শনিবার, ৩১ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

US wants 2012 talks for Taliban political office (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The Obama administration hopes to restore momentum in the spring to U.S. talks with the Taliban insurgency that had reached a critical point before falling apart this month because of objections from Afghan President Hamid Karzai, U.S. and Afghan officials said.

One goal of renewed talks with the insurgents would be to identify cease-fire zones that could be used as a steppingstone toward a full peace agreement that stops most fighting, a senior administration official told The Associated Press. It's a goal that so far has remained far out of reach.

U.S. officials from the State Department and White House plan to continue a series of secret meetings with Taliban representatives in Europe and the Persian Gulf region next year, two officials said, assuming a small group of Taliban emissaries the U.S. considers legitimate remains willing.

The U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the sensitive and precarious American outreach to the Taliban leadership.

The U.S. outreach this year had fits and starts but had progressed to the point that there was active discussion of two steps the Taliban seeks as precursors to negotiations, the senior U.S. official said. Talks are on an unofficial hiatus at Karzai's request, U.S. and other officials said.

The trust-building measures under discussion involve a would-be Taliban headquarters office and the release from the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, of about five Afghan prisoners considered affiliated with the Taliban. Those steps were to be matched by assurances from at least part of the Taliban leadership that the insurgents would cut ties with al-Qaida, accept the elected civilian government of Afghanistan and bargain in good faith.

The U.S. describes its current Afghan policy as "fight, talk, build," and maintains that it will not back off the military campaign that has ended Taliban control of key southern areas that had been the movement's mainstay. The Taliban remains a potent fighting force and has shifted operations to other parts of the country.

Just Friday, for instance, a NATO service member died in a roadside bombing in southern Afghanistan, while allied and Afghan forces killed three senior Taliban figures and captured 11 fighters and sympathizers, according to the alliance.

Although top U.S. military commanders say they cannot kill their way to military victory in Afghanistan, targeted raids on Taliban operatives are one of the tactical success stories of President Barack Obama's shift in strategy that favors counter-terrorism tactics.

The longer-term strategic effect of those tactics is less clear; nighttime kill-and-capture raids, in which a number of civilians have died, have become a flashpoint for anger over foreign meddling in Afghanistan. Karzai has demanded that foreign troops stop breaking into homes.

The U.S. administration wants to use its current extensive military campaign and an acknowledged but incomplete plan for a long-term American military presence in Afghanistan as leverage to draw the Taliban to talks with Karzai's representatives.

The gradual process of handing over areas of the country to Afghan security control would ideally be marshaled toward encouraging peace talks, by identifying areas where a test ceasefire could be tried, the official said.

More generally, the U.S. is trying to unify disparate elements of its strategy in Afghanistan after 10 tiring years of war and with an eye on the NATO deadline to withdraw combat forces by the end of 2014.

The likelihood that the Taliban insurgency continues as a fighting force after most foreign forces leave is driving the U.S. and NATO to seek even an incomplete bargain with the insurgents that would keep them talking with the Kabul government.

The U.S. goal is to midwife talks between the insurgents and the U.S.-backed Afghan government led by Karzai, who frequently has felt sidelined by the U.S. as it pursues talks with his enemies. He bills peace talks as an Afghan-led process, which the U.S. insists is also its goal. The U.S. outreach is meant to jump-start negotiations, U.S. officials have said, but they acknowledge that their efforts can feed the perception that Karzai is not fully in charge.

Although the Karzai government shares the goal of outreach and eventual political reconciliation with the Afghan Taliban movement, he resents the insurgents' demand only to speak with what they call American occupiers. He has argued that the U.S. undercuts his leverage, and his inner circle derailed initial U.S.-Taliban talks earlier this year, several officials previously told the AP.

With Obama planning to host a large NATO summit in his hometown of Chicago this spring, the administration would like some good news to announce.

Short of a clear military turning point in a war that is still stalemated in many areas, the summit is likely to focus on efforts to shore up the country while encouraging a political settlement with the Taliban.

One hope for the summit is a more coherent statement of how the military campaign is related to the effort to hand over areas of the country to Afghan control, the long-term U.S. presence in Afghanistan and Taliban reconciliation, the senior U.S. official said.

The Taliban headquarters office idea is seen the most likely to regain traction ahead of the summit in May, but it's unclear when it might open. A political office in a neutral third country would be authorized to conduct talks on a peaceful end to the 10-year war.

Karzai remains opposed to the more difficult prisoner transfer plan, which is further complicated by new congressional restrictions on any prisoner transfers. The U.S. tentatively had agreed to transfer a handful of Afghan prisoners to house arrest in a third country, probably Qatar, before the deal unraveled, U.S. officials said.

The Associated Press has learned the identity of some of the proposed transferees, including Khairullah Khairkhwa, former Taliban governor of Herat, and Mullah Mohammed Fazl, a former top Taliban military commander believed responsible for sectarian killings before the U.S. invasion that toppled the Taliban government in Afghanistan in 2001.

Karzai's own advisers seeking peace with the Taliban had named those men among several Afghan Taliban prisoners it wanted released from Guantanamo as a goodwill gesture, but Karzai wants the prisoners to come to Afghanistan, not a third country, a senior Afghan official in the region said.

Sending Afghans to an Arab country could offend Afghans' sense of sovereignty and suggest that the U.S. does not think Afghanistan is fit to hold or try the men, officials said.

"As soon as I was released, I met President Karzai and he promised that he would not allow Afghan prisoners to be sent anywhere except Afghanistan," said Haji Ruhollah, an Afghan who was released from Guantanamo in 2010. "They are all Afghans and they should be brought and kept in Afghanistan."

U.S. and Afghan officials also pointed to Karzai's longstanding unease with what he sees as a rush by the U.S. to broker deals ahead of the planned exit of U.S. combat forces

Karzai has political problems at home, including newly resurgent militias, and the assassination of his chief peace negotiator in September clouds his own outreach to the Taliban.

The U.S. once swore off direct talks with the Taliban until the insurgents essentially were beaten but shifted position as the war dragged on near stalemate. Participants said they still consider a peace deal a long shot, and the insurgent leadership has shown no sign that it wants to stop fighting a guerrilla war it thinks it can sustain until after most foreign forces depart.

The Associated Press is not identifying U.S. officials involved in the direct talks, in consideration for their safety. One member of the Taliban negotiating team has been publicly identified as Tayyab Aga, an emissary of Pakistan-based Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar. Other participants include a former Taliban ambassador to Saudi Arabia and a former Taliban deputy health minister, the senior Afghan official said.

Karzai has supported the general idea of an office, preferably in Afghanistan, but he balked when the plan for Qatar appeared to have been settled without him, officials said. Earlier this month, Kabul recalled its ambassador to Qatar for consultations over reports that the Taliban was planning to open an office there.

On Tuesday, Karzai backed down. He said his government would accept the Qatar office to hold peace talks, although Saudi Arabia or Turkey would be preferable venues.

___

Gannon reported from Islamabad. Associated Press writer Patrick Quinn in Kabul contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111230/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_us_afghanistan_taliban

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Kanye West moves to London to be taken seriously as fashion designer

Kanye West moves to London to be taken seriously as fashion designerLondon, Dec 29 : Kanye West has relocated to London in a bid to be taken more seriously as a fashion designer.

The 34-year-old rapper premiered his women's fashion label, known simply as DW, at Paris Fashion Week in October.

He is now on a quest to make the transition from chart-topper to runway connoisseur as he embarks on his next entrepreneurial move.

Having tested the water and conducting research with lengthy spells across the Atlantic this year, West is now opting to reside permanently in London.

The Grammy-winner held a party for his clothing label in the capital last week before flying home for Christmas festivities.

At the event, he reportedly told VIPs he's ready to make the UK his home.

"He went home for the holidays but was proclaiming that he is now based in the capital and would return in early January," the Daily Mail quoted a source as telling the Sun.

"He's close to the lecturers and students at the Central Saint Martins College and being in London means he can stop by for advice any time," the source added.

The insider also revealed West will be preparing for Paris Fashion Week ahead of the March show, while also searching for a studio base.

His previous fashion ventures include collaborating with Nike to release his own shoe, Air Yeezys, and introducing a shoe line for Louis Vuitton. (ANI)


Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5675603129&f=378

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No break for candidates as Iowa caucuses near (CNN)

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White Epic 4G Touch to grace Sprint come January, proves your wildest dreams can come true

If you thought Sprint was going to let T-Mobile and AT&T be the only US carriers to offer white Galaxy S IIs, think again. Per Sprintfeed is a supposed internal memo pegging the carrier's bleached variant of the GSII for January 8th, 2012. For those keeping score at home, that'll be nearly a month after T-Mo, and a good six months after we first caught wind of the unicorn. Frothing at the sentiment? Better think long and hard, as there's bound to be something equally lust worthy at an upcoming trade show.

White Epic 4G Touch to grace Sprint come January, proves your wildest dreams can come true originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Dec 2011 13:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Figures on government spending and debt

(AP)? WASHINGTON ? Figures on government spending and debt (last six digits are eliminated). The government's fiscal year runs Oct. 1 through Sept. 30.Total public debt subject to limit Dec. 2715,087,704Statutory debt limit15,194,000Total public debt outstanding Dec. 2715,130,583Operating balance Dec. 27103,792Interest fiscal year 2011 through November44,028Interest same period 201036,831Deficit fiscal year 2011 through November235,769Deficit same period 2010290,826Receipts fiscal year 2011 through November315,474Receipts same period 2010294,921Outlays fiscal year 2011 through November551,243Outlays same period 2010585,748Gold assets in December11,041

Source: http://feeds.cbsnews.com/~r/CBSNewsGamecore/~3/mA2X-E4xM1Q/

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Video: Is Iowa Ron Paul's to lose?

If Ron Paul wins on Tuesday, can he realistically mount a sustainable campaign and challenge the other candidates for the GOP nomination? NBC's Chuck Todd reports from Iowa.

Related Links:

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/45803589/

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Italy?s Debt Cost Dips, but Its Economic Perils Remain

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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Financial market pressure on Italy eased temporarily on Wednesday, but the political pressure on Prime Minister Mario Monti to stimulate the country?s economy remained high. ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/29/world/europe/despite-drop-in-borrowing-rates-italys-economic-travails-remain-acute.html

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শুক্রবার, ৩০ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

iPhone App Downloads In November Up 83% Over Last Year

index-competitive-lrg-201111Marketing technology company Fiksu tracked the impact of the iPhone 4S on iPhone app downloads and found that download volume of the top 200 free apps increased 15% from October's previous record high of 4.91 million daily downloads. In November, the firm's "App Store Competitive Index," which measures this trend, peaked at 5.65 million downloads per day - the first time it has topped the 5 million mark. That's an increase of 83% over November of last year.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/GcpW0x_ZGdE/

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Wacky rules complicate race for GOP delegates (The Arizona Republic)

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'Extreme Clutter' Season 2 Premiere: Mackenzie Phillips Lets Go Of Her Past With Peter Walsh (VIDEO)

Former "One Day at a Time" star Mackenzie Phillips has had a difficult few years, between a stint on Vh1's "Celebrity Rehab" and being in the media spotlight over an alleged sexual relationship with her famous father. But she?s intent on moving forward.

In her latest effort, Phillips is getting somewhat of a makeover thanks to OWN's "Extreme Clutter." On Part 2 of the show's Season 2 premiere, which airs Jan. 2, organization expert Peter Walsh visits the actress to help her gain control of her home. It's crowded with material representations of painful memories that stem from years of substance abuse and emotional family upheaval.

"I think it's the last vestige of the junkie I used to be," Phillips says of her cluttered home in this exclusive video interview. "But why am I hanging onto the past?"

Phillips's home doesn?t appear particularly overloaded with objects. "It's not like 'Hoarders,'" she explains, noting that her problem is "hidden clutter." In sorting through her things, Phillips picks up a doll from her father, John of The Mamas and The Papas, and boots from her actress/model sister, Bijou.

Walsh notes that the actress's house is "filled with disturbing reminders of her days as a drug addict." Throughout the series, Walsh helps people whose lives have been dramatically affected by overwhelming clutter. He guides families through the emotional journey of overcoming their attachment to material items by pinpointing the root of their problems and guiding them towards a clutter-free life.

And seemingly, it works with Phillips. "You let go of the things that have negative power and keep the things that fit into your future," she says about what she's learned at the end of the interview.

"Extreme Clutter" will have a two-night premiere beginning Sun., Jan. 1 at 11 p.m. EST on OWN and then Mon., Jan. 2 in its regular time slot at 10 p.m. EST with Mackenzie Phillips's episode.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/29/extreme-clutter-mackenzie-phillips_n_1173934.html

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৯ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

12/28/2011 - University Closure ? Holiday Break

  • Use the Custom Filter tool to browse events from multiple categories.

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Source: http://events.ua.edu/events/index.php?com=detail&eID=1506

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Perry sues to get on Virginia 2012 ballot (reuters)

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Coronation Street star Sally Dynevor ready to rebel at 50 after cancer battle

By Liz Thomas

Last updated at 2:33 AM on 27th December 2011

Coronation Street star Sally Dynevor is the first to admit she?s always been a bit of a goody two-shoes in real life.

But her very public battle with breast cancer has left the soap icon in a different frame of mind as she approaches 50.

In a frank interview, the actress says she?s fighting back to fitness and now it?s time to do something ?naughty?.

Age is just a number: Sally Dynevor dons a leather biker jacket for a photoshoot

Age is just a number: Sally Dynevor dons a leather biker jacket for a photoshoot

?I feel as though I?m starting to enter a new time in my life,? she said. ?I?m really excited about the future.

?As I get older I want to break the? rules and be a bit rebellious. I?ve been? so good for such a long time I just want to do something naughty. I want to do as much as I can. I just want to fill every minute of every day.?

?

Mrs Dynevor, who plays Sally Webster, was diagnosed with cancer after a Coronation Street plotline ? in which her character developed the disease ? inspired her to check her own breasts.

In November last year she began a gruelling course of chemotherapy which led to her losing her hair.

Cancer fight: Sally had months of therapy

Cancer fight: Sally had months of therapy

?I?ve learnt that whatever happens to us, it?s just life?s path,? she said. ?So many people go through breast cancer. I?m not the only one, there are thousands. But it gave me great comfort to talk to other women going through the same thing.?

The mother-of-three confessed that she now wanted to try a backpacking holiday or working in New York as a waitress.

She told Woman magazine: ?I was talking to some of the Corrie girls and we all said 50 is the new 40, isn?t it?

?Fifty-year-olds now aren?t dressing like my mother?s generation did. I still want to be wearing a leather jacket and skinny jeans. Being 50 is just a number and it?s about how you feel in your head. I?m sure there are exciting times to come.?

Mrs Dynevor, who was previously known as Sally Whittaker,?has said that the ITV soap could potentially have saved her life because it was only the storyline that caused her to check herself and find a lump.

The early diagnosis gave her a better chance at beating the disease.

?If I had not been researching this storyline, I may not have discovered the lump in my breast and had it looked at so quickly,? she said in a interview.

?I had never properly checked my breast before because I thought this wasn?t going to happen to me.?

Mrs Dynevor said she had ignored a? lump she had felt while on holiday? earlier last year, but was inspired by her scenes to have it checked by a nurse.

The nurse immediately booked her a hospital appointment and she was diagnosed with a 1.8cm grade one tumour. The tests also revealed that the diseased cells had spread to six of the lymph nodes under one arm.

The actress, who is married to scriptwriter Tim Dynevor with whom she has three children ? Sam, 14, and daughters Phoebe, 16, and Hattie, eight ? then underwent months of chemotherapy, losing much of her hair.

She? continued to play her character Sally, who was facing a similar? situation in the soap.

Mrs Dynevor, who has starred in Coronation Street for 25 years, insisted she was happy to keep working on the show.

?I?ve had so many good stories. If my storylines had dried up I would have left a long time ago,? she said. ?That?s not to say I might not venture off and do a bit of theatre when I get older.

?There are times when I see something and think, ?I?d really like to be doing that?, but the reality is I wouldn?t get home at night to put my kids to bed.? Corrie suits my life and that?s why I?ve stayed so long.?

Alongside her latest interview she posed in a daytime biker jacket and figure-hugging? trousers to illustrate how she? is beginning to get her life back? to normal.

?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dailymail/tvshowbiz/~3/j10jtlDbwMw/Coronation-Street-star-Sally-Dynevor-ready-rebel-50-cancer-battle.html

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Mass protests in Syrian city as monitors arrive

This image made from amateur video and released by Shaam News Network Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, purports to show the blood of men killed from shells in Homs, Syria, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via APTN) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUT

This image made from amateur video and released by Shaam News Network Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, purports to show the blood of men killed from shells in Homs, Syria, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via APTN) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUT

This image made from amateur video and released by Shaam News Network Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, purports to show men carrying an injured man in Homs, Syria, Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via APTN) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUT

This image made from amateur video and released by Ugarit News Group Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, purports to show a Syrian military tank in Homs, Syria. (AP Photo/Ugarit News Group via APTN) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUT

This image made from amateur video and released by Shaam News Network Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011, purports to show a woman mourning over a relative who has been killed in Homs, Syria Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via APTN) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUT

This image made from amateur video and released by Shaam News Network Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011 Monday, Dec. 26, 2011, purports to show a woman mourning over a close relative in Homs, Syria Monday, Dec. 26, 2011. (AP Photo/Shaam News Network via APTN) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CANNOT INDEPENDENTLY VERIFY THE CONTENT, DATE, LOCATION OR AUTHENTICITY OF THIS MATERIAL. TV OUT

BEIRUT (AP) ? Tens of thousands of defiant Syrian protesters thronged the streets of Homs Tuesday, calling for the execution of President Bashar Assad shortly after his army pulled its tanks back and allowed Arab League monitors in for the first time to the city at the heart of the anti-government uprising.

The pullback was the first sign the regime was complying with the League's plan to end the 9-month-old crackdown on mostly unarmed and peaceful protesters.

Yet amateur video released by activists showed forces firing on protesters even while the monitors were inside the city. One of the observers walked with an elderly man who pointed with his cane to a fresh pool of blood on the street that he said had been shed by his son, killed a day earlier.

The man, wearing a red-and-white checkered headdress, then called for the monitor to walk ahead to "see the blood of my second son" also killed in the onslaught.

"Where is justice? Where are the Arabs?" the old man shouted in pain.

Syrian tanks had been heavily shelling Homs for days, residents and activists said, killing dozens even after Assad signed on early last week to the Arab League plan, which demands the government remove its security forces and heavy weapons from city streets, start talks with opposition leaders and allow human rights workers and journalists into the country.

But a few hours before the arrival of the monitors, who began work Tuesday to ensure Syria complies with the League's plan, the army stopped the bombardment and pulled some of its tanks back.

The British-based activist group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed that government forces fired on protesters while the monitors were inside Homs and said at two people were killed from the fire.

About 60 monitors arrived in Syria Monday night ? the first foreign observers Syria has allowed in since March, when the uprising against Assad's authoritarian rule began. The League said a team of 12 visited Homs.

After agreeing to the League's pullback plan on Dec. 19, the regime intensified its crackdown on dissent; government troops killed hundreds in the past week and Syria was condemned internationally for flouting the spirit of the agreement.

On Monday alone, security forces killed at least 42 people, most of them in Homs. Activists said security forces killed at least 16 people Tuesday, including six in Homs.

One group put Tuesday's toll at 30, including 13 in Homs province. Different groups often give varying tolls. With foreign journalists and human rights groups barred from the country, they are virtually impossible to verify.

Amateur videos show residents of Homs pleading with the visiting monitors for protection.

"We are unarmed people who are dying," one resident shouts to one observer. Seconds later, shooting is heard from a distance as someone else screams: "We are being slaughtered here."

Given the intensified crackdown over the past week, the opposition has viewed Syria's agreement to the Arab League plan as a farce. Some even accuse the organization of 22 states of complicity in the killings. Activists say the regime is trying to buy time and forestall more international condemnation and sanctions.

"The Syrian government will cooperate symbolically enough in order not to completely alienate the Arab League," said Bilal Saab, a Middle East expert at the Monterey Institute of International Studies in California. "But make no mistake about it, its survival strategy is to keep kicking the can down the road, until domestic and international circumstances change in its favor."

Opponents of Assad doubt the Arab League can budge the autocratic leader at the head of one of the Middle East's most repressive regimes. Syria's top opposition leader, Burhan Ghalioun, called Sunday for the League to bring the U.N. Security Council into the effort. The U.N. says more than 5,000 people have been killed since March in the political violence.

Shortly after the tanks pulled back and stopped shelling, the videos showed tens of thousands flooding into the streets and marching defiantly in a funeral. They carried the open casket overhead with the exposed face of an 80-year-old man with a white beard.

"Listen Bashar: If you fire bullets, grenades or shells at us, we will not be scared," one person shouted to the crowd through loudspeakers. Many were waving Syria's independence flag, which predates the 1963 ascendancy of Assad's Baath party to power.

"The people want to execute Bashar," chanted a group as they walked side-by-side with monitors through one of Homs' streets. "Long live the Free Syrian Army," they chanted, referring to the force of army defectors fighting Assad's troops.

The amateur video also showed a man picking up the remains of a mortar round and showing it to the observers.

In another exchange, a resident tells a monitor: "You should say what you just told the head of the mission. You said you cannot cross to the other side of the street because of sniper fire."

The monitor points to the head of the team and says: "He will make a statement." The resident then repeats his demand, and the monitor, smoking a cigarette, nods in approval.

The Observatory for Human Rights said as the monitors visited Homs, tens of thousands of protesters gathered in some neighborhoods to "reveal the crimes committed by the regime."

Later, the Observatory said some 70,000 protesters tried to enter the tightly secured Clock Square but were pushed back by security forces that fired tear gas and later live bullets, killing at least two, to prevent them from reaching the city's largest square. The Local Coordination Committees, another activist group, said security forces were shooting at protesters trying to reach the central square.

Homs, Syria's third-largest city, has a population of 800,000 and is at the epicenter of the revolt against Assad. It is about 100 miles (160 kilometers) north of the capital, Damascus. Many Syrians refer to it as the "Capital of the Revolution."

Opposition activist Mohammed Saleh said four days of heavy bombardment in Homs stopped in the morning on Tuesday and tanks were seen pulling out. Another Homs activist said he saw armored vehicles leaving early on a highway leading to the eastern city of Palmyra. He asked that his name not be made public for fear of retribution.

"Today is calm, unlike previous days," Saleh said. "The shelling went on for days, but yesterday was terrible."

The Observatory said some army vehicles pulled out of Homs while other relocated in government compounds "where (they) can deploy again within five minutes."

A local official in Homs told The Associated Press the team of monitors, headed by Sudanese Lt. Gen. Mohamed Ahmed Mustafa al-Dabi, met with Ghassan Abdul-Aal, the governor of Homs province. After the meeting, the monitors headed to several tense districts including Baba Amr and Inshaat, sites of the most intense crackdowns since Friday.

The official later said that most members of the Arab team headed back to Damascus, while three will spend the night in Homs. The official refused to give details about where the observers will stay for security reasons.

In addition to the deaths reported by activist groups Tuesday, Syrian state-run news agency SANA said two roadside bombs targeted a bus carrying employees of a state company in Idlib, killing six and wounding four.

Also Tuesday, a Lebanese-based al-Qaida-linked group, Abdullah Azzam Brigades, claimed that two suicide attacks against Damascus security offices that killed at least 66 Friday were the work of the Syrian regime, and not al-Qaida as Syrian authorities said.

And in Lebanon, security officials said Syrian troops opened fire at a car that crossed illegally into northern Lebanon, killing three Lebanese men. Some Syrians have fled to Lebanon to escape the fighting, and Syria has complained that weapons are smuggled across its borders. It was not immediately clear if the shooting was related to the uprising in Syria.

___

Associated Press writer Albert Aji contributed to this report from Damascus, Syria.

___

Bassem Mroue can be reached on http://twitter.com/bmroue

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-27-ML-Syria/id-d5b9067761614942935337ab036be989

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Two men arrested during tornado cleanup, state of emergency still in affect

Two men were arrested during Saturday's tornado clean up after Gordon County Sheriff's Office deputies discovered the men had warrants out for their arrests.

According to the Sheriff's Office:

Carter Lynn Chamlee, 40, of Calhoun, and Danny Ray Dutton, 53, of Adairsville, were arrested on charges of violation of probation in the Sonoraville/Farmville area Saturday afternoon.

The men were acting as contractors for debris cleanup and did not have permits to do so.

Deputies were assigned to the storm affected areas to check contractors for permits from the county. That's when they discovered Chamlee and Dutton had warrants out for their arrests.

Dutton paid a fine and was released. Chamlee remains in custody at the Gordon County Jail.

Dutton's photo is unavailable because he is no longer in the Gordon County Jail

State of emergency

Because Gordon County is under a state of emergency, law enforcement is still patrolling storm affected areas and checking permits, according to Gordon County EMA director Richard Cooper.

Cooper said contractors interested in debris clearing should register with the county. For more information call 706-629-2785.

Gordon County government advises residents with natural debris (no metal, shingles or other non-natural items) from last week?s storm to place debris on the right of way. The right of way is the first few feet from the property line. They ask that no debris be put on roads.

Gordon County Public Works Department will be stopping by storm affected areas and removing the natural debris.

Tips for hiring contractors from the National Center for the Prevention of Home Improvement Fraud

1. Before hiring a contractor, NCPHIF recommends residents to contact their insurance agent. This is especially important if the contractor is saying he will pay the deductible, won?t charge a deductible or will fill out the insurance paperwork.

2. Some roofing companies are known to use aggressive and misleading tactics in order to gain business. Pay attention to instincts. Is he or she pushy? Anxious?

3. Make sure to get his or her license and insurance information, but verify it. Contact the Georgia Secretary of State, Professional Licensing Division, 478-207-2440 and/or the Corporations Division, 404-656-2817 to verify.

4. Check in with the Better Business Bureau in Georgia as well as the BB in surrounding states.

5. Do an Internet search using the contractor?s business name, personal name, business license, contractor?s license, phone number, etc.

6. Do not agree to a discounted rate for allowing a home to be a ?demonstration site,? or because the contractor has leftover materials from a previous job. This is a big red flag for potentially fraudulent practices.

7. Do not leave valuables, sensitive, personal or financial information around that can be stolen and used to commit identity fraud.

8. Do not allow a contractor or a salesperson to push into an immediate contractual relationship, even if the work needs to be done without delay.

9. Find out what types of repair, renovation or construction projects the contractor performs. (Most contractors have specialties and do not work on every type of project.)

10. Don?t sign a document until all of the information in the document is understood. Contact a trusted adviser or attorney to review any document that needs a signature.

11. If a contractor is allowed to inspect a property for damage or repair, accompany them throughout their evaluation procedure.

Source: http://calhountimes.com/bookmark/16910720

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Oscar voters: Your ballots are in the mail (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Academy Awards season is officially on. Nominations ballots for the 84th Oscar show have just gone in the mail.

Oscar organizers mailed ballots Tuesday to 5,783 voting members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Ballots are due back Jan. 13, and Oscar nominations will be announced Jan. 24.

The Oscar ceremony is set for Feb. 26, with Billy Crystal returning as host for the first time in eight years.

Among this season's best-picture prospects are the black-and-white silent film "The Artist," the Deep South drama "The Help," George Clooney's family tale "The Descendants" and Steven Spielberg's World War I epic "War Horse."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111227/ap_en_mo/us_oscar_ballots

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ACTION ALERT: Virginia GOP Changed Ballot Access Rules Last Month; Here's How to Contact Them and Demand Changes

Based upon several reliable reports at RedState, it would appear that Virginia's GOP establishment changed the rules of ballot access just last month. Front-runner Newt Gingrich, for one, saw his campaign hurt badly by reports that it bungled the Virginia ballot process. He and Rick Perry were excluded despite each turning in over 10,000 signatures. But if the new reports are true, the state GOP has a hell of a lot to account for.

Moe Lane provides the introduction:

...the very short version is that the VA GOP only certified Mitt Romney and Ron Paul for its primary ballot. Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich both had too many signatures tossed; Jon Huntsman, Rick Santorum, and Michele Bachmann didn?t even try. Of the seven candidates, one (Romney) had more than enough signatures (15K) to bypass the verification process entirely. All of this has caused a lot of agitation among Republicans following the primary process, of course; and not just from people who disapprove of what the VA GOP has done...

...There has been a good deal of defending of the outcome; and one argument heavily used in this defense has been that the campaigns all knew the rules and that previous Republican campaigns were able to get on the ballot, so clearly a competent current Republican campaign should have done so.

One small problem with that: as Winger argues, the rules were allegedly drastically changed. In November of this year.


So what changed?
...prior to the 2012 elections it was Republican party policy in Virginia to simply deem any candidate that brought in ten thousand raw signatures as having met the primary ballot requirements under Virginian state election law.

Under these rules, of course, both Newt Gingrich and Rick Perry would have qualified easily.

And why did the rules change?

...On October 24th independent state delegate candidate Michael Osborne filed suit against the Republican party of Virginia [challenging the signature review process and who performs it] ... according to Winger the VA GOP decided in response to bump up from 10K to 15K the threshold for simply deeming the requirements as being met.

...I think that John Fund?s general comment is correct: this is going to go to the courts. John was not discussing this specific wrinkle, but his larger point that Virginia?s ballot access policies have systemic problems gets a big boost when it turns out that the state party can effectively increase by fifty percent the practical threshold for ballot access ? in a day, and in the middle of an existing campaign.

...If it is true that the Republican party of Virginia decided in November of 2011 to increase the threshold for automatic certification from 10K to 15K, then it is reasonable to suggest that this was a change that unfairly rewarded candidates who had previously run for President in Virginia.


Lane asserts that the state GOP has ultimate control of the ballot and could, if pressed, decide to certify Gingrich and Perry.

Either way, the issue is going to the courts.

And, either way, the Virginia GOP looks incompetent... or ill-intentioned against conservative candidates.

Action Alert: I urge you to contact the Virginia GOP and demand that they include Gingrich and Perry on the ballot. Be polite, but firm. There's no excuse for issuing new rules at the last minute that just happen to exclude the leading candidates. In fact, it's an outrage.

? Email: Contact Form
? Phone: 804-780-0111
? Fax: 804-343-1060
? Facebook: www.facebook.com/VirginiaGOP
? Twitter: @va_gop

Make contact now. Time is growing short.

Labels: Gingrich, Paul, Perry, Protecting America, Romney

Source: http://directorblue.blogspot.com/2011/12/action-alert-virginia-gop-changed.html

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Women Beat Men to Jobs as Japan?s ?Mancession? Spurs Deflation

December 27, 2011, 4:41 AM EST

By Aki Ito and Toru Fujioka

Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Three times a week, Seiya Ogawa bikes to an unemployment center in Kadoma, home to Panasonic Corp., looking for work to help pay for his son?s final year at college.

?At this point, I?m willing to take any job,? said the 49-year-old, who assembled electronic circuit boards in what was once a bustling manufacturing suburb of Osaka, Japan?s third- largest city. This month, it?s officially one year since he first signed on at the center, and ?it?s like my humanity?s been stripped from me,? he said.

Ogawa and his son rely on the incomes of his wife and daughter, a social role reversal that is spreading in Japan as factories and building companies fire workers and services that hire mostly women add employees. The new jobs pay lower average wages, making it harder for Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to spur consumer spending and pull the world?s third-largest economy out of a decade of deflation. The increasing burden as breadwinners also gives women less incentive to marry and have children early in a country that already has the fastest-aging population in the developed world.

?With Japanese companies increasingly moving abroad and a shrinking population making growth in construction work unlikely, these sectors just can?t absorb male workers the way they used to,? said Toshihiro Nagahama, chief economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. ?Nominal wages are falling and falling as a result. This mancession is far from over.?

National Pride

Japan?s economy is shifting from monozukuri, or making things -- which the nation prides itself on -- to services, especially those catering to the 29 million seniors over age 64. Manufacturing and building industries, where seven out of 10 staff are male, will lose 4 million positions this decade, according to Tokyo-based Works Institute, funded by employment- services provider Recruit Co. Health care, 74 percent female, added people at the fastest pace across all industries in the past three years, growing 16 percent, Labor Ministry data show.

The shift is accelerating, thanks to a near record-high currency that?s wiping out profits at exporters including Panasonic and Sony Corp., giving the government no time to ease the transition. Panasonic forecast its biggest annual loss in a decade this fiscal year, while Sony estimated it will lose 90 billion yen ($1.2 billion).

Panasonic and Sony shares have slumped 45 percent and 53 percent this year, helping pull the benchmark Topix index 20 percent lower. At the same time, Message Co., the nation?s second-biggest operator of nursing homes by number of rooms, has risen 1.6 percent, and Nichii Gakkan Co., operator of the largest number of homes, is up 25 percent.

?Future of Japan?

Services such as nursing and health care are ?the future of Japan,? said Curtis Freeze, founder of Honolulu-based Prospect Asset Management Inc., who is considering adding Message to the $300 million that Prospect manages because its employment policies may reduce staff-turnover costs. Manufacturers ?are in the middle of restructuring, and they?re going to struggle. It?s the smaller services companies that will do most of the hiring.?

Health care, with 19 percent of working women, isn?t the only field to add jobs in the past three years: Education -- another profession where women outnumber men -- as well as research, restaurants and real estate also have grown, even as Japan lost a net 12.1 million positions.

Forty-two percent of people employed in 2010 were women, the highest share since the Labor Ministry made comparable data available in 1973, when the figure was 38.5 percent.

?Really Tough?

?It?s really tough right now,? said Reiko Sato, 31, at the government employment office near her home in Tokyo. ?It?s the end of the year, so there are lots of short-term positions at department stores or restaurants that everyone?s competing to get. It?s easier for the girls, because that?s who the stores want. I just feel bad for the men who have to come here. They probably won?t have something in time for the New Year.?

Manufacturing, where men outnumber women by more than 2-to- 1, is still Japan?s largest employer, accounting for about 16 percent of its 62.5 million workers. In construction, the ratio of men to women is 6-to-1. Since October 2008, the former shrank payrolls by 9 percent and the latter by 11 percent. Meanwhile, the health-care workforce will grow 32 percent from 2010 to 2020, according to Works Institute.

Pay Gap

As a result, one of the developed world?s biggest gender- pay gaps -- second only to South Korea and roughly double the average in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development -- is narrowing. Women between 30 and 34 earned an average 2.99 million yen last year, 69 percent of the 4.32 million yen for men, according to National Tax Agency data. That?s up from 55 percent in 1978.

The increase may help shift consumer spending toward services women prefer, such as traveling and dining out, and away from durable goods including cars and electronics, said Kyohei Morita, chief Japan economist at Barclays Capital in Tokyo. HIS Co., Japan?s largest listed travel agency, has risen 4.3 percent this year, to 2,141 yen.

?It?s because I work that I can go on these trips and buy my favorite makeup,? said Ayumi Ohtaki, a 27-year-old call- center operator in Tokyo who earns 240,000 yen a month. While she?s in no hurry to marry, she said she would want to keep her job after her wedding to ensure she could continue to buy the things she wants.

?If the money?s just from my husband, I wouldn?t be able to do anything fun,? she said.

Birth Rate

With women like Ohtaki marrying later and delaying starting a family, and more men struggling to find work, Japan?s falling birth rate is likely to get worse, said Mary Brinton, a sociology professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who studied the lives of young Japanese men shut out of well-paid, full-time work in the 1990s.

The number of babies born in 2010 was 1.07 million, down from 1.19 million in 2000, according to the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry.

?This so-called mancession is going to cause continuing problems for the marriage rate and birth rate,? she said. ?Many young Japanese men say they want to have a stable job before they consider marrying.?

Even so, the shift toward more female employees isn?t likely to boost overall consumer spending because the factory jobs being lost paid more than the newly created service positions. Social services and nursing paid an average 229,732 yen a month last year, 63 percent of the 362,340 yen for factory workers and 62 percent of the 373,288 yen earned in construction, according to the labor ministry.

?The reality is that women get paid less,? Morita said.

Global Trend

The trend of women replacing men in Japan?s workforce mirrors a similar shift in other developed nations as companies cut back payrolls. Last year, the average male unemployment rate among the OECD countries was 8.5 percent, compared with 8.1 percent for women, according to the organization?s website. In 2000, the situation was reversed, with 5.8 percent of men jobless and 6.8 percent of female workers.

Japan?s unemployment rate in 2010 was 5.4 percent for men and 4.6 percent for women, a record gap. Joblessness may rise to 7.1 percent for men and 5.9 percent for women by 2020, Works Institute estimates.

That?s a bleak outlook for Ogawa, who lives alongside Kadoma?s rusting, shuttered factories, which once drew laborers from across Japan as they boomed with the Panasonic headquarters they surround. He says the stagnation has changed the attitude of young people in their 20s like his son and daughter, who hoard the money they earn rather than spending it.

?It?s hard to tell them to aim high when I?m struggling to find a job,? Ogawa said. ?I don?t dare talk about my good times when I was their age; they just wouldn?t understand.?

--With assistance from Kanoko Matsuyama and Eleanor Warnock in Tokyo. Editor: Adam Majendie, Melinda Grenier.

To contact the reporters on this story: Aki Ito in Tokyo at aito16@bloomberg.net; Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at tfujioka1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net

Source: http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-12-26/women-beat-men-to-jobs-as-japan-s-mancession-spurs-deflation.html

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91% Into The Abyss

All Critics (74) | Top Critics (24) | Fresh (67) | Rotten (7)

Herzog is pursuing no agenda with Into the Abyss, despite his opposition to extreme judicial measures. He's seeking to answer the question of why people kill, especially in a situation such as this where the reason for the murders was so meaningless.

Into the Abyss does what too few documentaries these days do - it gives ample play to all sides of the argument. Herzog allows us to think things through on our own.

Herzog has managed another strange and intriguing look at a culture and the sorts of people it creates - victims, cops and criminals.

Herzog's investigation may not work as an anti-death-penalty editorial, but its findings are undeniably profound.

A disquieting, heartbreaking look at American crime and punishment.

The abyss here isn't capital punishment, the ostensible subject of the film; it's the seemingly unending capacity for causing and enduring pointless misery that humans seem to have.

An eerie, unsettling and slightly macabre attempt to understand the how and why of three senseless murders in 2001 in Texas.

The most memorable image here is the lethal-injection gurney. With its crossbar for the outstretched arms of doomed prisoners, it resembles a padded crucifix -- a ghastly and inelegant parody of a symbol of Christian comfort.

[Herzog] simply means to show us things as they are - and in this corner of Texas, just north of Houston, things are undeniably violent. And mean.

Into the Abyss makes Herzog's point powerfully, without descending to the level of polemic.

Unlike, say, Errol Morris in The Thin Blue Line, Herzog isn't seeking to exonerate anyone or introduce new evidence. He's just there, observing the process as it rolls forward and wondering why.

Herzog unforgettably shows how when you pull tight the straps on men who've lain down to die, it leaves a mark.

This is the abyss the film shows, the frightening arbitrariness of the death penalty. People are born into poverty and violence by chance, and their fates -- as crime victims or victims of the state -- are also functions of chance.

The director's ability to objectively pursue this line of inquiry makes Into the Abyss a compelling, revealing work of art.

Herzog's death-row documentary hits hard

The overriding point of Into the Abyss, what keeps this sad, sorrowful film from becoming depressing and elevates it far above the usual chatter of liberal-conservative debate, is that there can be light on the other end of even the darkest of tunnels.

Herzog asks, in that probing yet gentle, meditative voice we've come to cherish, "What does it mean?" Oh, Werner. We don't ask such things in 'Merica.

Covers much the same ground as other death row movies, but with the Herzog difference.

Comes close to the voyeurism of Nick Broomfield's documentaries on Aileen Wuornos but is saved by Herzog's obviously deep conviction that capital punishment is evil.

"Into the Abyss" makes a strong case for the inhumanity of capital punishment, regardless of the crime or the criminal.

[Herzog's] piercing gaze provides a tightly focused look at the realities underlying our nation's continued reliance on this archaic tool of criminal justice.

The interviews that make up the balance of the film yield plenty of oddities of modern American life.

More Critic Reviews

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/into_the_abyss_2011/

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Coal extraction poses climate challenge for Obama administration (Washington Post)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/179123358?client_source=feed&format=rss

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UK's Prince Philip remains in hospital (AP)

LONDON ? Britain's Prince Philip spent a third night in the hospital as he recovers after treatment for a blocked coronary artery.

The 90-year-old husband of Queen Elizabeth II is in good spirits and will remain under observation for "a short period," Buckingham Palace officials said Monday. There are no details of when he may be released.

The prince underwent a successful coronary stent procedure at Papworth, a specialist heart hospital in Cambridgeshire, where he was taken on Friday after complaining of chest pains.

It was the most serious health scare suffered by Philip, who is known to be active and robust. He has continued to appear at many engagements, most recently taking a 10-day tour of Australia with the queen.

He is likely to miss the Royal Family's traditional Boxing Day shooting party on Monday at the queen's private Sandringham estate in Norfolk, an event he usually leads.

Six of Philip's grandchildren, including Princes William and Harry, visited him Sunday in the hospital.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111226/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_prince_philip

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TiPb Picks of the Week for December 24, 2011

Every week a few of us from team TiPb will bring you our current favorite, most fun and useful App Store apps, WebApps, jailbreak apps, even the occasional accessory, web site, or desktop app if the mood strikes us. As long as they?re iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch related,...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/Pm2XaiKX01A/story01.htm

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Our Strange Universe: Q&A With Nobel Prize Winner Brian Schmidt (SPACE.com)

This year, three astronomers were awarded the Nobel Prize in physics for discovering a bizarre aspect of our universe that gave rise to the concept of dark energy.

In 1998, two teams independently discovered that the expansion of the universe was not slowing down or holding steady, as expected, but speeding up. One team was led by Brian Schmidt of the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia and Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Md., and the other was led by Saul Perlmutter of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, Calif.

To explain this perplexing finding, astronomers conceived an entity called dark energy that's essentially counteracting the force of gravity to pull the universe apart.

SPACE.com spoke to Schmidt after his Nobel win to find out more about the weirdness of our universe, and what it feels like to win the world's most famous science award.

How did you find out you'd won the Nobel Prize?

Well you get a call, in my case, 15 minutes before the announcement. So at 8:30 on Tuesday night here in Australia, I received a call from a woman with an impeccable Swedish accent.

I have graduate students who like to play jokes on me, so I was thinking, wow, they did a pretty good job on this one. But they told me it was a very important phone call and they wanted to make sure it really was Brian Schmidt they were talking to, and then members of the committee come on and read their announcement, and congratulate you.

In my case, I'm a wine-maker, and they asked me about my 2011 vintage of wine, and then they asked me whether or not I'd be willing to go live at their announcement in seven or eight minutes to tell the world what I'd done.

How did you feel?

Well, I kind of went weak in the knees. And I got a little queasy, 'cause it's just so intense, it's so amazing. You're excited, but you're kind of scared at the same time.

How do you think the Nobel Prize will change your work? Will it bring more opportunities?

It certainly does that.

From my perspective, if you're in a country like Australia or the United States, it brings a huge responsibility to ensure that people understand why science is important to society. And Nobel Prizes are just such an amazing opportunity to highlight everything that science brings to our civilization, and how it's taken us to a level of prosperity that I think we all take for granted.

When you began this project back in 90s, did you ever think it might lead to a Nobel prize?

No. We wanted to do a big project, we wanted to measure the ultimate fate of the universe. [Images: Peering Back to the Big Bang]

Although that as a big project, it wasn't one that was going to win a Nobel Prize, no matter what we measured. But it was an important thing to measure, at least from an astronomy point of view, the future of the universe. Was it going to expand forever, or was it going to eventually halt in its expansion?

So, a fundamental question about the universe, but I have to admit the idea of winning a Nobel Prize about it just wasn't on the radar.

When you saw the first indications that the expansion of the universe was accelerating, how long did it take for you to believe your results?

Adam Riess sent me a preliminary preview at the end of 1997, and when I saw it I just assumed we made a mistake and it would go away.

So you know, after six weeks of plotting around, it was pretty clear that the result was not going to go away, and it just sort of slowly sunk in over a period of a couple of months. At some point it kind of sinks in and you're like, 'Oh, geeze. What are we going to do now? No one's going to believe this!' [Twisted Physics: 7 Mind-Blowing Findings]

Was it gratifying that the other team led by Saul Perlmutter found the same thing?

I was surprised because one of the reasons I was so worried back in the end of 1997 was because preliminary results from the Supernova Cosmology Project were saying not that the universe was speeding up, but rather that the universe was slowing down and slowing down quickly.

And so it's one thing to have a crazy result, and it's another thing to completely disagree with the other team doing a very similar experiment. So yeah, it was a little reassuring to see that we were getting the same thing once we found out about each other's results.

Do you think dark energy is the explanation behind this acceleration?

It's definitely hard. We are guessing that the universe is filled with energy, that's our best guess.

We're getting the Nobel Prize, not for dark energy ? we're getting it for seeing the accelerated expansion of the universe. And so while I don?t think we're absolutely sure it's dark energy, I think that's the best explanation. But it could well be something even more exotic.

How do you think the universe will end?

The fate of the universe looks pretty bleak.

The universe is going to expand faster and faster over time and the reality that we see now will eventually fade away from view. It will be so far away that we won't be able to see its light anymore.

And so, while our own galaxy and a couple of other nearby galaxies will sort of merge together to form some super-galaxy, all the stars will eventually die because they run out of nuclear fuel, so we'll have a bunch of burned out embers surrounded by a sea of nothingness.

Do you find that depressing?

It's certainly sobering. It's certainly not the way I would have chosen for the universe to end. But, you know, the universe does what it wants, and I'm just here to figure out what it's doing. I can't judge it.

What inspired you to become an astronomer?

My father was a biologist. My parents had me when they were very young, so I remember my dad starting a PhD., and I remember my dad finishing a PhD. I remember having science around me from a very young age. I always wanted to be a scientist.

I became interested in astronomy when Comet West came by in 1975. That comet made me realize that the sky was interesting to look at. My dad bought me a very inexpensive telescope that I could look through.

You can follow SPACE.com assistant managing editor Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz.?Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom?and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111226/sc_space/ourstrangeuniverseqawithnobelprizewinnerbrianschmidt

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