Saturday, December 31, 2011

KCOY: California Tattoo Law Creates Statewide Health Standards: A new California law for tattoo and body art businesse... http://t.co/9j9pOGSP

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California Tattoo Law Creates Statewide Health Standards: A new California law for tattoo and body art businesse... bit.ly/v7qAW2 KCOY

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Source: http://twitter.com/KCOY/statuses/152227844347543552

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

The Warm Attic Workspace [Featured Workspace]

The Warm Attic WorkspaceThis workspace looks like a comfy yet energizing place to think or work, with warm brick-colored walls coupled with dark wood surfaces. TierOne Photography's Steve Norcup remodeled his attic to design his ideal space.

The desk consists of two Ikea units shaped into an L against the half wall around the attic staircase. He uses several monitors and computers in his work. If you hit up Steve's Flickr stream, you'll see the full view of the sumptuous office space, complete with dog bed and beautiful dark wood flooring.

If you have a workspace of your own to show off, throw the pictures on your Flickr account and add it to the Lifehacker Workspace Show and Tell Pool. Include some details about your setup and why it works for you, and you just might see it featured on the front page of Lifehacker.

IMG_0541.jpg | Flickr

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/BAjPbVQGvVI/the-warm-attic-workspace

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Aretha's Christmas: 'Silent Night' with Four Tops

(AP) ? Detroit's Queen of Soul knows how to throw a Christmas party, and she welcomed in the holiday with glitter, a jazzy musical backdrop and a finale of "Silent Night" with the Four Tops.

Aretha Franklin held her annual Christmas party on Friday at the Detroit Athletic Club, greeting guests in a teal blue gown accented with a silver sequined bodice.

The Detroit News reports (http://bit.ly/tPkXO9 ) that Franklin exchanged gifts with family and friends as Ursula Walker, Buddy Budson, Marian Hayden and Gayelynn McKinney played jazz in the background.

During a meal of filet mignon and salmon, guests were entertained by performances by Gwen & Charles Scales and Franklin's son Eddie Franklin, who sang "Some Enchanted Evening."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-26-US-People-Aretha-Franklin/id-fc388ae5062c476bb84e8e92da07ed8b

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Monday, December 26, 2011

More problems for RIM as BBM Canada sues over abbreviation of BlackBerry Messenger

For as long as many can remember, BlackBerry Messenger has been known by the abbreviation BBM. Now, a broadcasting trade body known as BBM Canada, is suing RIM for using the BBM abbreviation. RIM has already responded to the suit by saying that it cannot be allowed to continue because both firms are in different industries. RIM told Canadian paper The Globe and Mail that "The services associated with RIM?s BBM offering clearly do not overlap with BBM Canada?s services and the two marks are therefore eligible to co-exist under Canadian trademark law."

BBM Canada dates back to 1944 and sells data analysis to broadcasters. The company says its employees are always confused with RIM employees because of the use of the BBM abbreviation for BlackBerry Messenger. And because the company uses smartphone apps to collect? some of its data, BBM Canada says that its business is not that far off from RIM's business.

RIM, which does promote its messenger service as BBM, attempted to get a trademark for the BBM abbreviation in October 2009. BBM Canada says that the smartphone manufacturer was rejected. And perhaps this wouldn't seem like such a big deal if it weren't for the fact that the BlackBerry Messenger service is one of the few features on BlackBerry phones that keeps certain users from jumping to the competition like Android or the Apple iPhone. RIM has even allowed developers to integrate the free service with some apps.

This is the second legal action taken against RIM for three letters of the alphabet. Recently, RIM had to change the name of its new OS from BBX to BlackBerry 10 as the BBX name was being used by Basis International and the latter's complaint was upheld in court. If you're Mike Lazaridis or Jim Balsillie, the ball can't fall in Times Square fast enough.

source: MocoNews

Source: http://www.phonearena.com/news/More-problems-for-RIM-as-BBM-Canada-sues-over-abbreviation-of-BlackBerry-Messenger_id25083

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eFax (for Android)


One would think that e-mail, FTP, instant messaging, and other methods of transferring files would have killed the fax machine, but the antiquated tool is still alive and kicking, especially in the business sector. Fortunately, you no longer need a dedicated fax machine (and the associated phone line and ink) to send and receive paperwork. eFax (Various prices 4 stars), an Internet-based fax service available in over 3,500 cities and 46 countries worldwide, gives you a real fax number that you can use to send and receive faxes?using your smartphone. The electronic faxing service's new Android app keeps most of the desktop version's functionality by letting the business-minded send messages from their Google-powered smartphones. ?You may not be able to apply digital signatures as you can with the desktop version, but it's a competent and capable business-friendly mobile app.

Simple Setup
eFax' Android app has a simple set up process for those who are new to the service. You simply input your name, email address, area code, phone number, check the Customer Agreement box, and tap Start Faxing. I inputted it into the app so that I could log in after receiving the fax number and pin in an email. I then arrived at the home screen that featured four main sections: "View Inbox," "View Folders," "Search Faxes," and "Send A Fax." Each section's function is self-explanatory. Naturally, existing eFax users can simply log in with their credentials.

Cost
There are three different types of eFax accounts: Free, Plus, and Pro. The free account lets you receive (not send) just 10 faxes per month, so it's a good match for those who very rarely fax. Next up the ladder is eFax Plus ($16.95 per month), which includes 130 pages of incoming faxes, and a 15-cent per page coverage fee (there's also a $10 one-time set up charge). eFax also offers a Pro model ($19.95 per month, $220 per year) designed for large businesses and individuals with heavy faxing needs. There's a $19.95 one-time set up fee, but with the higher cost comes 200 pages of incoming faxes and a cool voicemail feature that sends left messages to your inbox. There's also a 10-cent per page overage charge, which is five cents cheaper than the basic plan.

The Plus and Pro accounts are relatively expensive compared to Send2Fax' Home Office and Small Business plans which are $8.95 per month and $12.95 per month, respectively. MyFax has three plans, one of which starts of $10 per month for 100 faxes sent and 200 received.

The eFax Experience
Firing off a fax required that I tap "Send A Fax," key a phone number into the address field, and optionally fill in cover letter information. At the moment, eFax for Android only allows you to send photos snapped with the phone's camera or stored within the image gallery?no other file types. So, if you want to send a document, you'd have to shoot it with your phone's camera and then send it (which is what I did to test the service). You can, however, use eFax' email-to-fax capabilities (outside of the mobile app) to send files of any type.

The recipient contacted me stating that he received the fax five minutes after it was sent. When he responded with a fax of his own, it arrived in my inbox seven minutes later?not bad considering the money I saved on a dedicated machine, ink, and paper. Faxes can be tagged and archived, or forwarded as faxes or email messages, but you can?t add digital signatures as you can with the desktop version. Note: Fax quality may vary depending on your phone's camera.

Should You Subscribe to eFax?
eFax for Android works because it makes the fax process simple?you don't need to own a machine or visit Kinkos. All that's needed is a Web connection, which means you can fax from nearly any location. eFax for Android may only let you fax photos , and it doesn't support digital signatures, but there's an extremely high convenience factor. All in all, eFax is a solid companion for the for business customers who want to save on paper and ink.

More Android Apps Reviews:
??? eFax (for Android)
??? McAfee Family Protection Android Edition
??? OnLive (for Android)
??? LogMeIn Ignition (for Android)
??? Google Android 4.0 "Ice Cream Sandwich"
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/ciuNnaHSAiQ/0,2817,2397975,00.asp

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

In China, a daring few challenge one-child limit (AP)

ZHUJI, China ? Seven months pregnant, Wu Weiping sneaked out early in the morning carrying a shoulder bag with some clothes, her laptop and a knife.

"It's good for me I wasn't caught, but it's lucky for them too," said Wu, 35, who feared that family planning officials were going to drag her to the hospital for a forced abortion. "I was going to fight to the death if they found me."

With her escape, Wu joined an increasingly defiant community of parents in China who have risked their jobs, savings and physical safety to have a forbidden second child.

Though their numbers are small, they represent changing ideas about individual rights. While violators in the past tended to be rural families who skirted the birth limits in relative obscurity, many today are urbanites like Wu who frame their defiance in overtly political terms, arguing that the government has no right to dictate how many children they have.

Using Internet chat rooms and blogs, a few have begun airing their demands for a more liberal family planning policy and are hoping others will follow their lead. Several have gotten their stories into the tightly controlled media, an indication that their perspectives have resonance with the public.

After finding out his wife was expecting a second child, Liu Lianwen set up an online discussion group called "Free Birth" to swap information about the one-child policy and how to get around it. In less than six months, it has attracted nearly 200 members.

"We are idealists," said the 37-year-old engineer from central China, whose daughter was born Oct. 18. "We want to change the attitudes of people around us by changing ourselves."

Freed of the social controls imposed during the doctrinaire era of communist rule, Chinese today are free to choose where they live and work and whom they marry. But when it comes to having kids, the state says the majority must stop at one. Hefty fines for violators and rising economic pressures have helped compel most to abide by the limit. Many provinces claim near perfect compliance.

It's impossible to know how many children have been born in violation of the one-child policy, but Zhai Zhenwu, director of Renmin University's School of Sociology and Population in Beijing, estimates that less than 1 percent of the 16 million babies born each year are "out of plan."

Liu thinks his fellow citizens have been brainwashed. "They all feel it's glorious to have a small family," he said. "Thirty years of family planning propaganda have changed the way the majority of Chinese think about having children."

The reluctance to procreate is also an issue of growing concern for demographers, who worry that the policy combined with a rising cost of living has brought the fertility rate down too sharply and too fast. Though still the world's largest nation with 1.3 billion people, China's population growth has slowed considerably.

"The worry for China is not population growth ? it's rapid population aging and young people not wanting to have children," said Wang Feng, director of the Brookings-Tsinghua Center for Public Policy, a joint U.S.-China academic research center in Beijing.

Wang sees a looming disaster as the baby boom generation of the 1960s heads into retirement and old age. China's labor force, sharply reduced by the one-child policy, will struggle to support them.

He argues that the government should allow everyone at least two children. He thinks many Chinese would still stop at one because of concerns about being able to afford to raise more than that.

Penalties for violators are harsh. Those caught must pay a "social compensation fee," which can be four to nine times a family's annual income, depending on the province and the whim of the local family planning bureau. Parents with government jobs can also lose their posts or get demoted, and their "out of plan" children are denied education and health benefits.

Those without government posts have less to worry about. If they can afford the steep fee and don't mind losing benefits, there's little to stop them from having another child. There's popular anger over this favoring of the wealthy but not much that ordinary people can do about it, since the policy is set behind closed doors by the communist leadership in Beijing.

In 2007, officials in coastal Zhejiang province threatened to start naming and shaming well-off families who had extra kids, but the campaign never got off the ground, possibly because it threatened to tarnish the reputations of too many well-connected people.

Hardest hit by the rules are urban middle class parents with Communist Party posts, teaching positions or jobs at state-run industries.

Li Yongan was ordered to pay 240,000 yuan ($37,500) after his son was born in 2007 as he already had a 13-year-old daughter. After refusing to pay the fee, Li was denied a household registration permit for his son, forcing him to pay three times more for kindergarten.

He was also barred from his job teaching physics at a state-run university in Beijing. "I never regret my second child, but I have been living with depression and anger for years," said Li, who struggles to make ends meet as a freelance chess teacher.

Of course, there are surreptitious, though not foolproof, ways to evade punishment: paying a bribe or falsifying documents so that, for instance, a second child is registered as the twin of an older sibling. Or, sometimes second babies are registered to childless relatives or rural families that are allowed to have a second child but haven't done so.

Wu, the woman who made the early morning escape, said she never intended to flout the one-child rule. She had resorted to fertility treatments to conceive her first child ? a daughter nicknamed Le Le, or Happy ? so she was stunned when a doctor told her she was expecting again in August 2008.

The news triggered a monthlong "cold war" with her husband, Wu said. Silent dinners, cold shoulders. She wanted to keep the baby. He didn't. After a few weeks, he came around, she explained with a satisfied smile.

But family planning officials insisted on an abortion. The principal at her school also pressured her to end the pregnancy.

Desperate, she went online for answers ? and was led astray.

At her home on the outskirts of Zhuji, a textile hub a few hours south of Shanghai, the energetic former high school teacher recounted how she divorced her husband, then married her cousin the next day, all in an attempt to evade the rules.

The soap-opera-like subterfuge was meant to take advantage of a loophole that allows divorced parents to have a second child if their new spouse is a first-time parent.

Wu had helped raise her cousin, who is 25 and 10 years younger than her, and when she asked if he would marry her to help save the baby, he agreed.

The divorce, on Sept. 27, 2008, involved signing a document and posing for a photo. It was over in just a few minutes. The next day's marriage was similarly swift.

"I remember I was very happy that day," Wu said holding the marriage certificate with a glued-on snapshot of the cousins. "Because I thought I'd figured out a way to save my baby."

But her problem wasn't over. When the newlyweds applied for a birth permit, officials informed them conception had to take place after marriage. They were told to abort the baby, then try again. Wu was back to square one.

A popular option that was out of reach for Wu economically is to have the baby elsewhere, where the limits don't apply. Some better-off Chinese go to Hong Kong, where private agencies charge mainland mothers hundreds of thousands of yuan (tens of thousands of dollars) for transport, lodging and medical costs.

The number giving birth in Hong Kong reached 40,000 last year, prompting the territory to cap the number of beds in public hospitals they are allowed from 2012. However, parents of kids born abroad face the bureaucratic hurdles of foreigners, having to pay premiums for school and other services.

In the end, Wu also fled, but not as far as Hong Kong. Three months from her due date, she kissed her baby daughter goodbye, telling her she was going on vacation, and hopped an early morning train to nearby Hangzhou. There she switched to another train bound for Shanghai, hoping the roundabout route would throw off anyone trying to tail her.

In Shanghai, Wu used a friend's ID to rent a one-room apartment with shared bathroom and kitchen. It was tiny and not cheap for her, 700 yuan ($107) a month, but it was across from a hospital that allowed her to register without a government-issued birth permission slip and it had an Internet connection.

Wu had never used email, so her husband ? the real one ? set up a password-protected online journal that he titled "yixiaobb," or "one tiny baby." She posted to the journal up to nine times a day, describing where she was living without ever revealing her exact location. She prefaced every entry with a capital M for mother, and added a number to mark how many messages she wrote in a day. Using the same journal, her husband wrote to her, coding his messages with an F.

It felt like an invisible tether linking Wu to her husband. He didn't know where she was, but knew she was OK. Shortly before her due date, she asked him to come to Shanghai, and he was present for the birth of their son.

More than two years later, she and her former husband, the father to both her children, have yet to remarry ? hoping it will legally shield him from any future punishment.

The marriage with her cousin was easily dissolved after they discovered it was never valid, because marriages between first cousins is illegal in China.

Wu was fired from her job as a public school teacher because of the baby, and her ex-husband, who is also a teacher, was demoted to a freelance position at his school. Though told she has been assessed a 120,740 yuan ($18,575) social compensation fee, Wu has refused to pay.

Enforcers of the family planning limits showed up at their house in July, and again in November, threatening legal action. Wu is afraid their property might be confiscated or that she or husband might end up in detention, but she doesn't want to pay the fine because she doesn't believe she's done anything wrong.

"I don't think I've committed any crime," she said. "A crime is something that hurts other people or society or that infringes on other people's rights. I don't think having a baby is any kind of crime."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_as/as_china_two_kids

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California Academy of Sciences ? San Francisco, CA

Flag of United States? San Francisco, California
Saturday, July 9, 2011

"The only place on the planet with an aquarium, a planetarium, a natural history museum, and a 4-story rainforest all under one roof."

I was terrified.
If you don't already know about my fish and bird phobia... now you do...

This place was like terror defined for me. I went into the rain forest thing and could not breathe, later I went down to the aquarium and could not move...

So so so so so so scary and gross. Everything, yuck.

After that, we went to the Japanese Tea Garden, which was a lot better and more enjoyable for me. It was bee-you-tee-ful.

So, after that we went to the Bistro at Sutro Baths and then walked around Sutro Baths. How Harold and Maude of us.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Recent-Travel-Blogs-RSS/~3/JI-RdfrWlVg/tpod.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Going Naked (The Motley Fool)

Success stories are regular features of The Motley Fool's Rule Your Retirement newsletter service, where we share profiles of people who have become financially independent. One of the most remarkable stories we've come across is that of Akaisha and Billy Kaderli, who retired two decades ago at the age of 38 and began traveling the world. They wrote the popular books The Adventurer's Guide to Early Retirement and The Guide to Chapala Living.

There's one thing everyone has to worry about. It's a fatiguing topic and one filled with emotion and fear. As a nation, we can hardly get past it, and present solutions are sometimes as hard to handle as the problem itself.

I'm talking about health care, and how to pay for it.

High cost and obstacles
We know a couple who pay $1,200 a month for a catastrophic, high-deductible plan in the States, despite having never had a claim. Another couple pay $2,000 a month just for the husband's ability to be insured with his pre-existing heart condition. Some people are not able to be covered at all with U.S. insurance companies due to a past condition, even when it completely cleared up a decade or more ago. They feel they are just twisting in the wind and waiting for the next shoe to drop.

Sometimes, our readers write to us about staying in their jobs for another five years or more for the promise of employer-covered health insurance that will last the rest of their lives. They wonder, Is it worth it? They feel like they are spending their healthy years chained to a job that has lost its luster for something in the future that might not exist when they need or want it.

Going naked
As you know, Billy and I have traded security for adventure many times in our lives. And when it comes to health insurance and the price of health care, it's no different. Medical Tourism is a viable option and one that we espouse in our articles and books. We have been called on the carpet for our decisions in this area more than once.

However, among world travelers there is a phrase we use when we discuss health insurance policies and whether or not we want to continue holding one and paying the corresponding price tag. It's called "going naked" or "going semi-naked."

This phrase pretty much describes how it feels when one chooses to let that insurance policy go. One can feel pretty exposed and vulnerable -- at least in the beginning. On the other hand, not being tied to $12,000 to $24,000 in health-insurance payments each and every year opens up other possibilities. In a few years, you can save enough money from not paying premiums to afford something unexpected out of pocket.

For the most part we're talking about travelers here, so these are people not living a full-time traditional life in the States. They have made certain decisions and trade-offs to have the life they enjoy, and they have already received health care in other countries. There is always a first time for an experience such as this -- going to a doctor in a foreign country -- and that new experience can be unnerving. But then after receiving the care, realizing the doctor speaks English, seeing the hospital or clinic with its computers and quality equipment, and having the heartfelt care, they often get a much better perspective.

Those who have never received medical service out of their own home country tend to look at this topic with jaded eyes or great suspicion.

It's understandable.

Those who have gone through this experience feel their eyes have been opened to new possibilities. The idea of "going naked" of an insurance policy becomes a manageable possibility. Going "half-naked" (choosing a high-deductible policy or travel insurance when visiting the States) is a comfortable middle ground.

Your choice
Once again, Billy and I are not advising anyone to do anything. We present options to challenging situations, and you can ruminate about it or toss it into the round file.

But what we see over and over again is how this one subject seems to be overweighted as compared to other themes that could generate happiness and comfort in one's retirement life. Categories such as cost of living, reasonable weather, and having a community of friends and energizing, rewarding activities to do, for instance.

There is no one size fits all, to be sure.

But if the overbearing cost of health care and insurance is a concern in your retirement plans, you might consider some working alternatives.

For more information on Medical Tourism, click here. For Alternative Medical options, click here.?

Billy and Akaisha Kaderli are recognized retirement experts and internationally published authors on topics of finance and world travel. With the wealth of information they share on their popular website RetireEarlyLifestyle.com, they have been helping people achieve their own retirement dreams since 1991.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personalfinance/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/fool/20111222/bs_fool_fool/rx170563

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Republican Presidential Candidates on Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae (ContributorNetwork)

According to a CNN report, Newt Gingrich started a consulting company after he left Congress, the Gingrich Group, and was paid $1.6 million to $1.8 million for consulting Freddie Mac. Due to the fact many believe mortgage lenders Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were partly responsible for the collapse of the U.S. housing market, the candidates seeking the Republican presidential nomination were asked for their opinions on this issue and corruption in Washington, in general.

Here is what they said, according to a debate transcript provided by the American Presidency Project:

* Newt Gingrich: "Barney Frank was in public office with direct power over Freddie Mac. He exploited that power just as Chris Dodd was in public office when he got special bargains from Countrywide, a firm that went broke. They were using power. I was a private citizen, engaged in a business like any other business. I worked for years with Habitat for Humanity. I think it's a good conservative principle to try to find ways to help families that are right at the margin learn how to budget, learn how to take care of a house, learn how to buy a house. And I'm not going to step back from the idea that in fact we should have as a goal, helping as many Americans as possible be capable of buying homes. And when you look for example at electric membership co-ops, and you look at credit unions, there are a lot of government sponsored enterprises that are awfully important and do an awfully good job."

* Ron Paul: "Well (Gingrich) has a different definition of the private sector than I have. Because it's a GSE, government sponsored enterprise. That's completely different ? the worst kind of economy. You know, pure private enterprise, more closely probably to what Gov. Romney is involved with, but if it's government-sponsored, it's a mixture of business and government. It's very, very dangerous. Some people say, if it goes to extreme, it becomes fascism, because big business and big government get together."

* Michele Bachman: "We know that (Gingrich) cashed paychecks from Freddie Mac. That's the best evidence that you can have, over $1.6 million. And, frankly, I am shocked listening to the former speaker of the House, because he's defending the continuing practice of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. There's a big difference between a credit union and Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. And they were the epicenter of the mortgage financial meltdown. I was trying to see these two entities put into bankruptcy because they, frankly, need to go away, when the speaker had his hand out and he was taking $1.6 million to influence senior Republicans to keep the scam going in Washington, D.C. That's absolutely wrong. We can't have as our nominee for the Republican Party someone who continues to stand for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. They need to be shut down, not built up."

* Mitt Romney, as reported by the Huffington Post: "One of the things that I think that people recognize in Washington is that people go there to serve the people and then they stay there to serve themselves. ... By the way, a very different number ($1.6 million) than (Gingrich) said in the first debate. He said $300,000 and he was there as an historian."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personalfinance/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111223/pl_ac/10729015_republican_presidential_candidates_on_freddie_mac_and_fannie_mae

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Strange red galaxies a 'missing link' in history of the universe?

The discovery of four ruby-red, dim galaxies at the farthest fringes of the universe could help scientists understand how the earliest galaxies evolved to become what we see today.

A quartet of rarely observed, ruby-red galaxies from the dawn of the universe could provide a "missing link" in understanding how galaxies formed, according to a new study.

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The galaxies, which researchers estimate formed before the 13.7 billion-year-old universe had reached its one billionth birthday, were a puzzle to the team that discovered them.?Only one other galaxy like them had been spotted before, and researchers sought to understand why the four?galaxies were as red and dim as they appear.

The data could help scientists trying to piece together the story of how the first galaxies formed, as well as how galaxies evolved from humble beginnings to form the variety of sizes, shapes, and star populations seen today in nearby regions of the universe.

These galaxies "might be a missing link in galactic evolution," notes Giovanni Fazio, a researcher at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., and a member of the team reporting the results, in a statement.

The galaxies appeared in data gathered by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, which?observes at longer infrared wavelengths than Hubble. That means Spitzer is?in a better position to snag objects ? like these galaxies ? that shine more brightly in the infrared than in visible wavelengths.

"Hubble has shown us some of the first protogalaxies that formed, but nothing that looks like this," said Dr. Fazio.

Still, the international team reporting the results pushed data-analysis techniques to their limit to tease out the dim galaxies.?The team,?headed by the Center for Astrophysics' Jiasheng Huang, also had to grapple with why the galaxies were so red and dim. Three options seemed possible:

  • The galaxies could host a large population of older, redder stars and be somewhat closer than the 12.7 billion light-year distance.
  • They could be extremely dusty and even closer.
  • They could be so distant that the universe's expansion has stretched the wavelengths of light they emit deep into the infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.

After analyzing the possibilities, the team determined that a blend of the 12.7 billion light-year distance with lots of dust best fit the data. In other words, the redness was not a trick of the distance; these neighboring galaxies would still be red if observed by someone in their local patch of the cosmos.

Red and rockin'. The team notes that one of the four objects is an X-ray quasar, typically an indicator of an active supermassive black hole at its center. Another is a hyper-luminous infrared galaxy.

Both point to galaxies that are undergoing mergers, the team suggests. And where there are mergers, more stars are born.

Initial estimates put the galaxies' masses at roughly 10 to 30 percent of the Milky Way's mass, which itself estimated at between 1 trillion and 1.5 trillion times the sun's mass.

The data were gathered as part of the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey.?The international effort draws on US and European orbiting observatories as well as ground-based telescopes observing in a range of wavelengths. It is designed to study galaxies over a wide span of time scales, peering as deep into the universe's past as current technology allows.

The next step will?be to follow up the Spitzer observations with views from telescopes that look at the universe with submillimeter views. These telescopes are specifically designed to see dusty and hidden objects that other telescopes can barely see, if at all.

For example, the Submillimeter Array near the summit of Hawaii's Mauna Kea discovered the only other known galaxy like those in the new quartet.

The researchers say they hope to gather more-accurate distance-related data for the newly found galaxies with the Atacama?Large Millimeter/submillimater Array (ALMA) high in Chile's Atacama Desert. The array began its first science operations in August.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/UMo_JKcDcLY/Strange-red-galaxies-a-missing-link-in-history-of-the-universe

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Gowalla Confirms It Will Shut Down As Founders and Team Members Join Facebook

Screen shot 2011-12-05 at 9.07.16 AMFollowing reports that the company as a whole had been acquired, Gowalla today announced that its founders and several team members have joined Facebook and will move to its Palo Alto headquarters. The Gowalla service "will be winding down at the end of January", and options will be made available for users to export their data. Gowalla CEO Josh Williams says his company was impressed by what Facebook revealed at f8, and soon after he and other team members were asked to join the social network's team.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/mA2k0XXicT4/

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Monday, December 5, 2011

HannahElliott: Tom Ford windows on Rodeo are the best ones there.

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Russia's ruling party wary as nation votes

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, left, signs autographs while visiting a shipbuilding plant in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Yana Lapikova, Pool)

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, left, signs autographs while visiting a shipbuilding plant in St. Petersburg, Russia, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011. (AP Photo/RIA Novosti, Yana Lapikova, Pool)

An election commission official prepares a voting booth adorned with the coat of arms of the Russian state, left, and of the Smolensk region, right, at a polling station in the village of Kozlovka, 380 kilometers (236 miles) west of Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. A parliamentary election will be held in Russia on Sunday. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

An election commission official prepares a voting booth adorned with the coat of arms of the Russian state, right, and of the Smolensk region, left, at a polling station in the village of Kozlovka, 380 kilometers (236 miles) west of Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. A parliamentary election will be held in Russia on Sunday. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

An election commission official prepares a voting booth adorned with the coat of arms of the Russian state, right, and of the Smolensk region, left, at a polling station in the village of Kozlovka, 380 kilometers (236 miles) west of Moscow, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. A parliamentary election will be held in Russia on Sunday. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

Russia's independent election monitor Golos (Voice) leader Lilya Shibanova speaks during a news conference in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. Shibanova was detained at a Moscow airport for 12 hours, a colleague said Saturday - the latest government pressure on a watchdog that has documented thousands of election law violations ahead of Sunday's parliamentary vote. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)

(AP) ? Russia's long dominant party appeared likely to lose its edge as voters across the sprawling country cast ballots for Parliament on Sunday, many of them frustrated over corruption and the gap between ordinary Russians and the super-rich.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's United Russia party has signaled it is worried about polls showing it could receive only a bit more than half the votes, cracking down on an independent election monitor and warning of political instability.

The Kremlin is determined to see United Russia maintain its two-thirds majority, an unassailable dominance that allows it to amend the constitution. Both Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev made final appeals for the party on Friday, the last day of campaigning, warning that a parliament made up of diverse political camps would be incapable of making decisions.

The view underlines Russian authorities' continuing discomfort with political pluralism and preference for top-down operation. As president in 2000-2008, Putin's strongman leadership style won wide support among Russians exhausted by a decade of post-Soviet uncertainty.

But United Russia has become increasingly disliked, seen as stifling opposition, representing a corrupt bureaucracy and often called "the party of crooks and thieves." Putin needs the party to do well in the parliamentary election to pave the way for his return to the presidency in a vote now three months away.

With so much at stake, there are doubts about how honestly the election will be conducted. An interim report from an elections-monitoring mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe noted that "most parties have expressed a lack of trust in the fairness of the electoral process."

The only independent Russian election-monitoring group, Golos, has come under strong pressure in the week leading up to the vote.

Golos' leader, Lilya Shibanova, was held at a Moscow airport for 12 hours upon her Friday return from Poland after refusing to give her laptop computer to security officers, said Golos' deputy director Grigory Melkonyants. On Friday, the group was fined the equivalent of $1,000 by a Moscow court for violating a law that prohibits publication of election opinion research for five days before a vote.

Putin last Sunday accused Western governments of trying to influence the election. Golos is funded by grants from the United States and Europe.

Golos has complied some 5,300 complaints of election-law violations ahead of the vote. Most are linked to United Russia, the party headed by Putin, who has dominated Russian politics for a dozen years as president and prime minister.

Roughly a third of the complainants ? mostly government employees and students ? say employers and professors are pressuring them to vote for the party.

Only seven parties have been allowed to field candidates for parliament this year, while the most vocal opposition groups have been denied registration and barred from campaigning.

Some of the parties in the running are unlikely to clear the 7-percent threshold for winning seats, which are proportionally allocated; critics say the 7-percent level is prohibitively high, effectively ensuring that most minority views are denied representation.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-03-EU-Russia-Election/id-7406e4457bd84bd5b3a3d83c063eb011

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Neil Patrick Harris Apologizes for Saying "Tranny" on Live! (omg!)

Neil Patrick Harris apologized Friday for using the word "tranny" during Thursday's Live With Kelly.

After Kelly Ripa and Harris, who is guest-hosting as Live searches for a permanent replacement for Regis Philbin, inhaled sulfer hexafluoride ? "helium's evil twin" ? during a science experiment, the How I Met Your Mother star joked, "I've never sounded more like a tranny in my life."

Dancing's Derek, Jerry O'Connell, Josh Groban to Guest-Host Live!

"Truly sorry for saying the word 'tranny' on Live this week. Twice! Should have been more thoughtful. Didn't at all mean to offend," he tweeted Friday.

GLAAD accepted Harris' apology, noting, "It's heartening to see a celebrity of Harris' stature recognize and apologize for using the slur in such a timely manner, and for greater media attention being paid to its use." ?

Check out a clip of Harris on Live:

Related Articles on TVGuide.com

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_neil_patrick_harris_apologizes_saying_tranny_live004900477/43789705/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/neil-patrick-harris-apologizes-saying-tranny-live-004900477.html

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Officials: Police saved lives in postal shooting

Law enforcement officers gather outside the Winton Blount U.S. Post Office in Montgomery, Ala., after a gunman opened fire inside the structure, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. No one was injured and authorities have a suspect in custody. The post office was evacuated and surrounding streets were cordoned off by police during the incident. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Law enforcement officers gather outside the Winton Blount U.S. Post Office in Montgomery, Ala., after a gunman opened fire inside the structure, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. No one was injured and authorities have a suspect in custody. The post office was evacuated and surrounding streets were cordoned off by police during the incident. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

(AP) ? A heavy police presence at a nearby mall for the holidays and a rapid response by employees helped save lives when a gunman armed with several pistols opened fire at Montgomery's main post office, postal officials said.

A suspect was quickly apprehended, and no one was wounded in the Thursday night gunfire.

The large mail processing area where the shootings took place was expected to reopen after 8 a.m. CST Friday, postal officials said.

"The best news is that nobody was hurt and the local police responded quickly," Postal Service spokesman Tony Robinson said Friday morning. "Management quickly had the building evacuated, which helped minimize the potential threat to the people."

The ordeal began around 6:38 p.m., when post office employees called 911 reporting gunshots. A large contingent of police were at a nearby mall because of holiday crowds and had a suspect in custody within 10 minutes, Montgomery Police Chief Kevin Murphy said.

The suspect was in his late 20s or early 30s, Murphy said. He didn't name the suspect and said federal postal officials would decide on charges.

On Friday, as workers prepared to reopen the processing facility, Robinson said counselors would be available during the day for employees who wished to talk about the shootings.

Robinson said authorities planned to check Friday whether video surveillance captured the gunfire. He said he didn't have further information on the suspect.

"We're thankful that the person was apprehended quickly enough that no life was lost," Robinson said.

___

Martin reported from Atlanta.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-02-Shots%20Fired-Post%20Office/id-c3b20596c9e14837b32a2ffe27d23881

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Documentary Review: Tornado Alley

Tornado Alley presents a realistic journey following two separate groups as they chase and investigate tornadoes and their genesis.   - Tornado Alley
Tornado Alley presents a realistic journey following two separate groups as they chase and investigate tornadoes and their genesis. - Tornado Alley

With its dull driving sequences & abrupt ending, Tornado Alley's potentially interesting investigation into tornado genesis ultimately seems a bit pointless

In the documentary Tornado Alley we are introduced to two separate groups of storm chasers. The first is led by the documentary's director, Sean Casey, an IMAX film maker, who for the past 8-years has been following his dream of filming the inside of a tornado.

The second group consist of scientists from the The Verification of the Origins of Rotation in Tornadoes Experiment 2 (VORTEX2) research project, led by Joshua Wurman, Karen Kosiba and Don Burgess. They aim to obtain more information on how a tornado is born so as to increase tornado warning times and save lives by giving locals more time to evacuate.

The documentary begins with both groups sharing the same road on the way to a forming tornado, but they soon go their separate ways across Tornado Alley, an area in the U.S where up to three quarters of the world's tornadoes occur. This area is generally considered to include Oklahoma, Kansas, the Texas Panhandle, Nebraska, eastern South Dakota, and eastern Colorado.

Casey's objective sees him driving around Tornado Alley in his 14,000 tonne homemade tank known as the Tornado Intercept Vehicle (TIV), which has an armoured steel shell, bullet proof windows and a maximum speed of 100mph. On top of the vehicle is a military-style filming turret, which allows Casey to shoot footage in a 360 degree angle. The TIV is truly an impressive sight and is arguably the most interesting element in the documentary.

Compared to Casey's one vehicle and three-man team, the VORTEX 2 team appear vastly different, showing possibly hundreds of team members and using a massive fleet of vehicles. VORTEX 2's Doppeler on Wheels (DOW) ? a truck mounted with a massive Doppler weather radar ? is the vehicle that appears most prominently throughout the documentary after Casey's TIV, and allows the scientists to scan tornadoes and create 3-D maps of wind and debris.

The feature is narrated by actor Bill Paxton, who does a fairly good job, though he does often sound bored by the events taking place in the documentary.

The Storm Chasers Take You on a Ride

From the beginning to the the end of the documentary, the audience follows the storm chasers while they're on the road. We're given basic information on the technology they're using but there's no explanation or interpretation of the images appearing on their computer screens that appear regularly throughout the feature.

We receive a little information on Casey and his back story, but the documentary doesn't do the same for the head VORTEX2 scientists, who spend a lot of time on screen but other than their job titles, we know nothing about their backgrounds, experiences or personal stories.

Rather than providing information on the science or history of tornado genesis, the audience are instead treated to constant footage of the VORTEX 2 lead scientists instructing their team members, followed by plenty of scenes of vehicles driving. While this may give an accurate picture of what storm chasing involves, it doesn't really make for an interesting watch.

About two or three tornadoes appear throughout the documentary and there is some pretty shocking, imagery of the devastation that a twister can cause in an urban area. Though this footage appears rarely and doesn't last long, it does make for a nice break from all the vehicle sequences. The documentary also does a nice job of showing us how bad weather conditions can be when in the vicinity of a tornado, as researchers approaching tornadoes are required to drive with almost no visibility and are impeded by roads that have totally flooded.

The Presentation

In Melbourne the documentary screened exclusively at IMAX. Seeing the documentary on the world's third largest screen however added nothing to the experience of viewing Tornado Alley, as there's very rarely awe inspiring footage that would be a ?must see? on the big screen.

3-D effects in recent documentaries such as Born to Be Wild and Hubble 3-D worked well, because there was always the perception of people, animals, planets etc. coming off the screen. However in Tornado Alley there's no real 3-D effects, despite audience members being required to wear 3-D glasses throughout the feature. There's no part of Tornado Alley where the audience may perceive gimmicky 3-D effects, such as the people in the documentary reaching into the audience or debris from the tornado flying out of the screen into the cinema.

In fact it didn't take long for me to forget that the movie was actually in 3-D, and I only remembered this after the documentary's end when I was required to take off the 3-D glasses while leaving the cinema.

The Payoff

Towards the end of this 45 minute feature we see Casey drive the TIV into a tornado. Unfortunately what the documentary has largely been leading up to, ends up being lackluster as the footage only lasts for about a minute and the tornado's interior appears as little more than fierce winds blowing.

The tornado scanned by VORTEX2 in the documentary provided them with data on its entire life cycle, including data captured 20 minutes before the tornado formed. It is said to be the most intensely examined tornado in human history but will take years until the results become evident. Unfortunately this means that after 45 minutes of following VORTEX2's expedition, the audience are not really given any information about their findings on tornado genesis. All we're told was that the mission was successful.

Conclusion

Tornado Alley has an interesting concept, following two separate groups' expeditions to get to the heart of the tornado, either by driving into the middle of one or by investigating its formation. It succeeds in presenting a realistic journey of these two separate groups and showing how they operate, but this is also were it becomes a little dull. Thanks to Hollywood the general public have associated storm chasing with suspense when in reality it usually consists more of experts surrounding it with sensors and scanning the twister from a safe distance as is represented in the documentary. There's very little suspense within the feature, with the only memorable exception being where the TIV team are chased down the road by a tornado.

The documentary may have been a little more interesting if they had further discussed theories and research on tornado genesis or given us more insight into the personal stories of the lead researchers, rather than solely relying on continuous footage of vehicles driving towards tornadoes.

It's definitely not a bad documentary as it seems to provide a fairly good insight into the journeys of thrill-seeking and scientific storm chasers. However Tornado Alley's biggest problems are that it can be consistently dull and fails to educate the audience with any new information on tornadoes and their genesis, even though half the documentary follows VORTEX2's mission to capture data and increase understanding on these issues. As the results of the TIV expedition were visually lackluster and the findings of VORTEX2 team were inconclusive by the end of the feature, it all ends on sort of a sour note.

Copyright Paul Campobasso. Contact the author to obtain permission for republication. Paul Campobasso, Paul Campobasso

Paul Campobasso - I live in Melbourne, Australia and recently graduated from university completing a Bachelor of Arts with Honours in Politics and a ...

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Source: http://paul-campobasso.suite101.com/documentary-review-tornado-alley-a396616

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Icon of US military now in Iraqi hands (AP)

CAMP VICTORY, Iraq ? Inside palace walls built by Saddam Hussein, U.S. generals plotted the war's course, tracked the mounting death toll and swore in new American citizens under gaudy glass chandeliers.

Just outside the palace, American troops whacked golf balls into man-made lakes or fished for carp, while others sat down with a cigar and a can of nonalcoholic beer hoping for a respite from incoming rockets or mortar shells.

Along another lake some distance away, a jailed Saddam tended to tomatoes and cucumbers in a small, walled-off enclosure with guards patrolling overhead.

Ever since the soldiers of the 3rd Infantry Division fought their way into the Baghdad airport grounds nearly nine years ago, the sprawling area they renamed Camp Victory has held a special place in the American military experience in Iraq.

From here, the highest-ranking generals sitting behind banks of telephones and video screens communicated with commanders in the field and political leaders in Washington, and dictated strategy that unfolded on the streets of Fallujah, Mosul and Najaf.

It was an intersection in the war where U.S. troops, hot and dusty after traveling across Iraq's deadly roads and highways, could relax with a latte or bootlegged movie before heading back out again.

On Friday, the base that at its height was home to 46,000 people was handed over to the Iraqi government as part of American efforts to move all U.S. troops out of the country by the end of the year.

"The base is no longer under U.S. control and is under the full authority of the government of Iraq," said U.S. military spokesman Col. Barry Johnson. He said that by 2 p.m. on Friday, there was no longer any U.S. troop presence at the base.

The transfer of the country's largest American military base to Iraqi custody happened with little fanfare, and no ceremony was held.

The area, which the military formally calls Victory Base Complex, was originally used as a country club for the Baghdad elite under Saddam. A visitor can still find small relics of that era, such as signs advising patrons where to park, or the hours during which the casino was open.

Saddam built the palace complex near the airport out of embarrassment. During the 1978 Arab League summit he was forced to house incoming dignitaries in private homes in Baghdad because he had no proper accommodations, according to Robert O. Kirkland, a former U.S. military historian who interviewed former Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz and other Iraqis who were once in American custody.

To rectify the problem, Saddam went on a palace-building spree, eventually building nine structures of varying size and impressiveness. He gave some of them names that reflected his often convoluted view of the world: Victory over America, Victory over Iran and Victory over Kuwait.

In the run-up to the war, U.S. military planners were confused by a cone-shaped structure they could see from satellite imagery, said Col. Les Melnyk, another former U.S. military historian in Iraq. They labeled it a possible prayer site. It turned out to be a pigeon coop.

Maj. William Sumner was a captain when his unit arrived at Camp Victory in mid-April 2003. He remembers how Iraqi looters managed to get into the complex and make off with geese, pelicans and other animals from a small zoo Saddam had built.

"I think that's when the cougar got out of the enclosure," he said. For weeks afterward, a large feline, which Sumner said could have also been a bobcat, was spotted wandering around the base.

In the early days after the invasion, soldiers swam in the man-made lakes or toured the islands with paddle boats.

But quickly the atmosphere became more like bases back in the U.S. That meant rules and regulations ? and military police to enforce them. Sumner said during his unit's second week at Victory he was pulled over for speeding.

"After we moved onto our other place, we just tried to refuse to go back there whenever possible," he said.

Victory Base Complex was essentially a city, often hit by rockets or mortar shells. One time the violence came from within. In May 2009, a U.S. soldier shot and killed five fellow troops at a combat stress clinic.

The facility was so big it was divided into sections with different names. Troops could travel from Camp Stryker to Camp Liberty without leaving the base. A public bus system with posted routes transported people to the dining facilities, the gym or a dirt speedway where troops and contractors would race remote-controlled cars.

By the numbers supplied by the U.S. military, it was a substantial operation:

? The incinerators destroyed an average of 178,000 pounds of waste a day.

? A water purification plant produced 1.85 million gallons of water a day.

? A bottled water plant filled 500,000 one-liter bottles a day.

? Three separate plants produced 60 megawatts of power a day.

If soldiers grew tired of food at the massive chow halls, they could grab takeout at Taco Bell, Pizza Hut, Cinnabon, Burger King or Subway.

At various stores they could buy anything from illegal DVDs to a Harley Davidson motorcycle delivered straight to their door back in the U.S. when they returned from the war. In the early days of the war, troops could even buy Saddam Hussein's personal silverware and place settings.

Troops and contractors visiting from other bases took tours of the palaces.

One particularly entertaining pastime was feeding the carp in the lake surrounding Al Faw palace, where the top generals and U.S. military officials were based. The aggressive fish would jump out of the water for cereal, Girl Scout cookies and Pop Tarts.

Off-limits to most troops was the jail used to house Saddam and some of his cohorts. In a dilapidated, bomb-damaged building encircled by concertina wire, American troops interrogated and guarded the former dictator before he was handed over to the Iraqis and executed in 2006.

The Iraqi government has not yet announced plans for the complex, prime real estate in a country sorely lacking in parks and public spaces. The Iraqi military is already using some parts, and there is talk of turning Saddam's jail cell into a museum.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/iraq/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111202/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iraq_end_of_victory

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Scorsese's 'Hugo' named best film by NBR awards

In this image released by Paramount Pictures, Asa Butterfield portrays Hugo Cabret in a scene from "Hugo." (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures, Jaap Buitendijk)

In this image released by Paramount Pictures, Asa Butterfield portrays Hugo Cabret in a scene from "Hugo." (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures, Jaap Buitendijk)

In this image released by Paramount Pictures, actors Emily Mortimer, left, and Asa Butterfield listen to director Martin Scorsese on the set of "Hugo." The film, adapted from Brian Selznick's award-winning illustrated book "The Invention of Hugo Cabret," is about a 12-year-old orphan who lives in a 1930 Paris train station. (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures, Jaap Buitendijk)

(AP) ? The National Board of Review picked Martin Scorsese's 3-D "Hugo" as the year's best film, an unusually kid friendly choice sure to add further intrigue to the Oscar hunt.

The group also picked Scorsese as best director for his whimsical film about an orphan who lives in a 1930s Paris train station. It's the director's first film in 3-D but one in which the adventure leads back to the early days of cinema and the wondrous films of French filmmaker George Melies.

It had been another movie nostalgic for the early days of movies ? the silent film "The Artist" ? that's thus far been the award season's early leader. That film didn't receive any individual awards, but it was named among the group's top films of the year. The others were "The Descendants," ''Drive," ''The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo," ''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2," ''The Ides of March," ''J. Edgar," ''Tree of Life" and "War Horse."

Alexander's Payne's "The Descendants," a warmly humorous film about a middle-aged Hawaiian (George Clooney) balancing a new commitment to parenthood, earned the most awards with three. Best actor went to Clooney, best supporting actress to the 20-year-old Shailene Woodley (who plays the eldest daughter) and best adapted screenplay to Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash's script, taken from Kaui Hart Hemmings' novel.

Tilda Swinton was awarded best actress for her performance in Lynne Ramsey's drama about a school shooting in "We Need to Talk About Kevin." Best supporting actor went to the 81-year-old Christopher Plummer for his performance as a dying man who awakens to his latent homosexuality in "Beginners."

The National Board of Review, a group of film historians, students and academics founded in 1909, is one of the first notable groups to announce its picks for the year's best movies. Although it's usually the first group out of the gate, the New York Film Critics Circle moved ahead of them this year, selecting "The Artist" on Tuesday as the year's best film.

The National Board of Review has some pedigree in picking films that have gone on to win best picture at the Oscars. Last year, it selected "The Social Network" as the year's best film, while the academy chose "The King's Speech." Most likely, this year's picks only reinforce the notion that the field remains refreshingly wide open ahead of the Academy Awards nominations on Jan. 24.

NBR president Annie Schulhof drew a connection between "Hugo," ''The Artist" and the group's animation pick, Gore Verbinski's movie-reference-stuffed "Rango." She called them all celebrations of film history.

"It feels really good," Schulhof said. "We can learn so much from our cinematic past. Filmmakers today are celebrating and respecting it and bringing it forward to the new generation of filmgoers."

The group awarded best ensemble to the Civil Rights-era drama "The Help." Its spotlight award went to Michael Fassbender, the Irish actor who stars in four films this year: "A Dangerous Method," ''Shame," ''Jane Eyre" and "X-Men: First Class."

The West Memphis 3 documentary "Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory" was selected best documentary. Best foreign film went to the Iranian drama "A Separation."

Two actresses were honored for breakthrough performances: Felicity Jones in the young love drama "Like Crazy" and Rooney Mara in the adapted thriller "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo." J.C. Chandor was singled out for debut director for his first feature, the financial industry thriller "Margin Call."

Will Reiser was awarded best original screenplay for his script to the cancer comedy "50/50." Special achievement in filmmaking was given to the Harry Potter franchise for its "distinguished translation from book to film."

The NBRs also give an award for "freedom of expression," which it bestowed on two films: "Pariah," a drama about a black teenager embracing her lesbianism, and "Crime After Crime," a documentary about an incarcerated victim of domestic abuse.

A gala for the National Board of Review Awards will be held Jan. 10 at New York's Cipriani's, to be hosted by the "Today" show's Natalie Morales.

___

Online:

http://www.nbrmp.org/

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-01-Film-National%20Board%20of%20Review/id-716f02d2765a46598b973d0bd5021774

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