzheimers_disease.aspx.

-----
GERD (Acid Reflux)

This is an 11-week study to evaluate the effectiveness
and safety of a medication for people with GERD (acid reflux). You must
be aged 18 to 65 and be taking medication to treat GERD symptoms to
qualify.
The research site is in San Antonio, Texas.

More information
Please see http://www.clinicalconnection.com/clinical_trials/condition/gerd.aspx.

-----

Copyright 2009 ClinicalConnection.com. All rights reserved.

AP: Layoffs toughest on workers young, older (AP)

ORLANDO, Fla. – Marcus Wells and Shirley Walker view their economic prospects from opposite ends of the age spectrum.
Wells, 25, was initially optimistic about his prospects for finding a new job after he was laid off as a systems analyst in January in San Jose, Calif. Now unemployment has begun to wear on the him, and he believes his age has factored into his frustration.
"More experienced people are getting hired, and they're downgrading their skills to get the job," Wells said. "I feel like I'm competing with older workers, not college graduates. It wears on your confidence."
Walker, 58, lost her job running a nonprofit which helped minority women in business in Orlando and hasn't had any luck finding new work in the three months since.
"What they tell us is that they're looking for more mature and experienced workers, but they want us to work for less, or what they could pay younger people to do," she said recently outside an Orlando job fair. "Maybe younger people would be willing or able to accept lesser pay."
Would-be retirees have watched their savings dwindle and health care costs soar, while workers recently out of school and burdened by debt try to advance in careers that no longer have room for them.
The results show up on the map: Places with high concentrations of people in their late 20s or nearing what they thought would be their retirement age are feeling the recession the hardest, as measured by The Associated Press Economic Stress Index. The index assigns each county a score from 1 to 100, with higher numbers reflecting greater stress, based on its unemployment, foreclosures and bankruptcy rates.
California's Santa Clara County, where Wells lives, registered 14.42 on the stress index through June, the most recent month for which figures are available, while Walker's Orange County, Fla., came in at 15.69, both well above the average county's 10.6.
The groups associated with the highest stress scores in each U.S. county are men and women between ages 25 and 29 and women over age 55. That doesn't necessarily mean having a high percentage of people in those groups causes a county's economic health to worsen, though the two appear to go hand in hand.
Experts said a variety of factors may be at play.
Young adults are more at risk for losing their jobs and homes in a recession, while people later in life are more likely to declare bankruptcy in order to protect their assets, said Tay McNamara, director of research at the Center on Aging and Work at Boston College.
"Last hired, first fired. Generally, that is very true," McNamara said.
Chanel Moore knows how that goes. The 25-year-old Orlando resident was laid off last year from a job in retail and has found herself competing with older workers in her jobs searches.
"I'm young, trying to get on my feet, and then you have people older than me who are already on their feet looking for jobs with more experience than me," Moore said.
Workers in the 25 to 34 age group have seen the most dramatic rise in unemployment during the past year compared to other age groups. Their unemployment rate went from 5.7 percent in July 2008 to 10 percent in July 2009, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Compounding the pain for some young workers can be big bills from their careers as students. The average undergraduate finishes college with $17,700 in debt at four-year public schools and $22,375 in debt at four-year private schools. Also, student loan provider Sallie Mae reported this year that seniors graduated college with an average credit card debt of more than $4,100 in 2008, up from $2,900 four years earlier.
If there is a bright side for this age group, it's that they are less likely than older workers to have a family to feed or mortgage to pay.
"They're a pretty flexible group," said Tom Smith, a labor economist at Emory University. "They have fewer ties to a community and can travel or relocate."

Though younger people may be more likely to be laid off, older workers are less likely to recover from a layoff, experts said. Part of the reason stems from the myths surrounding older workers — that they're tough to train, more expensive and not comfortable with new technology, said Joseph Quinn, a professor of economics at Boston College.

"Once they do get laid off, they're really hosed," Quinn said.

Unemployment rates for older workers have increased in this recession more than in past recessions, and the unemployment rate for adults over age 65 is at an all-time high — 7 percent in July. That is up from 3.3 percent at the start of the recession in December 2007, but still below the national unemployment rate of 9.4 percent in July. The previous high was 6.6 percent in February 1977.

The rise in unemployment for older workers is partly the result of a mobile work force that hasn't stayed with a single employer for long periods of time as in the past, said Richard Johnson, a senior fellow at The Urban Institute in Washington.

"What seemed to protect older workers in the past is that they had a lot of seniority," Johnson said. "Now there is much more churning going on with these older workers. Even though they're older and experienced, they haven't been with the employer for very long."

Recent figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics back this up. The BLS data shows that workers over age 55 have found their share of mass layoffs increasing during the past decade — from just over 12 percent in 1999 to almost 18 percent in 2009.

Laid-off older workers are more likely this recession than in past recessions to try to find other jobs, rather than drop out of the labor market, since the tanking of the stock market last year has caused their retirement nest eggs to shrink, Johnson said.

Retirees, and near-retirees, also are more vulnerable to stock market fluctuations than in past decades as retirement benefits have shifted from defined-benefit pensions to 401(k) plans. About two-thirds of assets in 401(k) plans were invested in stocks in 2007, according to a study by the Investment Company Institute.

Estimates vary on how much was lost last year in retirement accounts, though most assessments have those accounts losing about a quarter to a third of their value.

Even though Medicare provides health insurance coverage to those age 65 and older, out-of-pocket medical expenditures increase with age. They were on average $2,900 during a two-year period for those ages 55 to 64 but grew to $4,400 for people age 85 and older, according to a federal Health and Retirement Study survey that was taken in 2002 before prescription drugs were covered by Medicare.

Walker, the Orlando executive, worried recently that she might have to take any job that becomes available to her, no matter if it fits her career path or salary expectations that come with an MBA.

"If you've been out there working, and you have a career, now it's like starting a career all over again," she said.

Out in California, former systems analyst Wells is living with his girlfriend, who supports the couple on her income, and he is looking for jobs outside of his field. Recently, he considered joining the military.

"I'm looking for part-time, temporary ... I'm looking for everything," Wells said. "I don't have another year of emergency funds to tough it out. I'm getting desperate. I'm 25 and I need to start making it happen."

___

Errin Haines reported from Atlanta.

Cassette to CD Recorder

Optical drive's rotational mechanism differs considerably from hard disk drive's, in that the latter keep a constant angular velocity (CAV), in other words a constant number of revolutions per minute (RPM). With CAV, a higher throughput is generally achievable at an outer disc area, as compared to inner area.

Some drives further lower their maximum read speed to around 40x on the reasoning that blank discs will be clear of structural damage, but that discs inserted for reading may not be. Without higher rotational speeds, increased read performance may be attainable by simultaneously reading more than one point of a data groove , but drives with such mechanisms are more expensive, less compatible, and very uncommon.

Cassette to CD Recorder

The Gangs of El Salvador: A Growing Industry (Time.com)

The two most famous exports of El Salvador are rivals. Unfortunately, they are also ferocious gangs: Mara 18 and the Mara Salvatrucha. They have exported their gang culture - learned by expatriates returned from undocumented existence in the big cities of the United States - to other countries in Central and South America, re-exporting their influence back to the U.S., moving beyond petty thievery, flashy tattoos and thuggish violence, to drug-trafficking and large-scale extortion.
For the last three decades, successive Salvadoran governments have tried to curtail the two Maras. In the 1990s the Salvadoran government instituted a policy that became known as the Mano Duro (Strong Hand), that saw thousands of gang members jailed. But Mano Duro has not stopped the gangs. Corruption at the highest levels of government has allowed many leaders to go free or conduct business from behind bars. Saul Turcios Angel, also known as the "Pitbull," ran a kidnapping and extortion ring as part of Mara Salvatrucha. He escaped from a Salvadoran prison last year and was apprehended in Nicaragua earlier this week. Turcios faces possible extradition to the U.S. to face charges that, while behind bars, he phoned fellow gang members in a Maryland suburb, ordering them to commit murders and other crimes. (See pictures of the gangs of El Salvador.)
Earlier this week as well, gang members are suspected of killing the photographer and documentary filmmaker Christian Poveda, who spent years chronicling their activity and evolution. Poveda was shot in the head, killed, say police, by the very gang members he had been filming earlier in the day. Gang related deaths average about 10 a day throughout the country, according to local newspaper accounts, which splash news of the mayhem across their front pages daily.
While some gang members say they are virtual prisoners of their poor neighborhoods, unable to leave the slums because of police crackdowns and threats from rival gangs, gang culture continues to spread. It has moved well beyond its original bases in the impoverished suburbs of the capital like Apopa and Soyapango. It has now taken root in San Miguel, the country's second-largest city, and the port of La Union, which they now utilize for trafficking drugs abroad. Nowadays, gangs threaten businesses large and small, demanding kickbacks for not shutting them down. They are even said to force the country's public transportation system to pay millions of dollars annually in protection money. (Read about U.S. programs that attempt to turn around gang members.)
Many observers believe that newly elected Salvadoran President Mauricio Funes will ease the Mano Duro policy and, instead, implement social programs aimed at dissuading the country's youth into joining gangs. But, says Samuel Logan, an expert on Latin American gang culture, "The current administration still has not made an effort to to adopt a less punitive position in dealing with the gangs." Ironically, one of the loudest advocates for rolling back Mano Duro ways Poveda, who photographed the El Salvaor civil war for TIME in the 1980s. Poveda said in a recent interview that El Salvador's political corruption and abject poverty made most gang members "victims of society." (Read about the election of Salvadoran President Maurico Funes.)
But social programs are expensive for a country that depends for survival largely on remittances from citizens who work abroad, from relatives and friends in the United States. El Salvador's local economy has been hit particularly hard in recent months due to the global economic downturn and slumping U.S. economy, says Larry Birns, director of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, creating "a society unable to fulfill expectations of a large portion of the population." Says Birns, "El Salvador simply can't afford a full-scale war on crime and gangs." And so the Maras will continue to grow and export themselves.
View this article on Time.comRelated articles on Time.com:Even Gangsters Need Their Mamas

FAA will change airspace rules over Hudson River (AP)

NEWARK, N.J. – Federal aviation officials say they will change airspace rules over the Hudson River at New York City after a deadly crash last month.
The Aug. 8 collision between a small plane and a tour helicopter killed nine people and focused attention on the river corridor. It is used by many small aircraft.
The new rules include requiring pilots to tune their radios to specific frequencies and restricting speeds.
Aircraft between 1,000 and 1,300 feet would use the same radio frequency as those flying below 1,000 feet.
Last month's crash occurred between a low level where visual flight rules apply and a higher altitude where air traffic controllers guide pilots.

(AP)

WASHINGTON – Obama to give major address on health care to joint session of Congress on Sept. 9.

Natural Hormone Replacement

Grandson sues to clear Stalin over killings (Reuters)

MOSCOW (Reuters) –
Josef Stalin was in the dock on Monday when a Russian court held a preliminary hearing in a libel case brought by his grandson over a newspaper story which said the tyrant had ordered the killings of Soviet citizens.

Rights groups say the case shows a creeping attempt in modern Russia to paint a more benevolent picture of the Soviet Union's most feared leader, under whose rule millions perished.

Stalin's grandson, Yevgeny Dzhugashvili, is seeking 9.5 million roubles ($299,000) from the Novaya Gazeta newspaper and 500,000 roubles from the author of an article published last April claiming Stalin personally signed politburo death orders.

Leonid Zhura, a convinced Stalinist who is representing Dzhugashvili in court, said that the article -- based on declassified Kremlin documents -- damaged Stalin's reputation.

"Half a century of lies have been poured over Stalin's reputation and he cannot defend himself from the grave so this case is essential to put the record straight," said Zhura.

"We want to rehabilitate Stalin," he told Reuters. "He turned populations into peoples, he presided over a golden era in literature and the arts, he was a real leader."

A phrase in the article saying Stalin and the secret police committed grave crimes against their own people caused particular offence, Zhura said.

The many sides of the Stalin myth -- bloody tyrant and war leader, pipe-smoking Kremlin puppet master and economic miracle worker -- are still the subject of a heated debate in Russia 20 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Gilded words of praise for the dictator were unveiled last week on the marbled halls of a central Moscow metro station and Stalin was voted Russia's third most popular figure in history in a nationwide poll last year.

MILLIONS DIED IN LABOR CAMPS

Russia buried last August Soviet-era dissident and author Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who was sent to a Gulag (labor camp) for making a joke about Stalin, in a religious ceremony which bore all the hallmarks of a state funeral.

But in the public arena in today's Russia, there is very little talk about the millions of Soviets who perished in Gulag labor camps or from famine during Stalin's rule.

Recent Russian teachers' manuals have described Stalin as an effective manager who acted rationally in conducting a campaign of terror to modernize the Soviet Union.

"There is a change in society's view of Stalin," Anatoly Yablokov, who authored the Novaya Gazeta article, said after the preliminary court hearing.

"We hear much more now about how much of an effective manager Stalin was, much more than in the 1990s, and much less about the repression," he said.

Stalin's opponents are enraged and say the change is being fueled by Kremlin leaders who want to forget the 1990s, when former President Boris Yeltsin spoke openly about some of the Soviet Union's darkest secrets.

"The authorities are trying to build a bridge to the Soviet Union over the Yeltsin years to idealize Stalin," said Nikita Petrov, an historian from the Memorial human rights group.

"They have decided it was too dangerous to delve into the horrors of our history. It is deeply sad. It is the football hooligan's view of history."

(Editing by Tim Pearce)

Fire official: Big LA forest fire human caused (AP)

LOS ANGELES – Firefighters made more progress Wednesday against a giant wildfire that has ravaged a national forest north of Los Angeles as investigators searched for more information about how the fire started.
Officials are still trying to figure out what set off the blaze in the Angeles National Forest that had burned nearly 219 square miles, or 140,150 acres, by early Wednesday. Deputy incident commander Carlton Joseph said Wednesday that the fire was human-caused, but it's not known specifically how it was started or whether it was accidental or arson.
Carlton says investigators have leads that brought them to the conclusion but he will not give any further information. Carlton notes that the options were lightning or a human cause and lightning has been ruled out.
Firefighters have created a perimeter around 22 percent of the blaze, largely by removing brush with bulldozers and setting controlled burns. Bulldozers still have 95 miles of fire line to build, mostly on the blaze's eastern front near the the San Gabriel Wilderness Area.
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger visited the fire area Wednesday morning and served breakfast to firefighters, scooping Cream of Wheat into paper bowls and giving them plenty of protein so "they get all pumped up for the next fight out there with those fires."
"The crews are making excellent progress based on the improved weather conditions," U.S. Forest Service incident commander Mike Dietrich at a Wednesday news conference.
Since erupting Aug. 26, the blaze has destroyed more than five dozen homes, killed two firefighters and forced thousands of people from their homes. The cause was still not known.
Officials also were keeping a close eye on the wind, which had been calm overnight but could pick up Wednesday afternoon and move flames closer to homes and a historic observatory on Mount Wilson.
In a hillside neighborhood of Glendale, Frank Virgallito stood in a group anxiously watching a controlled burn edge toward their neighborhood.
Virgallito said he and his neighbors had been on high alert since Friday but ignored a voluntary evacuation.
"You don't sleep well," Virgallito said. "I get up every hour and a half or two hours to get a good view of where the fire is. For four days we've been a little sleep-deprived. It's unnerving."
Virgallito said he saw deer, coyote and skunks scampering down his street away from the heat and ash of the smoldering wilderness.
Officials also worried about the threat to a historic observatory and TV, radio and other antennas on Mount Wilson northeast of Los Angeles. But on Tuesday, firefighters set backfires near the facilities before a giant World War II-era seaplane-turned-air tanker made a huge water drop on flames inching toward the peak from the north and west.
By nightfall, 150 firefighters and engines were stationed at the peak to defend the towers, said fire spokesman Paul Lowenthal.
The flames crossed the Angeles Crest Highway into the San Gabriel Wilderness to the east on Tuesday, Lowenthal said. Firefighters made progress on fire breaks to the north near Acton and southwest from Altadena to the Sunland neighborhood.
Firefighters and longtime residents know it could be so much worse. Autumn is the season for the ferocious Santa Ana winds to sweep in from the northeastern deserts, gaining speed through narrow mountain canyons, sapping moisture from vegetation and pushing flames farther out into the suburbs.
"If we had Santa Anas, we still have all this open land here on the western flank and islands of vegetation would throw embers into the air, which would blow down to the homes," Fire spokesman Henry Martinez said, his voice trailing off as he imagined the worst-case scenario. "Let's hope that doesn't happen."
The wildfire season usually doesn't gather steam until the winds hit in October, but the fire has been driven by dryness instead of wind. The region is in the midst of a three-year drought, and the tinder-dry forest is ripe for an explosive fire.

Fire officials said 12,000 homes were threatened, but as evacuations are lifted, that number will likely fall.

Smoke billowed thousands of feet up in the air, forming what firefighters call an "ice cap," which dissipated and was pushed east for at least 800 miles.

In Colorado, smoke from the Station Fire combined with soot from local fires to block mountain views from Denver.

"That really speaks to the columns of smoke and how much burning was going on," said Norv Larson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Grand Junction, Colo.

"I've put haze in the forecast. I don't see it ending anytime soon," Larson said. "We've got our fires here, you've got your fires there."

Flames charred other parts of Southern California, including one that burned at least 1.5 square miles in the San Bernardino County community of Oak Glen and another that threatened 400 homes in Yucaipa and was at 70 percent containment.

"There's action everywhere," Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Tuesday as a helicopter interrupted his comments at a news conference in San Bernardino County.

Lance Williams, 49, managed to save his aunt's home in Delta Flats, a remote community tucked in a canyon in the Angeles National Forest, but returned Tuesday to find his neighbors' homes in ashes.

"It looked like hell," Williams said. "The fire was creating its own winds. There was no way of predicting which way it would go."

He said he used a water pump to fight off the firestorm that raced down hillsides into the canyon. By the time he ran out of water, fire crews had arrived to defend the home that had been in his family since 1945.

Near the remains of house, the charred frames of animal cages swayed in a light wind. In one of the cages, the remains of three small dogs were found.

The massive fire also took a toll on firefighters who bunk down each night in tents at the huge fire command center. Glendale firefighter-paramedic Jack Hayes, 31, said he had not taken a day off for a week.

"You can't sleep," said Hayes, who had the beginnings of a beard and bloodshot eyes. "You're ready to go and there's always something you could be doing."

Two firefighters — Capt. Tedmund Hall, 47, of San Bernardino and firefighter Specialist Arnaldo "Arnie" Quinones, 35, of Palmdale — were killed Sunday when their vehicle plummeted off a mountain road. Quinones' wife is expecting a child soon, and Hall had a wife and two adult children.

___

Associated Press writers Greg Risling, Thomas Watkins, Daisy Nguyen and Jacob Adelman in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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