Author: Serkadis

  • Squabbling Senate May Miss Deadline To Extend Unemployment Benefits For 1.2 Million Americans

    jimbunning one tbi

    There’s not a single senator who does not want to extend unemployment benefits for the 1.2 million Americans that will lose benefits by the end of the month, but the august body may be too inept to pass the bill.

    Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) is pushing a bill that would extend by 30 days benefits for workers laid off through no fault of their own. Last year’s stimulus bill already extended benefits beyond the normal 26 weeks.

    Standing in the way, according to HuffPo, is Sen. Jim Bunning (R-Ken.), who insists on establishing a means of funding the extension.

    Also in the way is Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), who is taking this moment of desperation to press the Senate for action on the estate tax.

    Meanwhile, unemployment insurance recipients in Michigan are scared like hell. Here’s a letter they received this week (from Huffpo):

    Dear Unemployment Insurance Recipient:

    Our records indicate that you are currently receiving unemployment benefits through the Michigan Unemployment Insurance Agency. While the first 26 weeks of your unemployment benefits are the responsibility of the State of Michigan, the federal government funds all unemployment benefit extensions. The United States Congress has until Sunday, February 28, to ensure that these federal benefit extensions continue.

    If the Congress does not vote by February 28 to extend federal unemployment benefits, no new extensions will be established and the federal programs that are in place will be phased out. While we are hopeful that Congress will approve an extension of federally funded unemployment benefits by the end of February, this notice is being issued in the event that Congress does not act. Among the specific benefit programs that will be affected if Congress fails to act will be the following:

    Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Tier 1 – Maximum 20 weeks of benefitsl EUC Tier 2 – Maximum 14 weeks of benefits; EUC Tier 3 – Maximum 13 weeks of benefits; EUC Tier 4 – Maximum 6 weeks of benefits; Extended Benefits (EB) – Maximum 20 weeks of benefits. Additionally, the Federal Additional Compensation (FAC) extra payment of $25 per week will also expire.

    If these federal extensions expire, the following will occur:

    – If you are currently receiving state funded unemployment benefits, you will not receive an extension of your benefits.
    – If you are currently receiving a federall funded extension of your benefits, you will not receive any further extension of benefits.
    – Extended Benefits can only be paid up to the week ending March 27, 2010.

    If Congress fails to extend the expiration date by February 28, 2010, the Unemployment Insurance Agency will begin mailing all unemployed workers currently collecting benefits a letter with more specific information.

    If Congress extends the expiration date, extensions will continue through the new expiration date. You will not receive a letter, but this information will be available on the agency’s web site at www.michigan.gov/uia and in the news media.

    If is our hope that the Congress will act to avoid an interruption in the unemployment benefits that are available to you. And, in fact, we are working to encourage Congress to act quickly so benefits will continue. However, we also understand how critical these benefits are to you and that is why we are providing this notice so you will not be caught unaware if the Congress fails to act by February 28, 2010.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Aston Martin Racing launches one-make Vantage GT4 series in UK

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    Aston Martin Vantage GT4 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Single-make customer racing series are an engaging experience for exotic sportscar-makers and their customers. Ferrari‘s Challenge series dates back to the 348 (succeeded since by the 355, 360 and 430, soon to be replaced by the 458). Porsche‘s Supercup series has been at it since the early ’90s and Lamborghini launched its own Super Trofeo championship just a couple of years ago. Even Maserati‘s getting in on the game with its new GranTurismo MC. But despite its extensive competition in the various Le Mans Series around the world, Aston Martin has been decidedly absent from the spec-racing scene, the one exception being the company’s Asia Cup that started in 2008. But that’s all about to change.

    To give the broad base of customers who already own race-spec Vantages a chance to get back on track against equal machinery, Aston is launching its own British GT4 Challenge. The series is open to the Vantage GT4 and N24, and will run this year at five tracks across the UK (including Silverstone) plus one at Belgium’s famous Spa Francorchamps.

    GT4-spec Vantage owners pony up a reasonable £12,950 (about twenty grand American) for the season, which includes hospitality, driving suits and full paddock support from Aston Martin Racing. Fuel and tires are extra, but Aston’s trackside support will be so extensive that they’ll even install a replacement engine on the spot in case you blow yours out. The 4.3-liter N24 owners feeling underpowered can also upgrade to the GT4’s 4.7-liter engine to keep pace.

    While the winner of the existing Asia Cup earn a fully-sponsored season in the FIA GT4 Championship, the British champion gets a crack at test driving either the Vantage GT2 or DBRS9 GT3. Now all we need is for Aston to launch a series in North America and we’ll be set.

    [Source: PistonHeads]

    Aston Martin Racing launches one-make Vantage GT4 series in UK originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 25 Feb 2010 15:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Santa Anita Park Race 6 Horse Racing Betting Pick Thursday 2-25-10

    Our horse racing play for Wednesday will come from Race 6 at Santa Anita. It’s a 1 mile turf event for maiden fillies three years of age. Post time for Race 6 today is set for 6:36PM Eastern Time and you can watch it on TVG. With our free pick we will play on #7 L’Enchanteresse to win.

    L’Enchantereesse will be ridden by the red hot Rafael Bejarano and is trained by Doug O’Neil. This maiden stretches out from 6 ½ furlongs down the hill to a two-turn race. She has 5 in the money finishes in her 8 lifetime races. Bejarano and O’Neill combo are hitting at 27% over the past 60 days. Jock has 7 wins in his past 24 mounts. The added distance will be the difference and Bejarano still aboard puts me on this filly at this great price.

    Play #7 L’Enchanteresse to win race 6 at Santa Anita 6-1 on the Morning Line.

    Post Time at 6:36PM Eastern Time televised by TVG

    Courtesy of Tonys Picks

  • HTC HD2 vs HTC HD mini

    Cellularmagazine.it has published this video comparing the HTC HD2 to the HTC HD Mini.  The smartphone is clearly much smaller than the HD2, seemingly able to fit whole inside the screen of the HD2.

    The video shows the HD Mini has a pretty faithful reproduction of the Sense UI of the HTC HD2, but lacks some of the more processor-intensive features such as the landscape album view.

    Of course the HD Mini does run Windows Mobile 6.5.3, and update that will hopefully come to the HD2 at some point.

    Are any of our readers considering the HD Mini? Let us know below.

  • Mother of longtime Palatine mayor was strong believer in public service

    The mother of former Palatine Mayor Rita Mullins, who inspired her daughter to pursue a life of public service, has passed away.

    Antonia Krueger died on Monday at the age of 93. She lived in Palatine for more than 50 years.

    “My mother was the one who helped everyone,” said Mullins, who was the Palatine village clerk for eight years before being elected to five terms as mayor. “When someone needed something, she was there to help them. In that way, I suppose she influenced me.”

    Mrs. Krueger passed away the same day as another Palatine matriarch was buried. Aida Guss, wife of former Palatine Mayor Robert Guss, was killed Feb. 18 after being hit by a truck while crossing Northwest Highway.

    The two women were friends and considered each other family. Amber Mullins, Mrs. Krueger’s granddaughter, is married to Mrs. Guss’ son, Robert.

    “It’s been a very rough time for the family,” Mullins said.

    Observers say Mrs. Krueger and her can-do attitude played a role in her daughter’s long career in public service.

    “I’d say she had a huge impact on Rita,” says Arlington Heights Village President Arlene Mulder, a friend and colleague of Mullins. “She gave her daughter a lot of self confidence and the attitude that she could do anything she set her mind to.”

    Mrs. Krueger grew up in Boston, as the oldest of six children of Italian immigrants. Her parents ran a fruit and vegetable store on the city’s north side, requiring Mrs. Krueger to delay going to school in order to watch her younger siblings.

    In the end, she was the first in her family to graduate from high school and she would encourage her siblings to pursue higher education, including her youngest brother, Dominic Donatello, who attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

    When World War II broke out, Mrs. Krueger went to work in the Boston Naval Shipyard. Wanting to do more, she enlisted in the Navy and received medical training as a Naval corpsman.

    While stationed in Washington D.C. and working in a hospital, she met her future husband, Alfred, a Marine recovering from malaria he had contracted in the Pacific theater.

    “When they met, my mother outranked my father,” Mullins says. “He was a very proud Marine.”

    They were married on the Quantico Marine base before being stationed at numerous bases across the country. Rita Mullins, the oldest of their three children, was born in Washington D.C.

    In 1958, the family settled in Palatine where they would raise their children. Mrs. Krueger worked as a hairdresser in Palatine, but she also was a longtime member of the Palatine American Legion Post 690.

    Mrs. Krueger was preceded in death by her husband, who died in 2004, and her youngest daughter, Alice Mika. Besides Mullins, she is survived by her son, Steven, as well as four grandchildren and eight great grandchildren.

    A memorial service will be held in May when extended family members can gather.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • New Industry Springs Up Overnight: Filing Patent Marking Suits Over False Patent Claims

    A few years back, we wrote about some lawsuits that were filed against companies who were still listing expired patents on their products, implying that those products were still protected by the patents. The practice of claiming patent coverage over something that isn’t patented is known as “patent marking,” and it’s become very popular lately. AdamR alerted us to the news that Activision was recently sued for patent marking, in listing out patents on certain games that don’t cover what’s in those games. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

    Joe Mullin points us to the news that, in just the past few months, it looks like a bunch of lawyers have started going around filing patent marking lawsuits. In at least some of these cases, totally different groups of lawyers have sued the exact same companies over the same patents.

    What’s going on?

    Well, as we noted a few years back, there had been a few such cases filed under the law covering patent marking, and as they made there way through the courts, there was a question of how the penalties should be calculated. The law notes that anyone found to have been patent marking “Shall be fined not more than $500 for every such offense.” But, if you were selling products — say Solo plastic cup lids (which one such case is about) — is that $500 fine for all the lids (considering all the cups with the marking together to be a “single offense”) or does each cup lid constitute a separate offense? Clearly, the difference matters in a big way.

    Without going into all the details, an appeals court ruled, at the end of last year, that the $500 should apply to each item, rather than to the product as a whole — massively increasing the liability for false marking. This particular ruling, the Forest Group ruling, applied to construction stilts, and greatly increased the liability — but in some of the other cases, the difference is even more striking. As some have noted, with Solo cups lids, there are supposedly 21 billion (with a b) cup lids with the allegedly falsely marked patent out there, meaning that a ruling like the one in Forest Group, if applied to Solo, turns a $500 liability into a $10 trillion liability.

    That’s real money.

    And here’s the next part of the law that makes things tricky. Unlike many court cases, anyone is allowed to bring a patent marking case. Yes, anyone. You just have to split the award with the US government. As the law notes:


    Any person may sue for the penalty, in which event one-half shall go to the person suing and the other to the use of the United States.

    So, with the Forest Group ruling last year, suddenly a bunch of lawyers realized that there could be good money in finding anyone with a falsely marked patent — especially if it’s on a consumer product of which there are tons in the market. Hence the sudden rush of patent marking cases, including duplicate suits against the same companies over the same patents.

    There are some concerns, obviously, that this is a dangerous situation, with a bunch of lawyers basically scouring the country for anything marked with a patent that might be expired or doesn’t cover the product in question. In fact, I’ve seen some start calling them “patent marking trolls,” playing off of the “patent troll” concept. But, at the same time, as with copyfraud, falsely claiming a gov’t granted monopoly right over something that is not protected is a pretty serious problem — and a law that makes it profitable to punish such an abuse seems like it should be a good thing. Now, if there were only a similar setup for copyrights…

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  • First Drive: 2011 Audi A8, the Grand Andalusian

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    2011 Audi A8 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    There was no sign of Sol on the Costa as I nosed the quartz-gray Audi A8 past the guard house and onto the rain-slicked traffic roundabout before heading out on the road.

    The long, smooth roadway that connected the estate to the autoroute was the perfect place to get better acquainted with the A8’s 372-horsepower, 4.2-liter V-8 and its 328 pound-feet of torque. Leaving the handsomely designed gear select in Drive allowed the eight-speed Tiptronic transmission to run through the gears at its sole discretion. But with a flick of the steering wheel-mounted paddles (downshift with the left paddle; upshift with the right, just as God intended), I snapped down to third gear to decelerate as I approached the roundabout, the transmission responding instantly with the discipline of a well-trained Doberman, the standard Quattro all-wheel drive easily finding traction despite the rain-slicked tarmac. I merged with traffic, exited the roundabout and accelerated southwest toward Cadiz with the Mediterranean off to my left, popping into view as rain clouds scuttled toward Morocco.

    Life in the south of Spain is sweet, and with the 2011 Audi A8 as a guide, it gets sweeter still.

    Continue reading First Drive: 2011 Audi A8, the Grand Andalusian

    First Drive: 2011 Audi A8, the Grand Andalusian originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 25 Feb 2010 14:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Ford gets nearly 11,000 orders for 2011 Mustang

    FoMoCo announced today that its has received nearly 11,000 orders for the 2011 Ford Mustang, three times more than the 2010 model in its first launch. The Dearborn automaker says that half of the nationwide orders have been made for the 305-hp 3.7L V6 Mustang.

    “Mustang is ready for a new generation of buyers,” Steve Ling, North America Car Marketing manager, said. “With new high-tech and fuel-efficient engines, class-leading connectivity and infotainment options as well as signature style and performance, Mustang is poised to continue its legacy as America’s favorite sports car.”

    Refresher: The 2011 Ford Mustang V6 is powered by the 3.7L V6 Ti-VCT making 305-hp and 280 lb-ft. The 2011 Ford Mustang GT is powered by a 5.0L 4-valve Twin Independent Variable Camshaft Timing (Ti-VCT) V8 engine producing 412-hp with a peak torque of 390 lb-ft. Transmission choices for both models include a 6-speed automatic with a 6-speed manual offered as standard.

    2011 Ford Mustang GT:

    2011 Ford Mustang GT 2011 Ford Mustang GT 2011 Ford Mustang GT 2011 Ford Mustang GT

    Press Release:

    NEW MUSTANG WITH NEW POWERTRAINS IN HIGH DEMAND

    * Orders for the 2011 Ford Mustang approach 11,000 in first month order banks are open – triple the number of orders that the 2010 Ford Mustang had at the same point in its launch
    * 2011 Mustang V-6s are 50 percent of all orders, up 19 percent versus initial orders in 2010
    * First-ever Mustang Club of America (MCA) Special Edition and California Special model demand is triple expectations

    DEARBORN, Mich., Feb. 25, 2010 – The new 2011 Ford Mustang with all-new powertrains has three times more orders than the 2010 model in its first month, and half of all nationwide orders are for the car’s class-leading 30 mpg 3.7-liter V-6 engine.

    “Fuel economy ranks among the top two reasons people choose vehicles,” said Steve Ling, North America Car Marketing manager. “With the 2011 Mustang lineup, we’ve found a way to offer even better fuel efficiency for V-6, GT and even Shelby GT500 performance drivers – while improving performance. And consumers are responding.”

    Nearly 11,000 Mustangs have been ordered since order banks opened in late January.

    Fifty percent of the 2011 Mustang orders are for V-6 models, which feature a new, high-performance, all-aluminum Duratec 3.7-liter dual overhead-cam (DOHC) Twin Independent Variable Cam Timing (Ti-VCT) engine. This new engine delivers 305 horsepower and an expected best-in-class EPA fuel efficiency of 30 mpg on the highway – a 25 percent improvement versus the 2010 model.

    2011 Mustang V-6 order levels are up 19 percent versus the new 2010 model orders.

    “The new engine transforms Mustang,” Ling said. “Everything people love about the car lives on, and now under the hood is a V-6 engine that uses premium technology to deliver the power, the feel, the fuel efficiency, even the sound of the best sports cars in the world.”

    A first-ever Mustang Club of America (MCA) Special Edition package available on V-6 models generated three times more orders than expected. Plus, “take rates” on the California Special series – which is available on the Mustang GT and harkens back to the original 1968 feature vehicle – are triple the expected rates.

    2011 Mustangs also are being equipped with record levels of technology. Navigation is specified on 18 percent of orders. High-intensity discharge (HID) headlamps are on 26 percent of vehicles. Rear-view cameras are on 10 percent – all up from 2010.

    For the 2011 model, 41 percent of orders are for Mustang GTs.

    The Mustang GT’s modern 5.0-liter four-valve, Ti-VCT V-8 engine delivers 412 horsepower and 390 ft.-lb. of torque. At the same time, fuel economy of 25 mpg highway is projected to be better than the previous model and unsurpassed in the segment.

    Approximately 9 percent of the 2011 Mustang orders are for Shelby GT500 models, which are powered by an all-new aluminum-block 5.4-liter supercharged V-8 engine. This produces 550 horsepower and 510 ft.-lb. of torque, a 10 horsepower increase versus the 2010 model. The engine also is 102 pounds lighter than its predecessor, delivering a better power-to-weight ratio, improved fuel economy, acceleration, handling and steering precision.

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Live from Washington: President Obama’s health care summit

    President Barack Obama argued Thursday that a sweeping overhaul of the nation’s broken health care system is imperative for the nation’s future economic vitality, clashing in an extraordinary live-on-TV summit with Republicans who want far more modest changes. “We believe we have a better idea,” declared GOP Sen. Lamar Alexander.

    With the marathon policy debate available from start to finish to a divided public, Obama cast the health care crisis as “one of the biggest drags on our economy,” painting his overhaul effort as critical to the economic revival that’s even more pressing to many Americans.

    “We all know that this is urgent,” he said.

    Obama lamented the partisan bickering that has resulted in a stalemate over legislation to extend coverage to more than 30 million people who are now uninsured.

    “Politics I think ended up trumping practical common sense,” he said.

    And yet, even as he pleaded for cooperation — and “actually a discussion, and not just us trading talking points” — he insisted on a number of Democratic points and acknowledged agreement may not be possible.

    “I don’t know that those gaps can be bridged,” Obama said. “If not, at least we will have better clarified for the American people what the debate is all about.”

    His skepticism about reaching consensus was vindicated as soon as the first Republican spoke — in opposition to the mammoth bills that have passed the House and Senate.

    Alexander said Congress and the administration should start over and take small steps, including medical malpractice reform, funding for high-risk insurance pools, allowing Americans to shop out of state for lower-cost plans and expanding health savings accounts.

    “Our views represent the views of a great many American people,” he said.

    Disagreements were not always expressed diplomatically.

    Alexander challenged Obama’s claim that insurance premiums would fall under the Democratic legislation. “You’re wrong,” he said. Responded Obama: “I’m pretty certain I’m not wrong.”

    As with much in the complicated health care debate, both sides had a point.

    The Congressional Budget Office says average premiums for people buying insurance individually would be 10 to 13 percent higher in 2016 under the Senate legislation, as Alexander said. But the policies would cover more medical services, and around half of people could get government subsidies to defray the extra costs.

    With such opposing positions well staked out before the meeting and no signs of them changing, the president and his Democratic allies prepared to move on alone. Politically, it would be an all-or-nothing gamble in a midterm election year for Democrats bent on achieving a goal that has eluded lawmakers for a half-century.

    One option for Democrats is passing a comprehensive plan without GOP support, by using controversial Senate budget reconciliation rules that would disallow GOP filibusters. Alexander asked Democrats to swear off a jam-it-through approach, while Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., defended it. Obama weighed in with gentle chiding, asking both sides to focus on substance and worry about process later.

    Polls show Americans want solutions to the problems of high medical costs, eroding access to coverage and uneven quality. But they are split over the Democrats’ sweeping legislation, with its $1 trillion, 10-year price tag and many complex provisions, including some that wouldn’t take effect for eight years.

    The Democratic bills would require most Americans to get health insurance, while providing subsidies for many in the form of a new tax credit. The Democrats would set up a competitive insurance market for small businesses and people buying coverage on their own.

    Democrats also would make a host of other changes, which include addressing a coverage gap in the Medicare prescription benefit and setting up a new long-term-care insurance program. Their plan would be paid for through a mix of Medicare cuts and tax increases.

    Another alternative if bipartisan agreement eludes Obama on Thursday is going smaller, with a modest bill that would merely smooth some of the rough edges from the current system.

    The Republican approaches, for instance, would help people now struggling with costs and coverage but probably not put the nation on a path toward coverage for all.

    A month after the Massachusetts election that cost Democrats their Senate supermajority and threw the health legislation in doubt, the White House has developed its own slimmed-down health care proposal so the president will know what the impact would be if he chooses that route, according to a Democratic official familiar with the discussions.

    That official could not provide details, but Democrats have looked at approaches including expanding Medicaid and allowing children to stay on their parents’ health plans until around age 26.

    The slimmer backup plan was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

    Obama himself hinted at a Democrats-only strategy. When asked by reporters as he walked to Blair House if he had a Plan B, he responded: “I’ve always got plans.”

    “Not only are lawmakers polarized, the parties’ constituencies are far apart,” said Robert Blendon, a Harvard University professor who follows public opinion trends on health care.

    “The president is going to use it as a launching pad for what will be the last effort to get a big bill passed. He will say that he tried to get a bipartisan compromise and it wasn’t possible.”

    The summit was held at Blair House, the elegant presidential guest quarters across the street from the White House. Leaders of both parties spoke, with Obama steering the debate as moderator.

    It wasn’t a grand, or even particularly comfortable, setting.

    About 40 senators, representatives and administration officials were crowded around a large hollow square table in a cramped room, perched for the six-hour marathon on wooden chairs with thin cushions. Coffee breaks had been ruled out, so the only pause in the action would come during lunch.

    C-SPAN carried complete coverage, while news operations from cable networks to public broadcasting were making it the focus of their day.

    Associated Press writers Erica Werner, Ben Feller and Natasha Metzler contributed to this story.

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • 2 hurt in explosion at Bedford Park plant

    Two people were injured Wednesday night during an electrical explosion at a factory in Bedford Park.

    The explosion happened about 9:30 p.m. at a Archer Wire Intl. Corp., a metal work company, at 7300 Narragansett Ave., Bedford Park Assistant Chief Jeff Clohessy said.

    A person at the plant notified officials about the electrical incident, Clohessy said.

    One person was taken to Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood and the other was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, Clohessy said. The victims’ conditions were not known.

    The plant sustained very little damage, Clohessy said.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Regional carrier American Eagle to sell 1st class

    DALLAS, TX (AP)  — The regional affiliate of American Airlines says it will set aside room on some of its planes for first-class seating beginning this summer.

    American Eagle said Thursday it will offer nine first-class seats on its CRJ-700 jets, which are much smaller than most planes operated by big sister American Airlines.

    The jets will have 63 or 65 coach seats after the redesign.

    Customers in first class will get complimentary meals on longer flights or what Eagle describes as a gourmet snack mix on shorter hops.

    The airline promises seats with ergonomically designed cushions and speedier baggage service.

    Eagle will offer the service from hubs in Chicago and Dallas-Fort Worth beginning in July.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Illinois schools piling up snow days

    GALESBURG, Ill. (AP)  — West-central Illinois schools have piled up an impressive collection of snow days this winter. At least some, though, say they don’t expect to extend the school year to make up for lost time.

    Students in the United School District have been out eight days.

    The district serves rural Monmouth, Yorkwood and Alexis, all about 50 miles northwest of Peoria.

    District bookkeeper Kris Repp can’t recall a year in the past two decades with that many snow days.

    The district builds five snow days into its schedule. It plans to seek a state waiver to cover two days and go to school on an optional holiday to cover the last one.

    Abingdon, Bushnell-Prairie City and Spoon River Valley school districts also have had more than five snow days off.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Prostitute filmed transactions with clients

    CHICAGO (STMW)  — An undercover prostitution sting on the Northwest Side this week led to the discovery of an elaborate video recording system used to videotape transactions and sex acts between the suspect and her clients, according to police.

    Guo Yu, 53, was arrested Monday in her apartment in the 5400 block of North East River Road in an unincorporated area near O’Hare Airport after Cook County Sheriff’s police investigated an ad on an Internet site, according to a release from the sheriff’s office.

    She was charged with prostitution, according to a sheriff’s office spokesman.

    The ad promised a “superb authentic oriental rub” by a 28-year-old “beautiful, highly trained and skilled young lady” who “is there to please.” For $180, customers were promised an “all inclusive” “tissue rub” and “a totally relaxing experience” in a “beautiful home, in a relaxing oriental setting,” the release said.

    An undercover sheriff’s officer responded to the ad Monday afternoon and once inside, Yu allegedly offered sex for cash, the release said. She briefly left the bedroom for another room, where she had set up a video monitor connected to a camera hidden in the hallway outside her apartment door.

    On the monitor, Yu saw officers outside her door and though she was naked, she nervously returned to the bedroom and tried engaging in conversation with the undercover officer, who placed her under arrest.

    Investigation revealed a hidden camera in the public hallway and more cameras in the bedroom, including a pin-sized camera set an Oriental wall fan. Jamming equipment had also been set up to block cell phone or text message transmissions from the apartment, the release said.

    All cameras all fed into a kitchen monitor for viewing, and were recording on a system set up in another bedroom. Years’ worth of tapes were found, all showing male customers exchanging cash for sex, the release said. About 30 hours worth of tapes have so far been confiscated, and more tapes had been erased.

    Officers are reviewing the tapes for evidence and examining a computer found in Yu’s home. It is illegal in Illinois to videotape a person without their consent or to transmit live video of a person without their consent, the release said.

    Police are also trying to determine whether any of the tapes were used to further other criminal activity against the customers.

    Yu’s next court date is set for March 25 in Rolling Meadows.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • 17 years later, $14.6M settlement in trampoline suit

    CHICAGO (WBBM)  — Seventeen years after a trampoline accident at a Chicago public school, there’s a 14-point-6 million dollar settlement in the personal injury case.

    It was in December of 1992 when a 13-year-old student named Ryan Murray broke his neck using a small trampoline at a South Side school.

    Ryan became a quadriplegic.

    The family sued the Chicago Board of Education – and the case went through 17 years of legal battles. But now there is a settlement: 14 million, 675 thousand dollars.

    Attorney Susan Schwartz has represented Ryan Murray, who is now 30, since the family filed suit.

    “I think the biggest sense is just relief knowing that Ryan will be able to get the care that he needs.

    “That’s the overwhelming concern. He’s not insurable. The overwhelming concern was how will we be able to provide them. And since his mother is his caregiver, what would happen if something were to happen to her?”

    Schwartz says attorneys will get a third of the 14-point-6 million dollars settlement.

    Newsradio 780 has asked the Chicago Public Schools for reaction.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Attacking Invasive Plants from the Air


    Wired’s Planet Earth
    reports that the Nature Conservancy’s Hawaii program has undertaken an ambitious conservation program in the Kauai watershed, a 144,000-acre “cloud forest” that varies in elevation by 3,000 feet. According to Wired, the area has been invaded by Australian tree ferns, an invasive species characterized as “water-sucking” and “plant-strangling.”

    Given the difficulty of accessing the area’s varied and dense terrain on foot, the Nature Conservancy team decided to go by plane. The Nature Conservancy first flies a Cessna 186 fitted with digital cameras and “a multispectral imager” that creates precise images of areas of infestation. Australian tree ferns have a distinctive shape so individual plants can be marked for herbicide. 

    Once plants are marked, a helicopter is set up with a “winch system” with a hose used to spray tree ferns. The Nature Conservancy team also tested the use of “high-pressure paintball guns” that can shoot herbicide pellets. This system was developed for by University of Hawaii weed ecologist James Leary.

    Read the article

    For more on fighting invasive plant species in the U.S., go to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agriculture Library, which offers a comprehensive set of resources on invasive plants. The New York Botanical Garden has an online catalog as well.

    In the UK, the government has asked gardeners to help limit the introduction of non-native plant species into the wild through its “Be Plant Wise” campaign. The Guardian (UK) writes: “the Be Wise Campaign is warning that five non-native aquatic bullies – floating pennywort, New Zealand pigmyweed, water-primrose, parrot’s feather and water fern – are invading British waterways, wiping out native species and disrupting water sports and boating.” 

    Lastly, check out Nature Conservancy’s now-defunct “Global Invasive Species Team” for more resources, which includes voluntary codes of conduct for the landscape and horticultural industries.

    Image credit: Chad Riley, The Nature Conservancy / Wired Planet Earth

  • RIAA CEO Tries To Connect China Google Hack With Google’s Attitude Towards Copyright

    The RIAA has made some bizarre and totally nonsensical arguments in its time, but it may have just set a new low. castilho points us to an opinion piece written by RIAA boss Mitch Bainwol that tries to pin the blame for the Chinese hack of Google on Google’s opinion towards copyright. Seriously. Of course, the logical leaps and bounds you have to go through to make this sort of statement is a bit crazier than your average roller coaster, and in the process Bainwol seems to be implying both that those who give away anything for free are against content creation and that getting hacked actually has something to do with copyright law.


    In January, Chinese hackers infiltrated the systems of the biggest technology dog on the global block and, according to the company, stole Google’s intellectual property.

    I see where you’re going with this, but to compare hacked code being copied with fans sharing music (neither of which, by the way, is actually “stealing”) is so far off-base that it’s guffaw-inducing. In Google’s case, this was information for private use — not something protected by intellectual property law that it was trying to sell. The two situations are entirely different and, unlike Mitch Bainwol, the folks at Google clearly do understand the difference.


    In texting parlance, Google has finally had an OMG! moment when it comes to intellectual property. Unfortunately, it took this theft of their IP to flip on the switch.

    Ignoring the bizarre and slightly creepy attempt to sound hip, nothing in Google’s response suggests any change in opinion on the issue of intellectual property. That’s because, as stated above, the hack had nothing to do with intellectual property or intellectual property law. If it caused any sort of epiphany, it should have been in relation to the problems with gov’t mandated surveillance, which is what opened Google up to being hacked. Again this has nothing whatsoever to do with intellectual property law and everyone knows it. Except, apparently, Mitch Bainwol.


    Frankly, Google has never been very warm to the idea of copyright protections. Google routinely has sided with the “free access” (more aptly the “free of charge”) crowd against those who actually create the intellectual property.

    I can’t speak for Google, obviously, but my sense has always been that they actually do take copyright law incredibly seriously. They went out and hired one of the world’s foremost experts in copyright. But it’s that second sentence that is so amazingly wrong that I’d like to formally request that Mitch Bainwol and the RIAA issue an apology for being blatantly insulting to everyone who believes in the use of “free” as part of a smart business model. I’ll note, of course, that the RIAA itself has long used “free” in parts of their business model — and to then imply that this is against those who actually create intellectual property is obnoxious in the extreme.

    I create intellectual property every single day, as do people at Google, and many others who recognize the value of free content. To imply that those who understand basic economics are somehow “against” content creators is ridiculous. How can you claim that, when we spend so much time showing how content creators — including a bunch who the labels that Bainwol represents have clearly ripped off repeatedly — are now making more money by ignoring copyright and leveraging free to their advantage, often to make more money than any RIAA-label ever helped them make?

    Mitch, you owe all supporters of “free” an apology.


    Remember the Big G’s idea to digitize every book in the world and put it in their digital library? That went over so well that Association of American Publishers and the Authors Guild of America sued to stop Google from creating the virtual library.

    Wait, what? A lawsuit, by itself, doesn’t mean anything. Mitch? The Authors Guild hasn’t won its lawsuit, and has admitted that the reason it settled was because a bunch of copyright experts told them they had a pretty good chance of losing the lawsuit to Google.

    Hell, the RIAA has been sued for racketeering a bunch of times. By Bainwol’s own logic here, the RIAA must be racketeers.


    Google argued that they were just trying to make the world a better place by making important works of literature available to people all over the globe. A rather egalitarian idea (unless you’re the authors and publishers who depend on people actually buying books in order for you to make a living).

    Yes, you heard it here first. The RIAA is apparently against people having more access to books. As for that final sentence, again, Bainwol is playing fast and loose with the facts. Google Books only showed mere snippets of books, and most authors found that when their books were available on Google books it helped them sell more and make a better living. Isn’t that the point? Or should we not be surprised that the guy who’s the spiritual leader of an industry that sued tens of thousands of its biggest fans and presided over the massive collapse of its revenue doesn’t quite understand how to focus on the actual bottom line results rather than making up false stats?


    Last month, Google found out just how dangerous free access to one’s property can be to one’s business model. Like Inspector Renault who is “shocked” to find gambling in Rick’s saloon in “Casablanca,” Google was “shocked” to find their systems hacked and their precious intellectual property stolen. Now, I’m not expecting Google to make a 180° turn and join us in our fight to protect IP the way Claude Raines joined Bogart to fight the Nazis, but perhaps Google will have a more reasonable view of the need to protect IP.

    Why? Seriously? Please explain how the hell intellectual property laws would have made the slightest difference here. You could have had the most powerful copyright laws in the world, and it would have had zero impact on the ability of Chinese hackers to break into Google’s servers. The hack had nothing to do with intellectual property laws.

    The problem here — and this is quite common with folks who don’t actually understand this topic — is that Bainwol is confusing intellectual property laws with the intellectual property (which isn’t actually property, but that’s another issue…).


    What’s the effect of IP theft on the U.S. economy? First, let’s look at the IP industry’s share of the economy. A 2007 International Intellectual Property Alliance study found 11.7 million people working in the total copyright industries. That’s 8.51 percent of the U.S. workforce. These industries help drive our nation’s economy. In 2007, IP companies added $1.52 trillion or 11.05 percent to the GDP. When people say “we don’t make anything in America anymore,” just hit them with those facts.

    I see your bogus $1.52 trillion dollars and raise you to $2.2 trillion. That’s the amount of the US economy dependent on exceptions to copyright law such as fair use. And that, by the way, is using the same methodology as your $1.52 trillion bogus number. And you know, companies like Google are a big part of those that rely on exceptions in copyright, such as fair use — something your organization has tried to deny exists.


    In cities and towns throughout America, the IP community creates good paying jobs that have an enormous, positive impact. Those jobs come with health care plans and retirement savings accounts. They benefit our cities and towns with increased tax revenues that help pay for the services we all need.

    See what Bainwol is doing here? He keeps shifting back and forth between content and IP laws, as if they’re the same thing. But they’re not. Most of those jobs don’t rely on IP laws to exist. In fact, as noted above, a much greater number rely on avoiding IP law through exceptions to have those jobs, with that even larger enormous, positive impact.


    Most importantly, the IP industries create products that are enjoyed the world over–games, movies, books, and of course, music. Yet every year, as broadband technology advances, intellectual property thieves become increasingly more sophisticated. The assaults grow more ferocious. The broader the broadband, the easier to steal copyrighted works.

    Mitch, those aren’t “IP industries.” They’re content industries, and a significant portion of their income doesn’t come because of IP laws. Hell, if we just look at your own industry, music, we see that a significant and growing portion is the part that doesn’t rely on IP laws at all. And please can the faux moral panic about broadband being to blame here. You and your organization have had well over a decade to learn how to adapt. Many in the music business have adapted. It’s just the organizations that you represent that have been resisting and making bad decisions — many under your leadership — that have resulted in nothing but greater and greater losses. This isn’t about broadband, but about a basic failure to adapt to a changing marketplace.


    Like our friends at Google, we fully support the adoption of broadband and the new and exciting opportunities it provides for consumers to enjoy movies, television programs and music.

    And that, right there, explains why you’re so far behind. You still don’t realize what the internet is. It’s a communication platform. It’s not for consumers to just enjoy music, television programs and music. It’s for them to communicate. You want to turn the internet into a broadcast medium when it’s a communications medium. The reason people share content online is because that’s what the internet is for. To communicate — and communication is just a way of sharing information. Until you understand that simple fact, you’re going to keep flailing.


    Yet there is no question that despite our extensive and innovative offerings of legal content, the levels of online and physical theft around the world extract a profound toll. That activity has a direct and harmful impact on American jobs and our economy. And as Google has found out, this illegal activity is exacerbated by the unwillingness of some–including some businesses and even some governments–to take reasonable steps to address these problems. As we know too well, IP theft has “enablers” all over the place.

    Again, no, what Google found out was that it needed better security, not stronger IP laws.


    If it is in the national interest to protect the millions of Americans who use Google’s services–and it is– it is also in the national interest to stop the theft of intellectual property. But doing so requires cooperation by other industries and a commitment on the part of government to take reasonable steps, both at home and abroad, to combat the harmful economic effects of IP theft.

    Again with the apples and oranges comparison. You’re still talking about two totally different things. And your readers know it. They’re not stupid. Why treat them as idiots who can’t tell the difference?


    Working with our partners in business and in government, we hope to ensure that the American intellectual property community remains a strong, vibrant world leader that helps fuel our nation’s economic resurgence. With the light shining on Google, one of the 21st century’s business icons, perhaps we will see a renewed sense of purpose at home and abroad to protect the heritage and the future of our IP community.

    Again, what Google needs is better security. But, given that one of the stellar moments under your watch was when the recording industry decided to place security-eviscerating rootkits on people’s computers in the form of DRM, perhaps we should prioritize computer security as an issue before we focus on your wasted effort to prop up an obsolete business model.

    I try to take the folks at the RIAA seriously, but when they published something this ridiculous, insulting and wrong, it really makes you wonder.

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  • Ron Paul to Obama: Don’t Assassinate American Citizens!

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    Location: Congress
    Date: 02/24/2010

    Transcript coming soon!

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  • The Man Behind The Mirror – Smoke Gets In Your Eyes.

    02.25.10 04:11 AM posted by Skip MacLure

    <div class="entry"><div class="snap_preview">Joseph Goebbels had a standard mantra which is attributed to him, in spirit if not in fact. “Tell a big enough lie frequently enough and it will be believed”. Actually Lenin, William James (considered to be father of modern psychology), and Adolf Hitler all had variations on the theme. It’s a current that runs through socialist history. In fact, socialism cannot function in the light of truth because its methodology is that of fear, intimidation and impending real and manufactured calamity.

    Barack Obama is telling us ‘I am not now, nor have I ever been, a socialist’ and as a matter of fact I’m an arch capitalist and have ever been a champion of business and commerce. That’s like saying, ‘hey, look over there, that’s not a giraffe it’s an eighteen foot lion’.

    Later today, Obama will put on his best socio-pathological face and demand that Republicans accede to his imperial will, while the House Madame prepares to threaten, cajole and break the kneecaps of recalcitrant House members. Republicans, far from heeding the imperial decree, will draw the proverbial line in the sand at the direction of the American people. With the imperial throne tottering and the public’s actual evaluation of Congress at an all time historical low of 90 percent disapproving, a bare 10% of the people are of the opinion that Congress has been doing its job. read more &raquo;

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/m…gets_your_eyes

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