Thursday, December 29, 2011

US automakers revved up for the new year

Paul Sancya / AP

A line worker assembles an engine for a Ford Focus at the Ford Michigan Assembly plant in Wayne, Mich., earlier this month. Ford is hoping to sieze back the midsize segment it once dominated.

By Paul A. Eisenstein, msnbc.com contributor

Ford is hoping history can repeat itself with the upcoming launch of the next-generation Fusion four-door.

It?s been more than a quarter century since the maker revolutionized automotive design with the original Taurus sedan. Its windswept styling helped Ford dominate the huge midsize market segment, and led most competitors to migrate to more aerodynamic designs. The new Fusion, which makes its debut at the Detroit Auto Show next month, will borrow many of the visual cues of the recent Ford Evos concept car and, if early reviews are any indication, could help the maker topple the imports that have dominated the midsize segment over the last two decades.

Ford isn?t alone seeing opportunity in one of the largest and most important segments of the U.S. market. Chevrolet is gunning to gain sales and market share with the new 2013 Malibu, while Chrysler will use the Detroit Auto Show to reveal the new Dart, the first major new product developed as part of the U.S. maker?s alliance with Italy?s Fiat SpA.

?We see the Americans coming out with a lot of product that?s not only new but very attention-grabbing,? says Aaron Bragman, a Detroit-based automotive analyst with IHS.

And it?s not just in the midsize segment, he adds. Detroit?s automakers are filling showrooms with an assortment of products that are decidedly more attractive and competitive than the market has seen in years, from the newly-updated Ford Escape crossover to Cadillac?s premium-luxury XTS and entry-luxury ATS sedans.

?It?s a lot of stuff that?s going to make it a lot more difficult for the Japanese to regain market share,? added Bragman.

That?s good news for the so-called Big Three, but a serious headache for Japan?s top-tier manufacturers. Toyota and Honda, in particular, are desperately counting on 2012 to bring a turnaround after several years of unexpected struggles. The outgoing year, in particular, saw them hammered by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that all but shut down the Japanese auto industry, the two collectively falling about 1 million units short of original production 2011 production plans.

With dealers struggling for inventory sales were down sharply, Honda expected to end the year with a 1.5 point decline in market share, Toyota?s share plunging as much as 2.5 points. The Detroit makers, on the other hand, will end the year with roughly 47 percent of the market, a gain of about 2 percentage points. It will be the first year since 1998, in fact, that all of the Big Three will have posted gains.

The question, cautions analyst Bragman, ?is whether they can keep that momentum going??

The Japanese aren't intending to make it easy. They?re ramping up production as rapidly as possible. And they?re rolling out plenty of new product of their own ? but getting decidedly more mixed reviews than they might have anticipated in the past. The critical Honda Civic, for example, was panned by Consumer Reports magazine. The automaker now rushing an update to market as quickly as possible.

?Some of the sales results (for recent new models) have been quite a disappointment,? acknowledges Tetsuo Iwamura, CEO of American Honda.

Honda isn?t alone. The new Toyota Camry has generated a largely ho-hum response despite the most expensive ad campaign in the Japanese brand?s history.

Significantly, the two Asian automakers are now spending more money than ever on rebates, low-interest loans and other incentives? ? a distinct shift in direction for companies that used to lambast their Detroit competitors for having to give away their products.

Detroit makers are still putting plenty of ?cash on the hood,? but they?ve steadily cut back on the givebacks this past year as offerings like the compact Chevrolet Cruze and Ford Focus have clicked with consumers.

Even if the incentive wars heat up again, the domestic makers are in a better position to keep up with the competition thanks to recent contracts signed with the United Auto Workers Union. The typical UAW worker now makes a bit over $50 an hour in wages and benefits, down from more than $75 in 2007. Add other concessions and the savings amount to several thousand dollars a vehicle. That's a critical reason why Detroit?s collective profits for 2011 will likely top $10 billion after decades of devastating losses and the 2009 bankruptcies of General Motors and Chrysler.

On the other hand, Japanese makers have suffered from plunging earnings that are expected to remain in the doldrums for at least the near to mid-term. Complicating matters, the strong yen is not only slashing earnings but forcing companies like Honda and Toyota to shift production off the home islands.

While Detroit may be getting a bit of a reprieve from the relentless onslaught of the Japanese the Big Three can?t rest on 2011 results. Korean carmakers Hyundai and Kia have gained even more share at the expense of the Japanese and are showing a willingness to spend whatever it takes to become dominant global players.

And then there?s Volkswagen, which has shown a newfound strength in the U.S. It may end 2011 as the globe?s largest automaker, toppling troubled Toyota.

Indeed, Detroit can no longer afford to focus on just the American market. With China now a larger national market than the U.S., it is readily apparent that no single market can make or break ? or be allowed to make or break ? a manufacturer. That?s readily apparent when one considers that nearly two-thirds of GM sales now come from outside the States.

But the turnaround at home will nonetheless help, especially as the U.S. remains the world?s most profitable automotive market. So, if the Detroit makers can maintain the outgoing year?s momentum in 2012 they should be positioned for the comeback they have so long and so desperately sought.

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9745717-us-automakers-look-to-build-on-victories-in-the-new-year

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Children bring toys to church to be blessed

It?s difficult to pry children away from their new toys and gifts Christmas morning, especially after waiting all year for Santa to stop by and reward those who were nice.

But at Queen Street United Methodist Church Sunday, children?s Christmas gifts were the focus of the day?s sermon.

Children were asked to bring their favorite Christmas gift for the first ever Blessing of the Toys service, led by Director of Children Ministries Bridges Baker.

?It?s rare that Christmas falls on Sunday, so we just figured it was a nice way to have a casual service and to bring the focus of all the gifts that the children and we received today back to Christ, the reason for the season,? Baker said. ?Kids don?t want to leave their toys behind and so they could bring a toy with them and come in their pajamas.?

As children held and wore their favorite presents, Baker explained to the congregation the reason people exchange gifts on Christmas is because the Three Wise Men gave baby Jesus gold, frankincense and myrrh.

Rickey Howard, 10, brought his Angry Birds ? a popular game played primarily on cell phones ? hooded blanket to church to be blessed.

?I love Angry Birds,? Rickey said while wearing his new Christmas gift.? ?My mom likes to play it on her (cell phone).

Rickey?s older sister Amy said she received everything she wanted for Christmas and decided to bring her most entertaining present to church.

?I got a chicken hat,? Amy said of her headwear shaped like a hen. ?I didn?t ask for it, but I got it anyway? I asked for clothes and books.?

Baker said the church had planned to hold the special service last year, but foul weather got in the way.

?This is the first year we have done it here, we will probably continue it,? Baker said. ?It is something I had heard of at other churches in the past. ? We were going to do it last year, but it snowed and so our church services were canceled. This year was just a great time to do it since it fell right on Christmas Day.?

Baker said she looks forward to hold future Blessing of the Toys services to keep the day centered on Jesus, ?the greatest gift ever given.?

?Gifts are an important part of Christmas, and play is an important gift from God,? she said. ?They should be honored and given in his name and not just the name of commercialism or anything like that.

?We just want to point it back to Christ, because that?s where it all comes from.?

?

Jane Moon can be reached at 252-559-1082 or jmoon@freedomenc.com.

?

Source: http://www.kinston.com/news/toys-78775-blessed-bring.html

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Republican rep to House GOP: ???Take the blinders off ??? see the light??? [VIDEO] (Daily Caller)

Democratic Michigan Rep. Sander Levin told The Daily Caller that House Republicans are ?blinded by a rigid ideology? and suggested that they ?take the blinders off, come back here, see the light? and pass the Democratic-led Senate?s two-month payroll tax cut extension.

Watch:

Friday, December 23, 2011

Childhood Obesity at Age 8 Linked to Asthma, Allergies (ContributorNetwork)

Children who are overweight by 8 years old were found to have higher incidence of asthma and allergic sensitivity, according to a study published in the American Academy of Pediatrics. Here are specifics on study findings and how they impact parent decisions.

Asthma and childhood obesity studies

In October, Science Daily reported obese children are twice as likely to have asthma as nonobese children. In the Pediatrics study, pediatric allergy and asthma researchers from Norway and Sweden looked at how changes in a child's weight status may affect his predisposition to asthma allergy.

Weight gain in 7-, 8-year-olds linked to asthma problems

The study revealed those with over-85 percent body mass indexes were no more prone to asthma at 12 to 18 months or when they were tested at age 4. By age 8, children with a high BMI were at greater risk for asthma regardless of whether they had been overweight in the earlier years or not. Children were more at risk for wheezing or other problems with inhalant allergies if they were overweight at age 8.

Childhood obesity, asthma parenting implications

Study authors conclude parents should be mindful of asthma in children who have a number of risk factors in combination: BMIs over 85 percent, exposure to secondhand smoke, maternal history of obesity or parents history of asthma or allergy. Weight problems at or after ages 8 to 10 seem to predispose children to other problems as well. In 2008, Science Daily reported on a study by Kansas State University that found children with sedentary lives and high body fat had more asthma-like symptoms after exercise. In 2010, a study from West Virginia University found children of normal weight who don't get a balanced diet or proper exercise are at greater risk for asthma. Study authors recommended parents improve nutrition and boost fitness levels, especially in school years to reduce asthma risk.

Ages 8 to 10 critical for obesity, asthma prevention

A Pediatrics study underscored the concern for obesity at age 8. Forty percent of kids begin school in the 85th percentile. Significant weight gain after ages 8 to 10, especially if not accompanied by equally significant height gain, is an indicator of lifelong obesity problems. Study authors concluded parents should build good nutrition habits early and monitor weight gain at all ages but the time for teaching good nutrition and fitness was in the early school years.

Marilisa Kinney Sachteleben writes about parenting from 23 years raising four children and 25 years teaching K-8, special needs, adult education and home-school.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/weightloss/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111221/us_ac/10717793_childhood_obesity_at_age_8_linked_to_asthma_allergies

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Gingrich assails judges as he courts conservatives (AP)

DAVENPORT, Iowa ? As he works to rev up his conservative base in Iowa with just two weeks to go until the state's caucuses, Newt Gingrich is launching a full-throated assault on a reliable GOP target: judges.

There is little love for the judicial branch among the Republicans seeking the White House. But Gingrich's ridicule has been, by far, the sharpest and the loudest. And it's taken a central role as his campaign struggles to stay atop polls in Iowa, a state where irate social conservatives ousted three judges who legalized same-sex marriage.

"I commend the people of Iowa for sending a strong signal that when judges overreach that they can find a new job," Gingrich told about 200 supporters who turned out to hear him speak in Davenport, Iowa, on Monday.

Gingrich has suggested that judges who issue what he termed "radical" rulings out of step with mainstream American values should be subpoenaed before Congress to explain themselves before facing possible impeachment. As president, he said, he'd consider dispatching U.S. marshals to round up judges who refuse to show voluntarily. In extreme cases, whole courts could be eliminated.

In the final debate before voters weigh in at the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses, Gingrich called the courts "grotesquely dictatorial." He cast the fight in stark religious terms reminiscent of the culture wars, in which a secular, legal elite was encroaching on religious liberties.

The targets of Gingrich's strongest derision: the West Coast's 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, a perennial punching bag for the right, and a federal judge in Texas who banned prayer in a public school.

The rhetoric ? in which Gingrich promises a more muscular executive branch that would simply ignore some federal court rulings it disagrees with ? draws applause on the campaign trail. But among some conservative legal experts who, like Gingrich, embrace a more limited judicial role, his ideas are being met with alarm.

Two former attorneys general named to the nation's top law enforcement post by Republican President George W. Bush have slammed Gingrich's proposal.

Michael Mukasey, a former federal judge, said Gingrich's ideas were "dangerous, ridiculous, totally irresponsible, outrageous, off-the-wall and would reduce the entire judicial system to a spectacle."

Alberto Gonzales was disturbed by the provision that would allow Congress to police judicial decisions. "I cannot support and would not support efforts that would appear to be intimidation or retaliation against judges," he said.

Gingrich's chief Republican rival, Mitt Romney, also chimed in, using Gingrich's remarks on judges as further evidence to suggest the former Georgia congressman isn't steady enough to be president.

"His comments about the justices and the Congress, sending the Capitol police to bring in judges ? that's not exactly a practical idea or a Constitutional idea," Romney said.

Bert Brandenberg, executive director of the nonpartisan group Justice at Stake, which favors an independent judiciary, said Gingrich's ideas "would plunge the rule of law into chaos and dysfunction."

"They would make courts answer to politicians rather than the law and Constitution," he said.

But Gingrich said he approaches the issue as a historian, not a lawyer. In a 54-page paper peppered with quotes from The Federalist Papers, Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson, he outlines what he says is a judicial power grab that the founders never intended.

Iowa Republican Party Chairman Matt Strawn said that while GOP criticism of judges has faded as a national issue, "here in Iowa, it resonates more than most places."

The battle over gay marriage became a fresh rallying cry for social conservatives in the state in 2009. Gingrich knows this well. He provided $200,000 in seed money to what became a successful effort to remove three of the judges who held same-sex marriage in the state was constitutional. That won him support from key evangelicals in the state.

And his strong words on the stump have found an appreciative audience.

"Why shouldn't judges have to answer questions about what they do, just like everyone else, especially if they are out there pushing their own agenda?" asked 62-year-old Tom Hall of Cedar Rapids, who attended a Gingrich speech in nearby Hiawatha.

Still, not everyone thought the issue was a winner.

Bob Wachtel, a 63-year-old house painter, had crossed the Mississippi River from Geneseo, Ill., to hear Gingrich speak in Davenport on Monday. He called the fixation on judges distracting.

"There is plenty to talk about with jobs and the economy, and that's what people are really worried about," Wachtel said.

_____

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_el_pr/us_gingrich_judges

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

KB Home 4Q net income falls but tops Street's view (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? KB Home's fiscal fourth-quarter net income fell 20 percent on rising expenses, but revenue climbed on more home deliveries and a higher average selling price.

Its shares rose 30 cents, or 3.9 percent, to $8.04 in premarket trading.

The Los Angeles homebuilder reported Wednesday that it earned $13.9 million, or 18 cents per share, for the three months ended Nov. 30. That compares with $17.4 million, or 23 cents per share, a year earlier.

The results beat the 4 cents per share that analysts polled by FactSet expected. KB Home also said that it was its first net profit in 2011.

Quarterly selling, general and administrative expenses climbed 36 percent to $75.6 million.

Revenue rose 6 percent to $479.9 million from $451 million, topping Wall Street's $467.9 million forecast.

Home deliveries increased by 4 percent, and average selling price rose 3 percent ? to $238,400 compared with $232,500 in the prior-year period.

"We anticipate that our companywide average selling price will continue to grow in 2012 as we heighten our concentration in our most desirable markets, particularly in our West Coast region which typically generates higher profits," President and CEO Jeffrey Mezger said in a statement.

Fourth-quarter net orders rose 38 percent to 1,494 from 1,085. Backlog also increased ? to the highest year-end level since 2008 ? with a total of 2,156 homes as of Nov. 30. That compares with a backlog of 1,336 homes a year earlier.

Cancellation rate as a percentage of gross orders was 34 percent versus 37 percent a year ago.

For the full year, KB Home lost $178.8 million, or $2.32 per share, compared with a loss of $69.4 million, or 90 cents per share, in the previous year.

The full-year results included $79.5 million in noncash charges and a $30.8 million loss on a loan guarantee. This was somewhat offset by a $2.4 million tax benefit and a $19.8 million gain tied to winding down the company's unconsolidated mortgage banking joint venture.

Annual revenue slipped 17 percent to $1.32 billion from $1.59 billion as the number of homes delivered fell 21 percent.

Net orders rose to 6,632 from 6,556, which was the first rise in full-year net orders in two years.

KB Home was ranked the fifth-largest homebuilder in the nation last year, by closings.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_kb_home

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Does the ?God particle? need to be renamed? (The Newsroom)

SIOUX CITY, Iowa--In the spin room after Thursday night's debate, Eric Fehrnstrom, a senior adviser to Mitt Romney, said of his candidate, "Americans watching at home could easily imagine him in the Oval Office." The line was, of course, designed to be flattering to Romney (this was the spin room, after all), but it captured the leap of faith that voters will make next month, beginning in Iowa on Jan. 3.

How do you imagine a president? Despite the oversize role of TV debates in the 2012 Republican presidential campaign, as the curtain falls on 2011 it is worth remembering how much about the job of the president was never discussed during these celebrity survivor shows. Three years ago, few Democrats, flush with the enthusiasm of the 2008 campaign season, could have envisioned President Barack Obama bedeviled by congressional Republicans and buffeted by chilly economic winds. Now Republicans have to identify a would-be president from the seven candidates on stage during the final debate before the Iowa caucuses--picturing one of them delivering a State of the Union address, choosing the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and struggling with gloomy projections from economic advisers.

The debates in 2011 did little to help voters to imagine the 45th president. The moderators could not resist fatuous horse-race questions: Megyn Kelly asked Rick Santorum on Thursday, "So far your campaign and you have failed to catch fire with the voters. Why?" The strait-jacket imposed by one-minute answers is at odds with the complexity of the presidency. Jon Huntsman was all but forced to sit in the corner with a dunce cap after he had the temerity to try to take two minutes to explain the role of the United Nations in American foreign policy. Candidates are also adroit at confecting crowd-pleasing banalities instead of real answers. Romney boldly declared, "It has to be the American century. America has to lead the free world."

The real problem is that debates tend to revolve around position-taking (what senators do all day) rather than executive policy-making (the job of a president). Early in the Sioux City debate, Newt Gingrich bragged, "I have a 90 percent American Conservative Union voting record for 20 years." Michele Bachmann burbled about devoting her congressional career to "going toe-to-toe with Barack Obama, taking him on, on every issue from Dodd-Frank to cap-and-trade to illegal immigration to Obamacare." Rick Perry once again peddled a balanced-budget amendment and a part-time Congress as a panacea. And Huntsman declared, ""We need to go to Congress and we need to say, you need term limits." (Almost certain congressional answer: "Fat chance.")

Even when the topic turned to a major presidential power, nominating federal judges, the emphasis quickly veered from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue to Capitol Hill. Gingrich was asked about his long-standing proposal for Congress (not the president) to subpoena judges to justify controversial decisions. This was all part of the former House speaker's pledge "to take on the judiciary if, in fact, it did not restrict itself in what it was doing." Part of Gingrich's big-ideas solution involves eliminating entire federal appeals courts, as Thomas Jefferson did in 1802, should a decision displease him. Because position-taking trumps governing in these battles waged from behind lecterns, Gingrich was never asked how such a radical proposal would survive a near-certain filibuster by Senate Democrats.

Sure, working with Congress is a major part of the presidential job description posted on Monster.com. But in debates, presidential candidates are allowed to claim without contradiction that they possess magical powers to cloud the minds of legislators. Perry, who has been a polarizing figure in both Texas and national politics, blandly invoked bipartisanship: "We need a president, who has that governing, executive experience, someone who understands how to work with both sides of the aisle." Romney, suggesting that not all Democrats are patriotic, said, "There are Democrats who love America as Republicans do, but we need to have a leader in the White House that knows how to lead." Bachmann said that if she were president during last summer's debt-ceiling crisis, she would have met with all 535 members of Congress and dictated her three non-negotiable conditions--no tax increases, drastic spending cuts and fidelity to the Constitution. She ran out of time before she could explain how she could have convinced Democrats to agree without resorting to mass hypnosis.

Ron Paul was the only candidate to articulate his vision of the presidency: Calvin Coolidge for the 21st century, only sleepier. "I would be a different kind of president," Paul said with understatement. "I wouldn't be looking for more power. Everybody wants to be a powerful executive and run things. I, as the president, wouldn't want to run the world." Even as the Texas gadfly grew shrill in his exasperation with the bomb-bomb-bomb, bomb-bomb-Iran rhetoric from his Republican rivals, Paul was clear in how he would respond to ambiguous intelligence estimates: "I would say that the greatest danger is over-reacting."

Over-reacting to televised highlight reels from a debate is also dangerous. Often the most intriguing moments in debates are the ones that are barely mentioned in the after-action wrap-ups. Perry, for example, offered a brief, but telling, glimpse of his executive style when he said about Attorney General Eric Holder's ignorance of a failed federal gun-tracking operation on the Mexican border, "If I'm the president of the United States, and I find out that there is an operation like Fast and Furious and my attorney general didn't know about it, I would have him resign immediately."

Read More ?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/yahoonewsroom/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_newsroom/20111216/od_yblog_newsroom/does-the-god-particle-need-to-be-renamed

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Perry, Bachmann Cross Paths in Iowa (ABC News)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/175995427?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

These Mind and Gravity Bending Photos Aren't Photoshopped [Image Cache]

Instead of relying on post-processing tools like Photoshop, photographer Li Wei uses tricks you're more likely to find in a magician's toolkit, including mirrors, wires, and talented acrobatic performers. All combined with the impeccable timing of his camera's shutter. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/eCs3aNdnW9U/

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Video: Kathie Lee and Hoda?s moms visit Studio 1A

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29054368/vp/45684475#45684475

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Christopher Hitchens: Friends, Fans Mourn The Late Journalist And Atheist

Note from the Editor: Journalist and polemicist Christopher Hitchens died on Dec. 15 of pneumonia, a complication of esophageal cancer. He was 62. The following are quotes of remembrance from his friends and fans.

"Christopher was the beau ideal of the public intellectual. You felt as though he was writing to you and to you alone. And as a result many readers felt they knew him. Walking with him down the street in New York or through an airplane terminal was like escorting a movie star through the throngs." --Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter

"Over the course of his heroic, uncomplaining 18-month battle with the cancer, I found myself rehearsing what I might say to an obituary writer, should one ring after the news of Christopher's death. I thought to say something along the lines -- the air of Byron, the steel pen of Orwell, and the wit of Wilde." --Satirist Christopher Buckley

"Editing Christopher Hitchens, who died Thursday at the age of 62, was the easiest job in journalism. He never filed late -- in fact, he was usually early, even when he was clearly very sick -- and he managed to make his work seem like a great lark. His weekly e-mails always read the same jaunty way: 'Herewith. Hope it serves, As always, Christopher.'" --Slate editor June Thomas

"Like all of us, he was often wrong, but never in the way everyone else was wrong. His originality was a constant, his independence an unstoppable engine. He loved to argue and debate, not because he was a bully but because he thought it pointed in the direction of truth. And possibly because he was better at it than anyone else." --Journalist Jacob Weisberg

"Few have written so movingly, so bravely and with such self-awareness about coming to terms with impending death. The announcement of a 'Pray for Christopher Hitchens Day' must have caused him more than a wry smile. 'Don't bother unless it makes you feel better,' he said. There could be few less likely deathbed conversions." --Patrick Gallagher, Hitchens' Australian publisher

"We shall miss you, your voice, your pen, & most of all your mind Christopher. The world is better because of you." --Michael Shermer, founding publisher of Skeptic magazine

"Goodbye, my beloved friend. A great voice falls silent. A great heart stops. " --Author Salman Rushdie

"Christopher Hitchens, finest orator of our time, fellow horseman, valiant fighter against all tyrants including God." --Author Richard Dawkins
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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/16/christopher-hitchens-literary-world-mourns_n_1153053.html

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Friday, December 16, 2011

Meizu MX review

A quick tag search for "Meizu" on Engadget takes us all the way back to April 2006, where we saw the launch of the Chinese company's M6 Mini Player with MP4 playback. But in fact, if you go as far back as early 2003 (before Engadget was even born) you'll also dig up the Meizu MX, which was eventually launched towards the end of the year. Confused? Well, bear with us here: this MX was Meizu's first ever product, a simple 128MB or 256MB MP3 player that unfortunately bore much resemblance to the Cowon iAudio CW300, albeit with different guts. Was this a case of shameless cloning or just an OEM product being rebadged? Our money's on the latter, but only with Monopoly bills.

Skip past the darker times and fast forward to about nine years later, Meizu would launch another MX, but now it's a totally different animal: a 1.4GHz dual-core Android smartphone that can handle a tad more than just music playback. Of course, company founder Jack Wong and his gang aren't the only players on the paddy field, as we also have the similarly powerful Xiaomi Phone already taking the lead in the Chinese Android enthusiast market. Adding more fuel to the fire is that shortly after the Xiaomi Phone's debut, Wong responded to a related forum post by accusing a certain someone -- which is believed to be Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun -- of abusing his or her old position as an angel investor to deviously walk away with Meizu's trade secrets. Alas, we'll probably never know the truth, so we shall simply observe whether the new Meizu MX will bite back hard and good. Read on for our full review on Meizu's second Android handset.

Continue reading Meizu MX review

Meizu MX review originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 15 Dec 2011 12:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/15/meizu-mx-review/

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Donald wins PGA Tour player of the year

England's Luke Donald plays a ball on the 2nd hole during the final round of the Dubai World Championship golf tournament on Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)

England's Luke Donald plays a ball on the 2nd hole during the final round of the Dubai World Championship golf tournament on Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)

England's Luke Donald plays his final shot on the 18th hole to win the Race to Dubai Trophy during the final round of Dubai World Championship golf tournament on Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)

JACKSONVILLE, Florida (AP) ? Already No. 1 in the world, Luke Donald now is No. 1 in the eyes of PGA Tour players.

Donald capped off a sensational season Tuesday by winning PGA Tour player of the year, the most significant of the postseason awards because it's a vote of the players.

He became the first British player to win the award since it began in 1990.

"It's a great honor to cap off what has been an amazing year for me," Donald said from the Australian Masters in Melbourne. "Thank you to all the players for their votes. There was obviously some other worthy people to vote for, and I guess my overall consistency and having to go to Disney and win, and win the money list like I did, was a deciding factor.

"I feel very honored at the moment."

Donald won the award over Keegan Bradley, Bill Haas, Webb Simpson and Nick Watney. An official familiar with the results described it as a landslide. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the tour does not release the votes or the order in which the players finished.

Bradley, whose two wins included the PGA Championship, was voted rookie of the year.

It was only the fifth time in the last two decades that the PGA Tour player of the year did not win a major. Even so, Donald made a compelling case, especially at the end of the year.

He won two tournaments, as much as anyone else this year. He won the Vardon Trophy for the lowest adjusted scoring average. He had top 10s in 14 of the 19 tournaments he played, a rate of consistency only Tiger Woods has known in this era.

But it still came down to the end of the year.

Simpson won twice in the last three months of the season, and entered the McGladrey Classic to try to capture the money title. He took over the lead with his runner-up finish, and Donald decided to enter the season finale at Disney.

Needing nothing short of a win, the 34-year-old from England turned in one of the best performances of the year. Donald began the back nine of the final round with six straight birdies and closed with a 64 to make up a five-shot deficit and win by two.

While only his tour record counted for this award, Donald last week became the first player to win the money title on the PGA Tour and European Tour in the same season. He won twice in Europe this year, including Europe's flagship event at Wentworth when he beat Lee Westwood in a playoff to take over as No. 1 in the world. Donald expanded his lead in the world ranking the final seven months of the year.

He achieved all this with moderate length off the tee, demonstrating that while power helps, it's not the only way in golf.

"I've done a lot of things this year that probably not a lot of people would have given me much chance of doing," Donald said. "I think in the last 10 or 20 years, the power game has really taken control of golf. But I think I've been a little bit of a breath of fresh air knowing that's not the only way you can be successful. Through a good short game, good putting, managing your game, you can be successful in other ways.

"I think I've proven that quite considerably this year."

Still left to prove is winning a major. Woods in 2009 and 2003, Greg Norman in 1995 and Nick Price in 1993 were the only players in the last 20 years to have won PGA Tour player of the year without capturing a major that year.

Donald tied for fourth in the Masters for his best finish in a major.

"I suppose there's a little bit more pressure, a little bit more expectation, in majors and I need to learn to better handle that," Donald said. "Obviously, this year has been a breakout year for me in terms of my confidence levels, and hopefully those confidence levels will be carried over to next year and will serve me well in the majors."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-13-Player%20of%20the%20Year/id-519d632e17a34a588715b76332c0aa02

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